Bomberger's Estate

47 Pa. D. & C. 627, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 444
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Lancaster County
DecidedApril 6, 1943
Docketno. 36
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Pa. D. & C. 627 (Bomberger's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bomberger's Estate, 47 Pa. D. & C. 627, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 444 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

Appel, P. J.,

Exceptions on behalf of the Commonwealth to the adjudication filed by this [628]*628court in this estate aver that this court erred in its method of fixing the transfer inheritance tax imposed upon this estate under article I, sec. 1, of the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, as amended, 72 PS §2301, and the rates at which such taxes are to be calculated under section 2 of this act, as amended by section 1 of the Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 721, 72 PS §2302.

The Commonwealth’s contention is that no part of the estate is subject to a two percent tax, but that the whole taxable estate is subject to collateral transfer inheritance tax at the rate of 10 percent under the facts and for the reasons hereinafter set forth.

No creditors of decedent or persons other than the Commonwealth, as to the tax, and the distributees of the estate, as to the amounts which they are to receive after deduction of the tax, are interested in the determination of these exceptions.

The facts which give rise to these exceptions will be considered in chronological order, together with such parts of the laws of wills and of descent and distribution of decedents’ estates as are applicable to such facts as they develop in each phase of the discussion of the facts.

On March 2, 1926, the present decedent, being a widow, without children or descendants, possessing a considerable personal estate and seized of several parcels of real estate, executed her will disposing of her estate for the support of her father and after his death to her brothers and sisters.

On January 16, 1929, decedent married William A. Bomberger. There were no children born of this marriage.

On August 16, 1941, decedent died without having changed her will (in which no provision for her husband had been made, it having been executed before the marriage), and was survived by her husband and by brothers and sisters named in the will.

The rights of the husband in this decedent’s estate [629]*629were established under section 21 of the Wills Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 403, as amended by the Act of May 20, 1921, P. L. 937, 20 PS §273, providing as follows:

“When any person, male or female, shall make a last will and testament, and afterward shall marry . . . and shall die leaving a surviving spouse ... so far as shall regard the surviving spouse . . . shall be deemed and construed to die intestate; and such surviving spouse . . . shall be entitled to such purparts, shares, and dividends of the estate, real and personal, of the deceased, as if such person had actually died without any will.”

See Neill’s Estate, 222 Pa. 142, Pfanenschmidt’s Estate, 35 Montg. 135 (1919), Shestack’s Estate, 267 Pa. 115 (1920), and Shoch’s Estate (No. 1), 271 Pa. 158 (1921).

In Edwards’ Appeal, 47 Pa. 144 (1864), the testator made his will on September 10, 1856, devising his estate, real and personal, in trust for the benefit of his friend, Sarah Devitt, to whom he was married on February 11, 1858. On August 10, 1860, testator died, leaving to survive him his widow, and on August 25, 1860, a son was born to the widow. The court, at page 152, said:

“Upon this state of facts it is safe and easy to say that the marriage revoked the will as to Mrs. Edwards. The revocation as to her did not depend on the provision made for her, it resulted absolutely as a legal consequence of the marriage. The statute annexes the condition of provision to the children, not the widow. As to ‘child or children not provided for in such will,’ it. is revoked; but as to children who are provided for, it is not revoked by the marriage of the testator and birth of issue. The revocation as to the widow, I repeat, was absolute the instant of the marriage. It did not wait for her election, any more than it depended on the provision made for her. And a will revoked is as if it had never been made. The statute plainly declares this to [630]*630be the effect of revocation; the testator shall be deemed and construed to die intestate, and his estate, so far as concerns the parties in behalf of whom the revocation occurs, is distributable ‘as if he, had actually died without any will.’ ”

The purparts, shares, and dividends in this estate which vested in the surviving husband immediately at the time of decedent’s death under section 2(a) of the Intestate Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 429, and the Act of June 11, 1917, P. L. 755, 20 PS §11, was the sum of $5,000 and one half of the real and personal estate remaining after payment of all just debts and legal charges.

From the chronological statement of facts in this case it is unnecessary to decide whether decedent’s will was revoked on the date of the marriage by the marriage or was revoked on the date of her death. The status of the husband remained the same from the one date to the other. The material and important facts and the law1 applicable thereto, so far as concerns the present discussion, are that on the instant that testatrix’s spirit fled from her body or was borne away all estates, rights, and liabilities which depended on that death became absolute, fixed, and established. At that instant, the surviving husband by operation of law became absolutely seized With title to and right of possession of the share, estate, interest or proportion of the decedent’s estate which was cast upon him by the laws to which reference has been made. These came to and vested in him in the same manner and with the same legal incidents of ownership as if decedent left no will or testamentary disposition of any kind or character. At the same instant of decedent’s death her brothers and sisters came into their inheritance under the will, not, however, to the full extent mentioned therein or intended thereby, but subject, in quantity and quality to modification by the absolute and vested rights of the surviving husband in the estate. True, the values of [631]*631the estate or their proportionate admeasurement to the parties was not then determined, but the rights were so established and fixed that under proper legal procedure the values and admeasurements could be ascertained and secured.

At the same instant that the rights of certain persons in decedent’s property became fixed the long-reaching and inescapable taxing arm of the Commonwealth stretched out and seized the property left by decedent with a transfer inheritance tax liability claim or lien which it was necessary to pay, satisfy, and discharge, as the price reserved by the Commonwealth upon the payment of which the owners would be entitled to receive their property from decedent:

The nature and character of this tax is discussed in Tack’s Estate, 325 Pa. 545 (1937), at page 548:

“The right to transmit or to receive property by will or through intestacy is not a natural right but a creature of statutory grant. Students of law agree that the State has the right to declare an escheat of all the property of a decedent, and therefore, as the price of allowing a legatee, devisee or heir to inherit, it may appropriate to itself any portion of the property which it chooses to exact. Whether this appropriation be designated an inheritance tax, an estate tax, a succession tax, a death duty, or otherwise howsoever, it is not, in its essence, a tax on the decedent’s property or any component part of it, or on the transaction of transferring it as in the case of a transmission of possession or title inter vivos, but an excise on the privilege of inheritance.

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Related

Tack's Estate
191 A. 155 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Lintner's Estate
147 A. 92 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Commonwealth v. Presbyterian Hospital
134 A. 427 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Cochrane's Estate
20 A.2d 305 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Easby's Estate
131 A. 652 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Shugars v. Chamberlain Amusements Enterprises, Inc.
130 A. 426 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Edwards's Appeal
47 Pa. 144 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1864)
In re Estate of Handley
37 A. 587 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Neill's Estate
70 A. 942 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)
Jackson v. Myers
101 A. 341 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
Shestack's Estate
110 A. 166 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Billings's Estate
110 A. 768 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Shoch's Estate
114 A. 502 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Pa. D. & C. 627, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bombergers-estate-paorphctlancas-1943.