Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett

260 U.S. 647, 43 S. Ct. 233, 67 L. Ed. 439, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2505
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1923
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 260 U.S. 647 (Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett, 260 U.S. 647, 43 S. Ct. 233, 67 L. Ed. 439, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2505 (1923).

Opinion

*648 Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By § 1190 of the.General Statutes of the State of Connecticut, 1918, passed in 1915, it is provided that “-All taxable property of any estate upon which no town or city • tax has been assessed . . ... or upon which no tax has,been paid to the sta^e during the year preceding the date of the death of the decedent, shall be liable to a tax of two per centum per annum on the appraised inventory value of such property for the five years next preceding the date of the death .of such decedent, provided, the executor or administrator of any estate may, by furnishing evidence to the satisfaction of the tax commissioner that a state, town or city tax has been paid on any of such property for a portion of said five years or that the .ownership of such property has not been in the decedent’for a portion of said period, obtain a proportionate deduction from the tax hereby imposed, ■. . .”

It is further provided (§ 1192) that “Any executor, administrator or representative of such an estate aggrieved by the action of the tax commissioner in determining such' tax, if unable to agree with the tax commissioner upon the amount of such tax as provided in section 1190, may, within ninety days from the time of the filing by the tax commissioner of such statement or corrected statement with the judge of probate, make application in the nature of ah appeal therefrom to the superior court of the county in which such probate court is located which shall be accompanied by a citation to said tax commissioner to appear before such court.”

Lena McMullen died in 1919, and the information required by an act passed in that year, amendatory of an act concerning inventories of estates, 1 having been, filed by plaintiffs in error as her executors and sent, as required, *649 by the Probate Judge to the Tax Commissioner, that officer filed with the State Treasurer a statement that there was due from the estate of the decedent to the State of Connecticut by virtue of its statutes, $10,286.39, and made claim for such sum.

Plaintiffs in error, within the time provided' ih § 1192, made, to quote from the language of the section, “ application in the nature of an appeal ” from the claim to the Superior Court of the county in which the Probate Court was located, in accordance with § 1192.

The Tax Commissioner, acting for the State, demurred “ to the reasons of application and appeal,” and the Superior Court, by consent of the parties, reserved the questions of law arising upon 'the demurrer “ for the advice of the Supreme Court of Errors . . . as to what judgment should be rendered ” on the demurrer. In fulfillment of the “ reservation ” the Supreme Court of Errors took the case, adjudged the statute to be valid, and advised the Superior Court “ to sustain the demurrer and to dismiss the application.”

The Superior Court in execution of that direction sustained the demurrer and entered judgment dismissing the “ application in the nature of an appeal.” To review that judgment is the purpose of this writ of error. Manifestly, however, it is the views and reasoning of the Supreme Court of Errors that must engage our attention as they constituted the foundation of the judgment of the Superior Court.

In description of the statute, the Court of Errors said, its purpose is “ to compel estates to pay to the State a sum which shall approximately equal the taxes which property of the estate has escaped paying while in the hands of the decedent ”; and “ the single point raised by the demurrer,” the court further said, “ is that the statutes which authorize this action of the commissioner are unconstitutional.” .

*650 The specifications of the ground of offense urged by plaintiffs in error against the • Fourteenth Amendment (and with this only are we concerned) were said by the court to be that the statute deprived creditors and dis-tributees of this estate' of their property without due process of law, (a) by exacting a penalty from them for the failure of the decedent to list his property for taxation, and (b) by creating against them a presumption of guilt for such omission.” The comment of the court upon the specifications was that both rest upon the unfounded premise that the property of this estate, upon the decease of the owner,, passed to the distributees subject to the payment of the just debts of the estate.” And the court further said; “The night,to dispose of one's property by will, and the right to haye it disposed of by law after decease, is created bjy statute, and therefore the State may impose such conditions upon the. exercise of this right as it may determine. Stone Appeal, 74 Conn. 301, 302; Hatheway v. Smith, 79 Conn. 506.” See also Plummer v. Coler, 178 U. S. 115, 134; Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41.

The conclusion of the court is of such authoritative effect as not to need much comment. The attack upon it by plaintiffs in error is based upon a confusion of rights. As pointed out by the Supreme'Court of Errors, executors and, ad: ainistrators do not own the property committed to them -for administration. It goes to them subject to the liabilities and burdens upon it in the hands of its owner, and whatever interest distributees or creditors may have is subject to the same .liabilities and burdens,— subject] we v may say, as the court decided, to the tax which the State has imposéd on its disposition or devolution:' And the-tax does not take on a different quality or incident because it. is, or has .the effect of, a penalty. And the court,' constíújrig 4he statute, declared it was a provision for penalizing a'delinquency' — the delinquency *651 of the decedent, and.made to survive “ by statutory sanction.” “ In .effect,” the court said, “ this statute is a penalty imposed upon the estate because of the delinquency of the decedent, and no less permissible than the penalty tax against the decedent, kept alive by statutory sanction.”

Plaintiffs in error do not contest the principle expressed but deny its application by asserting, (1) there was no debt owed by decedent, (2) no action under the statute arose against her, (3) no penalty had been incurred by her because as long as she lived the statute was inapplicable to her, (4) it is not a tax, for its primary object is punishment, not revenue.

The assertions are-unjustified. There was an evasion of duty by decedent, and the obligation she incurred, and should have discharged, was imposed upon her estate, and legally imposed,, for out of her estate only can it be discharged.- The payment of taxes is an obvious and insistent duty, and its sanction is usually punitive. The Connecticut statute is not, therefore, in its penal effects, unique, nor are they out of relation or proportion to a decedent’s delinquency.

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Bluebook (online)
260 U.S. 647, 43 S. Ct. 233, 67 L. Ed. 439, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-co-v-blodgett-scotus-1923.