Blodgett v. Bridgeport City Trust Co.

161 A. 83, 115 Conn. 127, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 161 A. 83 (Blodgett v. Bridgeport City Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blodgett v. Bridgeport City Trust Co., 161 A. 83, 115 Conn. 127, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 115 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Haines, J.

The defendant is the duly qualified executor of the will and estate of Gregory S. Bryan who died a resident of Washington in this State October 22d, 1929. On or about October 1st, 1930, the executor filed with the tax commissioner a sworn return for the purpose of the computation of the state succession tax as provided by law, and on or about October 3d, 1930, the tax commissioner computed the tax and filed his computation with the Court of Probate. One of the items of the computation was a tax of $35,448.12 upon a bequest and devise to Harvard University provided in the eighth clause of the will as follows: “All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate both real and personal, and wherever situate, I give, devise and bequeath to the Trustees of Harvard University at Cambridge, to be retained as a perpetual memorial, known as the ‘Gregory Seeley Bryan’ fund or building or professorship or whatever other form the memorial may in the discretion of the Trustees assume.” The amount of the residue was determined to be $474,642.34.

Thereafter on October 17th, 1930, the Court of Probate after hearing, disallowed the proposed tax upon the bequest and devise in question and held it untaxable; and on November 5th following, the tax commissioner appealed from the action of the Court of Probate to the Superior Court in Litchfield County and by agreement of parties the case was reserved for the advice of this court.

The parties have stipulated that “The President and *131 Fellows of Harvard College (often referred to as the ‘Trustees of Harvard University’) is a non-stock corporation existing under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and organized under an Act of the General Court of said Commonwealth passed in 1650 and entitled ‘The Charter of the President and Fellows of Harvard College,’ which was amended by an Act of said General Court passed in 1657 and entitled ‘An Appendix to the College Charter,’ and was confirmed by an Act passed by the General Court in 1707 entitled ‘Extract from a Resolve of the Provincial General Court, passed A. D. 1707, Declaring the College Charter of 1650 Not Repealed,’ etc., and by Articles of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts adopted in 1780.

“Said corporation was in good faith formed for charitable and educational purposes, and from the date of its organization to the present time has been conducted in good faith solely as a charitable and educational institution exclusively for the purposes for which it was incorporated.

“Said corporation has no shareholders. No officer, member, fellow, overseer or employee of said corporation has ever received or has ever claimed to receive from said corporation any share, directly or indirectly, of any pecuniary profit or financial advantage derived from the exercise by said corporation of its corporate powers, or from the investment and management of its funds and properties, except reasonable compensation for services rendered in effecting one or more of the purposes for which said corporation was organized, or as proper beneficiaries of a strictly charitable purpose.

“Said corporation, neither directly nor indirectly, owns or controls any money, securities, or other assets *132 except such as have been given to it charged with a trust to use the same to promote education.”

The questions of law raised by this appeal are agreed upon and stated in various ways, but they present, essentially, one question only: Whether under the statute law of this State, the bequest and devise to Harvard College in the eighth clause of the will as quoted, is subject to a succession tax?

At the date of the death of the testator, October 22d, 1929, the provisions of our statute law governing succession and transfer taxes were contained in Public Acts of 1929, Chapter 299, which became General Statutes, Rev. 1930, § 1367. The applicable provisions of that section were as follows: “There shall be exempt from the tax imposed by this chapter all transfers to or for the use of . . . any corporation, institution, society, association or trust, wheresoever incorporated or organized, formed for charitable, educational, literary, scientific, historical or religious purposes, provided the property transferred is to be used exclusively for one or more of such purposes; but no such transfer shall be so exempt if any officer, member, shareholder or employee of such corporation, institution, society, association or trust shall receive or may be lawfully entitled to receive any pecuniary profit from the operation thereof, except reasonable compensation for services in effecting one or more of such purposes or as proper beneficiaries of a strictly charitable purpose . . .” In the Court of Probate and upon the appeal to the Superior Court, this was the only question presented: As to whether the gift to Harvard College was or was not exempt from taxation under the provisions of Public Acts of 1929, Chapter 299, § 8, now General Statutes, § 1367, in force at the time the decree was entered in the Court of Probate?

Upon the stipulated facts, this gift would clearly be *133 exempt under the first clause of the Act in question. The uncertainty arises under later provisions of the Act, which deny exemption if any officer, member, shareholder or employee “shall receive or may be lawfully entitled to receive any pecuniary profit from the operation” of the institution.

The appellant rests his contention that the gift is taxable upon our decision in Canterbury School, Inc. v. New Milford, 111 Conn. 203, 149 Atl. 685. In that case we were dealing with a property tax and with a corporation without capital stock formed under the statute law of this State. The tax statute there involved was Chapter 319 of the Public Acts of 1927 (now General Statutes, § 1163), which exempted the property of Connecticut corporations “organized exclusively for scientific, educational, literary, historical or charitable purposes or for two or more such purposes and used exclusively for carrying out one or more of such purposes. . . . provided (a) any officer, member or employee thereof does not receive or at any future time shall not receive any pecuniary profit from the operations thereof, except reasonable compensation for services in effecting one or more of such purposes or as proper beneficiary of its strictly charitable purposes.”

The appellant calls attention to the similarity-of language in that Act and the one now under consideration. He avers that this similarity is the important feature of his case and draws the inference that the intent of the legislature was the same in both Acts; and therefore claims the reasoning and conclusion in the Canterbury School case controls the present situation and renders the decree of the Court of Probate erroneous. A careful reading, however, shows a dissimilarity in one important particular which is the very feature of the Act of 1927 which our decision *134 turned upon. That Act referred specifically to profit from the operation of the school either (1) presently or (2) at any future time, and we held that since it did not appear that profit might not be obtained at some future time, the second requirement was not met and the exemption could not be allowed.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 83, 115 Conn. 127, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blodgett-v-bridgeport-city-trust-co-conn-1932.