Braden, Tax Comm. v. Senior

193 N.E. 80, 48 Ohio App. 255, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 193, 1 Ohio Op. 320, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 428
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1934
DocketNo 4397
StatusPublished

This text of 193 N.E. 80 (Braden, Tax Comm. v. Senior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braden, Tax Comm. v. Senior, 193 N.E. 80, 48 Ohio App. 255, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 193, 1 Ohio Op. 320, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 428 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*194 OPINION

By ROSS, J.

The statutes of Ohio define investaients in part as follows:

Sec 5323 GC. “* 4 4 Annuities, royalties, and other contractual obligations for the periodical payment of money and all contractual and other incorporeal rights of a pecuniary nature whatsoever from which income is or may be derived, however evidenced, excepting (1) patents and copyrights and royalties derived from each, (2) interests in land and rents and royalties derived therefrom, other than equitable interests divided into shares evidenced by transferable certificates * ~

The following sections are also pertinent:

Sec 5388 GC. “s * * In listing investments, the amount of the income yield of each for the calendar year next preceding the date of listing shall? excepting as otherwise provided in this chapter, be stated in dollars and cents and the assessment thereof shall be at the amount of such income yield. 4 * 4”
Sec 5389 GC. “* * 4 “Income Yield” as used in 85388 GC and elsewhere in this title means the aggregate amount paid as income by the obligor, trustee or other source of payment to the owner or owners, or holder or holders of an investment, whether including the taxpayer of not, during such year, * * V’
Sec 5322 GC. “ “Real Property” and “land”. The terms “real property” and “land” as so used, include not only land itself, whether laid out in town lots or otherwise, with all things containes therein but also, unless otherwise specified, all buildings, structures, improvements, and fixtures of whatever kind thereon, and all rights and privileges belonging, or appertaining thereto.”

Article XII, 82 of the Ohio Constitution provides that: “Land and improvements thereon shall be taxed by uniform rule according to value.”

It is contended by the defendant in error that the property sought to be taxed evidenced by the certificates is in reality in those instances involving land outside of Ohio, an interest in land outside of Ohio, and as to the land in Ohio is a tax upon an interest in land in Ohio; that in the first case being real property outside the state, it is beyond the jurisdiction of Ohio taxing authorities and in the case of the Ohio property, the tax is paid by the owners in possession, and this tax upon defendant in erron amounts to double taxation.

*195 It is further contended that the classification adopted is discriminatory, unfair, and illegal, in that legal interests in land, whether divided into shares and evidenced by transferable certificates or not are specifically exempted in the statute, as well as equitable interests in land not divided into shares evidenced by transferable certificates, (§5323, GC) while equitable interests in land divided into shares evidenced by transferable certificates are made taxable by the exception within the exception in the section of the code just noted. In other words, the tax is leveled at the particular interests last mentioned only, and that there is no material mark of distinction or differentiation except the division of the interest into shares evidenced by a transferable certificate.

Taking the first contention, that the tax is in effect an attempt to tax real estate outside the jurisdiction of the state of Ohio, as it is applied to the interests in trust involving land lying without the State, we consider this now disposed of by the case of Rowe v Braden, 126 Oh St, 533, in which case the identical section of the statutes herein involved was considered.

There is no more authority in a state to tax personal property without the state than there is to tax real estate. Anderson v Durr, Auditor et, 100 Oh St, 251, 259. Southern Pacific Co. v Commonwealth of Kentucky, 222 U. S., 63, 74.

The syllabus in the case of Rowe v Bra-den is as follows:

“Where R. created an irrevocable trust, with corpus located in another state, and appointed a trustee resident of such other state, who, under the terms of the trust, pays the beneficial interest thereof to the widow of R. as cestui que trust, a resident of this state, on the basis of income yield from such trust fund, §§5323, 5328-1, 5370, 5388, 5389 and 5638, GC (114 Ohio Laws, 714), known as the intangible tax law, requiring such cestui que trust as a. beneficiary of such trust fund to list and return such equitable interest in the property for the purpose of taxation, do not violate the Fourteenth Amendment or any other provision of the federal or state Constitution.”

In the 'opinion, the court say:

“These quotations from the opinion of the Supreme Court in our judgment demonstrate that the reasoning and principle by which the court reached its conclusion of the constitutionality of the Massachusetts statute were: (1) That the tax it imposed was on an equitable interest in property, owned and protected in Massachusetts, and distinct from the legal ownership of the trust in Pennsylvania; and (2) that as the domicile of the owner was in the state of Massachusetts this equitable property interest had its situs there, and was, in consequence, subject to the jurisdiction of that state for taxation purposes.
“The objection is made on behalf of the plaintiff in error that “we are here dealing with a property tax, not an income tax or an excise tax,” and that as the tax in question in the instant case is a property tax the case of Maguire v Trefry, Tax Commissioner, supra, is not in point.
“This objection is not well taken. The tax under consideration in the case of Maguire v Trefry, supra, and in the case of Maguire v Tax Commissioner, supra, affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, was declared to be a property' tax. In the latter case the court in its opinion said: ‘The tax here in question is a property tax. Tax Commissioner v Putnam. 227 Mass., 522, 531, 532 (116 NE, 904, L.R.A., 1917F, 806). Whether it be regarded as a tax on the right of the cestui que trust or a tax on the income as received, in either event a property tax’ is permissible.
“In the case of Maguire v Trefry, Tax Commissioner, supra, the court in its opinion said: “It is this property right belonging to the beneficiary, realized in the shape of income, which is the subject-matter of the tax under the statute of Massachusetts.”

“It is not material in the decision of this case, whether, as in Massachusetts, the tax imposed is designated a tax on income, which is derived from the resident beneficiary’s interest in the trust, or, as in Ohio, the tax imposed is designated a tax on the resident beneficiary’s interest in the trust, as measured by the income therefrom, because, under the ruling of the Supreme Court of- the United States in the case of Ijlaguire v Trefry, Tax Commissioner, supra, “It is this property right belonging to the (resident) beneficiary, realized in the shape of income,” which is taxed.

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Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 80, 48 Ohio App. 255, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 193, 1 Ohio Op. 320, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braden-tax-comm-v-senior-ohioctapp-1934.