Central Union Trust Co. v. State

202 P. 853, 110 Kan. 153, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1921
DocketNo. 23,824
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 202 P. 853 (Central Union Trust Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Union Trust Co. v. State, 202 P. 853, 110 Kan. 153, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 186 (kan 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West?, J.:

Augustus D. Juilliard died about April 25, 1919, a resident and citizen of Orange county, New York, leaving a will which was probated in the surrogate court of that county in September, 1919. The plaintiffs are the executors of the will. The estate had among its assets three thousand shares of preferred stock and one thousand of common stock of the Santa Fe Railway, which at the death of the testator were worth $351,000. The will specifically devised the home and personal effects, and ordered all the rest, of the estate to be sold, the bequests to be paid, and the balance invested as the executors should see fit. The inheritance tax commission of this state, although allowing the deduction of the proportionate amount of the federal estate tax, ruled that specific bequests, debts and expenses of administration were payable first out of the domiciliary estate, leaving the Kansas property properly belonging to the nonresident decedent to fall into the residuary estate at full value unless there were debts or other claims in Kansas which would go to reduce the value of the property. The commission found that there were no debts or claims against the estate in Kansas or any creditors residing here and that the funds in the hands of the New York executors were more than sufficient to pay all the debts, expenses of administration, and specific bequests, and, therefore, the tax was required on the basis of the whole $351,000.

The plaintiffs insist that there should first be deducted from the gross value of the Kansas assets the proportionate amount of the total indebtedness of the estate and that only the net value of the Kansas assets so ascertained should be used as a basis, which would in this case lower the inheritance tax payable in Kansas approxi[155]*155mately $10,000 below the sum required by the commission. The plaintiffs appealed, from the order of the commission to the district court of Shawnee county where in the second division the ruling of the commission was reversed, and from that ruling this appeal is taken.

Kansas passed the first inheritance tax law in 1909, chapter 248 of the Laws of 1909, which was repealed by chapter 330 of the Laws of 1913. The legislature of 1915 enacted chapter 357 which has since been in force. By chapter 319 of the Laws of 1917, the state tax commission was made the inheritance tax commission and given certain powers therein set forth. By chapter 305 of the Laws of 1919, section 11203, General Statutes of 1915 (being section 1 of the act of 1915), was amended in respect to the classification only. The language of the act of 1915 seems to provide unmistakably for the assessment of a tax in the ordinary acceptance of the term. But in this respect the act follows similar legislation of other states and the courts have held practically without exception that the sum required to be paid is not a tax in the ordinary sense of the word, but a mere exaction upon the right to receive property by inheritance or devise. In 1894, the supreme judicial court of Maine in State v. Hamlin, 86 Maine, 495, in considering a similar statute said:

“The tax provided for in the statute under consideration is clearly an excise tax. . . . It is true that the act contains some language indicating a tax upon property; but it should be construed according to its essential principle, object and effect. Substance, and not form or phrase, is the important thing. All exactions of money by the government are taxes; but they are not all levied by assessment upon values, . . . The tax under this statute, is once for all, an excise or duty upon the right or privilege of taking property, by will or descent, under the law of the State.” (pp. 503, 504.)

The federal supreme court in Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, in an exhaustive opinion by Chief Justice White, went over the history and philosophy of inheritance taxes and after holding that the right to take property by devise is a creature of law and not a natural right, and, hence, one which may be taxed, said:

“Concluding, then, that the tax under consideration is not direct within the meaning of the Constitution, but, on the contrary, is a duty or excise, we are brought to consider the question of uniformity.” (p. 83.)

The supreme court of South Dakota in In re McKennan’s Estate, 25 S. D. 369, in 1910, went over the ground very thoroughly and reached a similar conclusion. This court in The State, ex rel., v. [156]*156Cline, 91 Kan. 416, 137 Pac. 932, in an exhaustive opinion by the late Justice Benson, reviewed the question legally and historically, holding that—

“An inheritance tax is in the nature of an excise upon the transfer, rather than a property tax, and the constitutional rule requiring uniformity in the rate of assessment of property, prevailing in this and other states does not apply.” (p. 420.)

The foregoing cases furnish a thesaurus of historical and legal knowledge upon the subject of inheritance taxes and settle beyond question the proposition that they are deemed a mere charge or excise upon the passing of property by inheritance or devise. (See, also, The State v. Mollier, 96 Kan. 514, 152 Pac. 771, holding that the tax is upon the right to- take the property.)

Counsel for the executors say that in determining the net value of the Kansas assets a proportionate amount of the indebtedness of the estate should have been deducted. They quote the provision of section 11206, General Statutes of 1915, that the tax upon the several shares of an estate shall be determined upon the actual value of the property at the time of the death of the decedent, and contend that this shows that it is the actual value of the property passing to the beneficiary which has to be considered, and which can be determined only after the deduction of the indebtedness. They suggest that the legislature expressly provided for the deduction of the indebtedness by section 2 of chapter 319 of the Laws of 1917, which says that in determining the amount of any tax the commission shall not be required to’consider any payments on account of debts or expenses of administration which have not been allowed by the probate court having jurisdiction of the estate. They call attention to the fact that the New York surrogate court allowed indebtedness against the estate amounting to over three million dollars and say:

“We know of no reason why the Kansas assets of this estate shall not bear a proportionate amount of the indebtedness.”

They also urge the inconsistency of deducting a percentage of the federal tax and not deducting anything on account of indebtedness, and insist that the two deductions stand upon the same footing. The points thus presented will be covered by what is hereinafter said, although they may not be further mentioned specifically.

Kingsbury v. Chapin, 196 Mass. 533, is cited in support of-the contention that the debts and expenses are chargeable upon general [157]*157assets, and it is said that Wieting v. Morrow, 151 Iowa, 590, follows the same rule. In the former case the executors brought a suit for instructions as to the amount they should pay for collateral inheritance tax under the Massachusetts law then in force.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 P. 853, 110 Kan. 153, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-union-trust-co-v-state-kan-1921.