The St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank, a corporation organized under the Federal Farm Loan Act and herein referred to as “land bank,” and William R. Compton, owner of shares of stock of said land bank, seek our order quashing the record of the Board of Equalization of the City of St. Louis, herein referred to as “board.”
*258In response to our writ theretofore issued, a return was filed incorporating a stipulated record of the proceeding's before the board. Relators filed their motion for judgment upoxi the> pleadings, thereby admitting all facts well pleaded in said return. The Attorney-General has filed a brief as amicus curiae.
As appears in the stipulated record, the board made an order on April 12, 1924, directing “that an assessment be made against the shares of stock of said St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank for taxes for the year 1924 on the basis of a total assessment in the sum of $603,292.87. ’ ’ The board was dissolved on April 12,1924, and prior to thej issuance of our writ. The records and minutes of the board are in the custody and control of respondent William Buder, herein referred to as “assessor.”
The sole question in the case is the power and authority of the board to assess against said land bank, 'for taxation for state, city and school purposes, the value of the shares of stock owned by the shareholders of said land bank. It is coxiceded that the land bank is a Federal agency and that its shares of stock are not subject to taxation by the State or its ag’exicies, except to the. extexit axid ixi the manner authorized by Congress.
In the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary to enter into an extexided consideration of the various provisioxis of the Federal Farm Loan Act which give rise to the authority of the State to take advantage of the Federal Government’s permission to tax the shares of said land bank. We will assume that such authority exists. Relators coxicede this, but coxitend that the State of Missouri has not enacted any law to take advantage of such permission. Respondent assessor; contends that Section 12775', Revised Statutes 1919, which was enacted long before the Federal Farm Loan Act was passed, is broad enough in its scope axid meaning to serve as such authority.
Much space is taken in the briefs and numerous de>cided cases and text-writers are cited upon the question *259of whether or not the land bank is doing a banking business. It will be unnecessary to consider such authorities at length, because we think the issue here involved can be settled by a consideration and understanding of our statute. :
It is conceded by respondent assessor that the only section of our statute authorizing the State or any agency thereof to tax the shares of the land bank is found in Section 12775', Revised Statutes 1919. If that section be deemed not to cover the situation, the record of the board should be quashed and other contentions in the case need not be noticed.
The portion of said section which is counted upon as authority for the assessment made by the board, reads as follows:
“Persons owning shares of stock in banks, or in joint stock institutions or associations doing a banking business, shall not be required to deliver to the assessor a list thereof, but the. president or other chief officer of such corporation, institution or association shall, under oath, deliver to the assessor a list of all shares of stock held therein, and the face value thereof, the value of all real estate, if any, represented by such shares of stock, together with all reserved funds, undivided profits, premiums or earnings and all other values belonging to such corporation, company, institution or association; and such shares, reserved funds, undivided profits, premiums or earnings and all other values so listed to the assessor shall be valued and assessed as other property at their true value in money, less the value of real estate, if any, represented by such shares of stock.” (Italics ours).
It is provided by Section 12777 that the taxes assessed against such shares of stock shall be paid by the corporation, and that such corporation may recover from the owners of such shares the amount so paid or may deduct such payments from dividends accruing thereon.
It is stipulated as a fact, “that the business of the St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank has been confined to making loans on improved farm lands in the states of *260Missouri and Arkansas for a term; that the St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank at no time accepted or received any deposits from the United States (Government, or from its stockholders, or any other persons, and had at no time maintained any facilities for the receiving of deposits from anyone, or the cashing of checks drawn on any such deposit.”
Citation of authority is entirely unnecessary in support of the well recognized rule that taxing statutes must he strictly construed. Our Section 12775- does not authorize the assessment of taxes upon the shares owned by shareholders of a bank or other institution which is merely authorised, by its charter or the law providing for its incorporation, to do a “banking business.” It authorizes the assessment of such taxes only in the event the' particular institution or corporation is a “bank,” as generally understood, or is “doing a bcmkmg business True, the words, “doing a banking business,” in the order in which they appear, apparently modify only the words “joint stock institutions or associations;” but the connection in which such modifying words are used clearly denotes that they relate back to the word “bank,” as well, and indicate the sense in which the word “bank” is used. That word is used in the sense of an institution which is doing a banking business, as generally understood or as defined by statute. The words “bank” and institutions “doing a banking business” are identical in meaning as used in Section 12775-.
We have found only two sections of our statutes which attempt to define what is meant by “banking business”.and they are not found in the chapter on taxation. Section 11781 defines private bankers as “those who carry on the business of banking by receiving money on deposit, with or without interest, by buying or selling bills of exchange, promissory notes, gold or silver coin, bullion, uncurrent money, bonds or stocks, or other securities, and of loaning money, without being incorporated.”
It will be noted that such persons must be engaged in three lines of business activity, to-wit, accepting de*261posits, buying and selling various securities and loaning money. The land bank is actually engaged in a restricted way in the loaning of money, but admittedly not in the business of receiving deposits. It is not doing a banking business under the definition contained in said Section 11781.
• The other statutory definition is found in Laws of 1923, page 223, which enacted a new section known as Section 11780a, Revised Statutes 1919. We note the contention of the assessor that the 1923 act did not take effect until after the date of the assessment under consideration here, but will quote said section for what it is worth. It provides that “the term 'bank’ shall include any person, firm, association or corporation soliciting, receiving or accepting money, , or its equivalent, on deposit as a business, whether such deposit is made subject to check, or is evidenced by. a certificate of deposit, a pass book, a note, a receipt or other writing.” In the face of the stipulation in this case, it cannot be contended that the land bank is a “bank” or an institution “doing a banking business,” as defined by new Section 11780a, because it has never accepted deposits of any character.
While Sections 11781 and 12775 were enacted upon different subjects, yet they relate to the same class of persons or things and are in pari materia. At least Section 11781, if not the Act of 1923, may be safely referred to as constituting the legislative idea of what is meant by “doing a banking business” in this State and the land bank is not doing a banking business, as therein defined.
Aside from our own statutory definition of what constitutes doing a “banking business,” we do not think the business in which the land bank is engaged, under the stipulation filed, brings it within the definitions of that term cited by the assessor. He quotes the Century Dictionary And Cyclopedia as defining a bank as “an institution for lending and receiving money.” The term “receiving money” evidently refers to receiving money on deposit and not to receiving money in payment of sub*262scriptions for stock or from the sale of bonds or repayment of loans. It refers to the business of receiving money on deposit. The land is, of course, engaged in a restricted way in the lending of money. If receiving money otherwise than upon deposit is meant as the test under said definition, then every individual, or corporation engaged in making real estate loans, collecting the principal and interest thereon and selling said notes and the mortgages or deeds of trust securing same, is engaged in the banking business under the definition for which the assessor contends.
The definition of a bank quoted from the Standard Dictionary as “an institution for lending, borrowing, issuing or caring for money” clearly would cover many persons and corporations engaged in lines of business no one would for a moment regard as coming within the term “doing a banking business” as used in our Section 12775. The words “lending,” “borrowing,” “issuing” and “caring for” are connected by the word “or,” indicating that engagement in any one of such activities constitutes one a banker. The use of the conjunction “and” would more nearly approach the sense in which the term “doing a banking business” is apparently used in Section 32775.
Respondent quotes from Encyclopedia Britannica (11 Ed.) as follows: “The word ‘bank’ in the economic sense, covers various meanings which all express one object, a contribution of money for a common purpose. The term has been gradually applied to several classes of institutions established for the general purpose of dealing with money.” The first sentence of this definition treats the words in the sense of “pool,” as where a number of persons contribute money for a, common purpose. A corporation organized to engage in the merchandising business would be a bank in that sense; yet, clearly that is not the sense in which the words “bank” or “doing a banking business” are used in Section 12775. The “general purpose .of dealing in money,” as used in the second sentence, is broad enough to include an in*263stitution doing a banking business, but is indefinite. Tbe definition is broad enough to include the acceptance of deposits along with lending or otherwise generally dealing with money.
The quotation from Smith v. Kansas City Title & Trust Co., 255 U. S. 180, 210, 65 L. Ed. 577, 589, that, “Speaking generally, a bank is a moneyed institution, to facilitate the borrowing, lending and caring for money,” includes the depositing of money, as well as the borrowing and lending of money.
The United States Supreme Court did not hold that the use of Federal land banks as depositaries was essential to the validity of the law. It merely held that it was sufficient if they were subject to such use by the government. Mr. Justice Day said (65 L. Ed. 589): “But, it is urged, the attempt to create these Federal agencies, and to make these banks fiscal ag’ents and public depositaries of the Government, is but a pretext. But nothing is better settled by the decisions of this court than that when Congress acts within the limits of its constitutional authority, it is not the province of the judicial branch of the Government to question its motives. [Citing cases.] That Congress has seen fit, in making these banks fiscal agencies and depositaries of public moneys, to grant to them banking powers of a limited character, in nowise detracts from the authority of Congress to use them for the governmental purposes named, if it sees fit to do so.”
The quotation from said opinion, relied upon by respondent and first quoted by us, is followed by this expression: “But whether technically banks, or not, these organizations may serve the governmental purposes declared by Congress in their creation.”
It is evident that the Supreme Court was not deciding whether the Federal land banks were or were not banks as generally understood, but whether the declared purpose of their organization met the constitutional test of a • governmental purpose, even though they were not technically banks.
*264We may assume for the purpose of this case that the powers granted to land banks are sufficiently broad to constitute them banks or institutions doing a banking business, in a limited way, it is true, but nevertheless banks within approved definitions and our own Section 12775. But as our statute provides for taxes of shares of stock only in institutions which are actually banks or which are doing such banking business and as the land bank is not actually doing such banking business, it appears that the shares of stock therein are not taxable under Section 12775.
In this view of the case it becomes unnecessary to consider other questions raised by the briefs. The necessity for their consideration is wholly dependent upon the construction of Section 12775 as making sufficient provision for the assessment of such shares. Such shares are concededly exempt from state taxation, except in accordance with Section 26 of the Federal Farm Loan Act. As the land bank is not a bank or an institution doing’ a banking business within the meaning of our Section 12775', this State has made no sufficient provision for taxing the shares owned by stockholders in land banks and it makes no difference whether Section 5219 of the Federal statute, as referred to in Section 26 of the Federal Farm Loan Act, or said Section 5219', as amended March 4, 1923, fixes the method the State must adopt in order to avoid the exemption of such' shares from taxation by the states.
It follows that the assessment made by the board was unauthorized and is void, and that its record making such assessment should be quashed. It is so ordered.
All concur, except Atwood, J., not sitting.