Boe v. Steele County

19 N.W.2d 921, 74 N.D. 58, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 52
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1945
DocketFile 6950
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 19 N.W.2d 921 (Boe v. Steele County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boe v. Steele County, 19 N.W.2d 921, 74 N.D. 58, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 52 (N.D. 1945).

Opinion

*59 Christianson, Ch. J.

The plaintiff Boe brought this action as Executor of the Last Will and Testament of Hans Hansen to recover the sum of $2363.52 which he, as such executor, paid as estate tax upon the estate of said Hans Hansen in excess of the amount of estate tax actually and legally due from or chargeable to or upon said estate.

The material and undisputed facts are substantially as follows :

The Last Will and Testament of Hans Hansen was admitted to probate in the county court of Steele County and Letters Testamentary were issued to the plaintiff Boe. By the terms of said Will Hans Hansen disposed of the whole of his estate as follows: (1) Bequests to various persons, aggregating in all $9700.00; (2) Bequests, aggregating in all $14,000.00, to domestic religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations; (3) Bequests, aggregating in all $57,925.25, to foreign religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations. In due course of administration, the plaintiff as executor prepared a verified estate tax return upon the form prescribed by the tax commissioner and filed the same with the county court, together with a copy of the Last Will and Testament and the Inventory and Appraisement. In such return the plaintiff claimed as exempt from estate tax the bequests made both to the domestic and to the foreign religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations, for the purpose of carrying on religious, charitable, and educational work. The county court determined that the bequests for religious, charitable, and educational purposes to domestic religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations, aggregating $14,000.00, were exempt from the estate tax and should be deducted from the value of the estate in computing the tax; but the court refused to exempt and to deduct from the valuation of the estate the bequests (aggregating $57,925.25) made for such purposes to foreign religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations, and required that the plaintiff amend the estate tax return so as to conform with the determination so *60 made. Upon the valuation as so fixed the connty court by order made October 29, 1940 assessed the estate tax at $2557.52. On February 14, 1941 the plaintiff paid the full amount of the estate tax as assessed by the court. It is admitted that at the time the tax was assessed and paid, the county court and the State Tax Commissioner were of the honest but mistaken belief that bequests to foreign religious, charitable, and educational corporations, societies, and associations for religious, charitable,' and educational purposes were not exempted from the estate tax; and that the plaintiff paid such tax in reliance upon the action of the public officials and in the honest but mistaken belief that the amount assessed by the county court was the correct amount of such tax.

On March 24, 1942 this court in the decision rendered in McKee v. State, 71 ND 545, 3 NW2d 797, ruled that the provisions of the Estate Tax Act exempting from an estate tax ‘The amount of all bequests, legacies, devises, or transfers . . . to or for the use of any corporation, institution, society, or association, whose sole object and purpose is to carry on charitable, educational, or religious work,’ apply to bequests, legacies, devises, or transfers to any such corporation, institution, society, or association located without the state as well as to one located within the state.” The plaintiff, upon becoming aware of this decision and of the error that had been made in the determination and assessment of the estate tax, which the plaintiff had paid, filed an application with the county court calling attention to the fact that the tax which had been assessed and which the plaintiff had paid was excessive under the decision of the Supreme Court of North Dakota rendered interim the payment of the estate tax and the filing of such application, and demanded a refund of the sum of $2363.52, the amount which the plaintiff had been required to pay and had paid in excess of the estate tax which might legally be assessed and collected. On January 6, 1943 the county court made an order granting the application for refund. In such order the court found that the plaintiff had overpaid the correct and lawful estate tax by $2363.52 and directed the county treasurer of *61 Steele Comity to pay the same to the plaintiff as an overpayment of the ■ estate tas. The State Tax Commissioner disapproved such order of the county court, specifying as a ground of disapproval that no appeal had been taken from the order of the county court made October 29, 1940 making the assessment ; that such order had become final and was res judicata of the amount of the tax. Thereupon the plaintiff brought this action to recover the amount of the overpayment and in his complaint alleged in substance the above-stated facts. The defendants in their answer, in effect, admitted the allegations of the complaint and asserted as a defense that no appeal had been taken from the order made by the county court of Steele County dated October 29, 1940 determining and assessing the estate tax; that such order had become final and was res judi-cata of the amount of the tax. The defendants as a further defense asserted that “there was no mistake or involuntary payment of the estate tax so determined sufficient in law to, entitle the plaintiff to a refund of the estate tax so paid or any part thereof; and that the county court of said Steele County was without jurisdiction or power to make said order dated January 6, 1943” ordering a refund and repayment of the amount of the overpayment. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the overpayment, and the defendants, Steele County and the State of North-Dakota, have appealed from the judgment.

In appellants’ brief it is said that the issues on this appeal are as follows:—

1. Whether the failure of the plaintiff to appeal from the order of the county court datéd October 29, 1940, which assessed the estate tax, operated to make such order final and conclusive and deprived the county court of jurisdiction to enter the order made January 6,1943 directing that the overpayment be repaid.
2. Whether the payment of the estate tax made by the plaintiff on February 14, 1941 was a voluntary payment, and if it were, whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount of the overpayment.

*62 The provisions of the estate tax laws of North Dakota, in force at the time the tax was assessed and paid and the order for refund made, pertinent to the consideration and determination of the issues thus stated are as follows:—

“Each judge of the County Court shall have full authority, and it shall be his duty to assess the taxes hereby imposed at the time of probate . . . Laws 1927, ch 267, § 4, subdiv 1. (ND Rev Code 1943, § 57-3714.)
“It shall be the duty of the County Court having jurisdiction over any estate to assess the tax payable thereon before final decree of distribution of said estate has been made . . . .” Laws 1927, eh 267, § 4, subdiv 2. (ND Rev Code 1943, § 57-3714.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 N.W.2d 921, 74 N.D. 58, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boe-v-steele-county-nd-1945.