Barber's Estate

155 A. 565, 304 Pa. 235, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 13, 1931
DocketAppeals, 112 and 113
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 155 A. 565 (Barber's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber's Estate, 155 A. 565, 304 Pa. 235, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 489 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

The register of wills made a supplemental appraisement in the estate of Margaret M. Barber for the purpose of assessing an inheritance tax. It covered a trust fund valued at $500,000 which decedent, during her lifetime, had transferred to the Board of Missions for Freedmen of the Presbyterian Church hereinatfer referred to as the Board. As a result, a tax was assessed amounting to $30,000. The orphans’ court sustained the assessment, and this appeal by the Board and by the executors followed. The questions are the same in both cases.

The trust fund of $500,000 was transferred under five separate instruments. In all of them, the term “annuity gift” was used. Regardless of what a gift may be called in determining the validity of the tax, the legal effect of the terms and conditions of the various instruments must be ascertained.

The first agreement of 1916 recited that the grantor desired “to make an annuity gift” of $100,000 to the *238 Board for the endowment of the Barber Memorial Seminary at Anniston, Alabama, the principal “to be held in perpetuity and the income only to be used” toward the running expenses or the enlargement or equipment of such institution. It provides that the Board “shall pay to Mrs. Barber......interest at the rate of 5% per annum upon the principal given until her death. At her death the income of her annuity gift is to be used as above set forth.”

Another similar gift of $100,000 was made shortly afterward, in 1918, the only difference being the rate of percentage to be paid to Mrs. Barber, which was 4% instead of 5%.

A third agreement in 1920 referred to the two prior agreements and gave an additional $200,000 with interest at 4% to be paid to Mrs. Barber during her lifetime. This agreement introduced a new feature in that the Board was to pay Mae Lynd, during her lifetime, yearly interest at 5% on $50,000. At the death of Mae Lynd, the income was to be used as the other income for the seminary as stated in the foregoing agreements. The Board in this instrument declares that it “holds the above recited fund of $400,000 [the total sum covered by the three agreements] in trust to apply the income from the same, after the payment of the annuities above provided [during the lives of the donor and Miss Lynd]......and after the death of the persons named, the whole of the income” to the Barber Memorial Seminary as heretofore set forth.

The fourth agreement made a further contribution of $50,000 on the same terms and conditions with the interest rate at 5%. In this there is an acknowledgment by the Board that they would apply the income from the $450,000 held in trust, after the payment of the annuities, to the running expenses, etc., of the institution mentioned. The final payment of $50,000 was made on October 20, 1925. Interest at the rate of 5% was to be paid , to Mrs. Barber under this instrument which also *239 contained an acknowledgment by tbe Board similar to tbe preceding ones.

Tbe Act of Jnne 20, 1919, P. L. 521, provides that a tax shall be imposed on the transfer of any property by deed or gift made in contemplation of the death of the grantor or donor or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death. The fact that property, a sum of money, was transferred by being placed in a trust, will not affect its taxability if the profits (income) from it were intended to take effect in enjoyment after death. The Commonwealth’s power to levy such tax, under such circumstances, cannot be doubted.

Did the various instruments here involved create such a pecuniary benefit in such fund, and was it intended by the instruments that it should take effect in enjoyment after death? If it, did, the tax will follow.

It is the Commonwealth’s contention that the beneficial enjoyment of the trust fund remained in Mrs. Barber, during her lifetime, and at her death this beneficial enjoyment took effect when all the income was to be applied for the benefit of the seminary by the trustee, the Board.

Appellant’s contention is that the grantor in requiring interest to be paid to her at a given rate percentage each year was merely using a convenient method to determine the amount of an annuity, and that the word “interest” was not used in the sense of compensation for the use of money, but to designate or measure the annuity payable, and, further, that this annuity became a personal obligation of the Board, dissociated from the fund itself, which had become part of its property absolutely when the agreements were executed and the trust fund delivered, and, therefore, that it was not subject to a tax.

While the legislature in its tax statutes is not supposed to assume a hostile attitude toward citizens, it frequently occurs that its administrators reach out to bring within the grasp of the statute subjects which *240 only conjecture may bring within its intent. A tax statute like the collateral inheritance tax should receive a reasonable construction to effectuate the purpose intended. A subject-matter should not escape taxation that is fairly brought within the act when no purpose is expressed for an exemption: Phila. v. Ridge Avenue Passenger Ry. Co., 102 Pa. 190. On the other hand, it is not the function of a judicial tribunal “to impose taxation, which is a species of confiscating by a strained construction of doubtful legislation”: Com. v. New York, L. E. & W. R. Co., 145 Pa. 57, 64; Com. v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 129 Pa. 429, 451. Words should be interpreted in their popular meaning. Artificial or scientific meanings should be avoided. See Cooley on Taxation, volume 2, section 503, page 1115. The underlying principle of construction is to ascertain the legislative intent and give effect to it. As the Commonwealth is seeking to impose a tax on the property, the burden is on it to show that it clearly came within the tax statute. If there is doubt or uncertainty as to the imposition of the tax, that doubt or uncertainty should be resolved in favor of the taxable. The burden is on the Commonwealth to show, first, that the agreements contemplated the payment of income or profits as distinguished from the fixed charge that had no relation to the principal, and, second, that the actual receipt of the income at Mrs. Barber’s death was what was intended to. be covered by the statute by the words “take effeet in enjoyment after death.”

The Act of April 7, 1826, section 1, and, of May 6, 1887, P. L. 79, use much the same language as the Act of 1919, with a few exceptions not material here. These acts have been construed in a number of cases, some of which were reviewed in Todd’s Est. (No. 2), 237 Pa. 466. In that case at various times after “A” made her will, she paid to the churches the amounts of such legacies, taking from them obligations or “annuity notes” by which they agreed to pay her interest on the amounts *241 during the term of her natural life. She had also taken such notes from the churches to which she had previously made gifts in her will. The court held that the entire amount of the gifts represented by these annuity notes was subject to collateral inheritance tax.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A. 565, 304 Pa. 235, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbers-estate-pa-1931.