Carnill v. McCaughn

30 F.2d 696, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 8486, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 991, 7 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 8486
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 13, 1929
DocketNo. 13682
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F.2d 696 (Carnill v. McCaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnill v. McCaughn, 30 F.2d 696, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 8486, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 991, 7 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 8486 (E.D. Pa. 1929).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

A ruling in this ease was withheld until counsel could incorporate in their briefs cases pending at the time of the argument of this caso. The pending cases have been decided', and we now have these briefs.

The complaint out of which the cause of action arises is the unlawful exaction of a tax payment. Following the Pennsylvania Practice Act of 1915 (Pa. St. 1920, § 17181 et seq.) the defendant has set up the lawfulness of the tax. A demurrer issue is thus raised. The pertinent facts are that plaintiff’s decedent in his lifetime made a transfer of property to a trustee, reserving to himself the income from the property dining his life, the remainder going at his death to named beneficiaries. The interests of the latter were vested and absolute, and there was no power of revocation or control over the gift retained by the donor.

The pertinent dates are: (1) Date of creation of trust, August 13, 1920. (2) Effective date of Tax Act, June 2, 1924. (3) Date of death, July 12,1925.

We have had the benefit of a full discussion of the questions deemed to arise presented by experienced counsel, who qualify as experts in tax cases. It is because of this that we, with very great diffidence and not a little hesitation, have made the ruling of the case to turn upon a question which not only counsel for plaintiff does not raise, but which counsel for plaintiff and for defendant agree is out of the case. The compulsion of conviction, however, leaves us no choice but to adhere to the view ”we have taken.

As we view it there are three questions which the ease presents: (1) Was the transfer here “intended to' take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death”'of the grantor, within the meaning of the Tax Act of 1924? (2) Do the provisions of the law apply to transfers made before the passage of the act? (3) If so, is the act in this feature constitutional ?

The respective counsel agree in ignoring the second question. As we view it, this controls, and the answer we make to it renders it unnecessary to discuss either of the other questions, except in so far as the first throws light upon the second. As, however, it would be ungracious to put upon counsel the burden of defending a judgment based upon what he thought to be untenable grounds, and as a different answer to the second question than that which we make would leave the whole case unruled, we include the others in the discussion. We assume counsel for plaintiff will be able to reconcile himself to the conclusion we have reached on the theory that, although it does him no good, it does him no harm.

The general scheme of taxation which is sought to be enforced by the act of .1924 (43 Stat. 253) was put into effect in 1916 (39 Stat. 756) in the modern development of it. Whether the appropriate name of the tax is an estate tax, transfer tax, succession or inheritance tax, or an excise tax, measured by the value of the estate passing at death, the primal thought was to impose it, based upon the estate of the decedent at the time of his death. This is still the primal thought, and is expressed in section 301 of the present act (26 USCA § 1092). If the tax acts stopped here, what constituted the estate of a decedent would he determined by the state laws, and be in practical effect under the control of the taxpayers. The effect of this upon the tax payments called for a succession of additional provisions in the tax laws.

Following them, not chronologically, but in the order set forth in the act of 1924, we have the general fact situation that an owner of property, for the purpose of cutting down the tax payment, might before his death grant away estates or interests in his property. We thus have (1) the provision that, if at any time he has transferred his property in contemplation of his death, the value of such property shall bo deemed, for tax purposes, to form part of his estate, and a transfer within two years of death was presump[698]*698tively such a transfer. There was then (2) provision made for the possible situation of a practically testamentary disposition of property at the death of decedent, through the device of a transfer to take effect at or after the death of the grantor. This was met by the provision that a transfer “intended to taire effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death” of the grantor should likewise, for tax purposes, form part of his estate. There was still (3) the possible situation of a transfer in trust absolute in form, but over which, by the reservation of. a power of revocation or the like, the grantor retained control of the final disposition of the property as fully as if the transfer had not been made; and finally (4) there was the situation of the release of such an existing ■power by the grantor in contemplation of his death.

The taxing situation thus became this: A tax was payable based upon the estate of a decedent as the law of the domicile of the decedent determined that estate to be, but that estate was, for taxing purposes, to have added to it, in the determination of what it was, the value of any property of which the decedent in his. lifetime had made a, transfer under any one of the four situations above outlined.

With respect to situations (1) and (4), we assume that no question* of the application of the act-arises, because they are aimed at what is nothing else than a plain attempt to evade the payment of a tax by a gift causa mortis. So, likewise, with respect to situation (3), because there the gift was gift or no gift at the will of the grantor, as fully to all practical intents and purposes as if no transfer had been made. Whether it was such transfer was not determined until “at or after the death” of the grantor.

Respecting, however, situation (2) we have reached the conclusion (with, as we have said, great diffidence, because thus far we have found no one to agree with us) that it applies only to transfers made after the law was enacted. Evil consequences resulting from a law, whether foreseen or unforeseen, do not abrogate the law; but it has always been an accepted canon of construction that the effects and consequences are accepted as guiding lights in the interpretation of a statute.

Since the impressive recital of the evil consequences of a retroactive statute in cases such as the instant one, which was voiced in the opinion in Nichols v. Coolidge, 274 U. S. 531, 47 S. Ct. 710, 71 L. Ed. 1184, 52 A. L. R. 1081, Congress may be presumed by anticipation to have had them in mind. There is a situation so common to the experiences of all lawyers that Congress must have had it presented. A man or woman having in eon- . templation a second marriage, and wishing to assure the children of the first marriage of their fair share of his or her estate, creates a trust for their benefit, reserving a life estate and the fair share of the second spouse and possible children by the second marriage. Surely there is nothing unlawful, nor anything against public policy, in such an arrangement. If there is anything in an existing law subjecting the remaining-estate to a tax, measured by including the value of that with which the grantor has parted, he can provide for this by imposing a condition upon the gift; but, if a law thereafter made subjects his remaining estate to such a tax, the effect may be to greatly reduce, if it does not wholly absorb, the estate he leaves. Indeed, the estate may be rendered insolvent.

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Related

Shwab v. Doyle
258 U.S. 529 (Supreme Court, 1922)
Lewellyn v. Frick
268 U.S. 238 (Supreme Court, 1925)
Nichols v. Coolidge
274 U.S. 531 (Supreme Court, 1927)
Chase National Bank v. United States
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11 F.2d 520 (Third Circuit, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 696, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 8486, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 991, 7 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 8486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnill-v-mccaughn-paed-1929.