Central Trust Co. v. State Tax Commissioner

178 S.E. 520, 116 W. Va. 37, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 12
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1935
Docket8070
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 520 (Central Trust Co. v. State Tax Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. v. State Tax Commissioner, 178 S.E. 520, 116 W. Va. 37, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 12 (W. Va. 1935).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The executors of the estate of John R. Shanklin, deceased, complain of the action of the circuit court of Kanawha county in approving as correct in every respect the state tax commissioner’s assessments against the transfer of the several bequests provided for in decedent’s will.

Shanklin died on June 13, 1933, leaving an estate, after deductions on account of indebtedness, burial costs and administration expenses, of an appraised value of $71,227.03. According to such valuation the widow receives $17,388.20; the son $35,971.10; and the three grandchildren (children of the beneficiary son) $17,887.73, or $5,952.57 each. Against the foregoing the following assessments were made:

“3% of $4,776.40, bequest to Emma Y. Shanklin, widow of the deceased, and representing a total bequest of the present value of $17,388.20 less an exemption of $12,611.80. 143.29
Bequest to John A. Shanklin, son of the deceased
A. 3% of $21,741.20, proportionate allocation of the first $50,000.00.. $652.24
B. 5% of $14,229.90, proportionate allocation of the excess of $50,-000.00. 711.49 1,363.73
Bequest to John A. Shanklin, grandson of the deceased
A. 3% of $3,623.53, proportionate allocation of the first $50,'000.00.. 108.71
B. 5% of $2,339.04, proportionate allocation of the excess of $50,-000.00. 116.95 225.66
Bequest to Lucille Ann Shanklin, granddaughter of deceased
*39 A. 3% of $3,623.53, proportionate allocation of the first $50,000.00 . 108.71
B. 5% of $2,339.05, proportionate allocation of the excess of $50,-000.00. 116.95 225.66
Bequest to Elizabeth G. Shanldin, granddaughter of the deceased
A. 3% of $3,623.53, proportionate allocation of the first $50,000.00 108.71
B. 5% of $2,339.05, proportionate allocation of the excess of $50,-000.00. 116.95 225.66
Total. $2,184.00”

It is insisted on behalf of the appellants that the tax commissioner erred in his computation in the following particulars: (1) in applying the graduated rates provided in the statute to the $71,227.03 (total bequests), instead of to the interest of each beneficiary, considered as a unit; and (2) in failing to make allowance for exemptions in accordance with appellants’ construction of the statute.

A determination of appellants’ first contention is dependent upon a construction of sections 2 and 3, article 11, chapter 11, Code 1931, as amended and re-enacted by chapter 36, Acts (First Extraordinary Session) 1933.

It is apparent that article 11, chapter 11, Code 1931, when considered in the light of previous legislation on the subject in this state, beginning with chapter 31, Acts 1887, imposed an excise upon the right or privilege of acquiring property by inheritance or succession from deceased persons or by transfers made by living persons in contemplation of death, to be measured by the amount of each separate legacy or distributive share. Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, 20 S. Ct. 747, 44 L. Ed. 969. The title to the Act of 1904, and every amendment thereto, prior to the adoption of the Code of 1931, with but one exception (Acts 1929), contain the following: “relating to taxes on collateral inheritances, devises, distributive shares and legacies.” And, although the Act of 1929 stated in its title “relating to transfer of the estate of deceased persons,” there was nothing in its body *40 purporting to change the type of the tax or the manner of its computation.

And that the amendatory act of 1933 does not purport to change the type of tax theretofore imposed is conclusively shown by an added section (section 28) wherein the legislature imposes an “estate tax”, in addition to the “inheritance tax” (provided for in Code 1931, 11-11-1 to 27, inclusive), equal to the percentage of the federal estate tax allowed as credit. See 26 U. S. C. A. sec. 1093.

Sections 2 and 3, article 11, chapter 11, Code 1931, as amended by chapter 36, Acts (First Extraordinary Session) 1933, provide: “When the property * * * passes by any such transfer where the amount of the property considered as a unit shall exceed in value the exemption hereinafter specified, and shall not exceed in value fifty thousand dollars, the tax hereby imposed shall be; (a) Where the person or persons entitled to any beneficial interest in such property shall be the wife, * * * child, * * * or descendants of a living or deceased child per stirpes, * * * at the rate of three per cent of the market value of such interest in such property; * * *” (section 2); and “When the market value of any such property considered as a unit exceeds fifty thousand dollars, the rate of tax upon such excess shall be as follows: (a) Upon all in excess of fifty thousand dollars, up to and not exceeding one hundred fifty thousand dollars, the rate shall be as follows : Transfers to those persons in subdivision (a) of section two, five per cent * * *” (section 3). What is the effect of the insertion, by amendment of the words which we have italicized ?

Although, as we have seen, the value of the property received had been one of the determining factors in the measurement of the amount of the tax under the law as it had obtained prior to the amendatory act of 1933, the commissioner, on the theory that “considered as a unit” has reference to the total estate to be distributed, proceeded to make an apportionment of the distributive shares of the son and each of the grandchildren on the basis of $71,229.03, and to make charges at three and five per cent as heretofore indicated. The method of apportionment, whatever it is, is of *41 tbe commissioner’s own making. The statute makes no mention of an apportionment and provides no formula therefor, although all other processes are set forth in great detail. The liability of the personal representative for the tax (Code 1931, 11-11-9) adds no weight to the commissioner’s position, since “the person to whom the property is transferred” is likewise made liable. May not, as suggested by the appellants, the words “considered as a unit” have been inserted for the purpose of clearing up whether or not property refers to the total of all transfers (see section 1) to one beneficiary? Paragraph “(b)” (which is new) of section 4, chapter 36, Acts (First Extraordinary Session) 1933 supports this theory. It provides: “No transfer of less than one hundred dollars shall be taxable under this article. For this purpose all transfers from a decedent to the same transferee shall be treated as a unit.” It therefore seems clear, especially in view of the benign rule that such statutes are, in every ease of doubt, to be considered most strongly against the government and in favor of the taxpayer, that the latter construction must be adopted. Rice v.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 520, 116 W. Va. 37, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-state-tax-commissioner-wva-1935.