Citizens National Bank of Paris v. Calvert

515 S.W.2d 142, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 1974
DocketNo. 12106
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 515 S.W.2d 142 (Citizens National Bank of Paris v. Calvert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens National Bank of Paris v. Calvert, 515 S.W.2d 142, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Appellants acted in behalf of the estate of Ethel Burnsides, deceased, in bringing this lawsuit against the proper officers of the State of Texas to recover inheritance taxes and interest in the sum of $20,748.35, paid under protest in May of 1972.1

The cause was submitted to the trial court, sitting without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts, supplemented by testimony on behalf of defendants. From a judgment that plaintiffs take nothing, the representatives of the estate have appealed and bring two points of error. We will overrule the points of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Under their points of error, appellants contend:

(1) that no death tax is levied in Texas by Article 14.12 (additional inheritance and transfer tax), V.A.T.S. Tax.-Gen., Title 122A, inasmuch as no federal estate tax is now imposed by the Federal Revenue Act of 1926, which has been replaced by the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, to which Article 14.12 makes no reference but instead refers to the 1926 Act;

(2) that in any event the Federal Estate deductions payable out of the gross estate in Texas should be deducted in computing the “net estate in Texas,” With the result that the tax under Article 14.12 could not exceed $308.19.

Under their first point appellants contend that no tax whatever is now levied by Article 14.12, inasmuch as no Federal estate tax is now imposed by the Federal Revenue Act of 1926, which has been repealed.

Appellants’ reasoning appears to be that since the maximum tax imposed by Article 14.12(A) is equal to “eighty per cent (80%) of the total sum of the estate and transfer taxes, imposed on such estate by the United States Government under the Revenue Act of 1926,” an Act under which the United States no longer imposes a tax, then “eighty percent of zero is zero” and “eighty percent of no tax is no tax.”

In this position appellants do not recognize that the existing and applicable statutes of both the state and the United States have brought forward the provisions necessary to preserve the system under which the states may compute local death taxes in relation to the levy made by the United States. In 1926, for the first time, the Congress of the United States allowed a credit of eighty percent of the federal estate tax for taxes paid to the states. (Sec. 301(b), Revenue Act of 1926) Under the prior Act of 1924 the credit was limited to twenty-five percent.

With passage of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, the Act of 1926 was repealed, but Section 301(b) of that Act was carried forward in identical language as Section 813(b) of the Code of 1939. Under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, the Act applicable to the estate involved in this appeal, the federal tax is imposed by Article 2001, and credit for state death taxes is prescribed by Article 2011.

The Legislature of Texas in 1959 revised the “inheritance tax and federal estate tax credit” statutes as Chapter 14 of Title 122A, Taxation-General (Acts 1959, 56th Leg. 3rd C.S., p. 187, ch. 1). Then, as now, the section designed to “Impose Additional Tax” on an estate by reason of [144]*144property of the estate “situated in this State and taxable under the laws of this State” provides that the tax “shall be equal to the difference between the sum of such taxes due this State as inheritance or transfer taxes and eighty per cent (80%) of the total sum of the estate and transfer taxes imposed on such estate by the United States Government under the Revenue Act of 1926 ...” (Art. 14.12(A), formerly Art. 7144a, Sec. 2b)

Similar references to the “Revenue Act of 1926” are made in subsections (B), (C), (D), and (E) of Article 14.12. (Formerly Secs. 3, 4, 5 and 8 of Art. 7144a) In 1965 the Legislature provided in Article 14.00A certain definitions, one being “(g) ‘Revenue Act of 1926’ includes amendments and revisions thereto.” (Emphasis added) (Acts 1959, 56th Leg. 3rd C.S., p. 187, ch. 1, art. 14.00A, added by Acts 1965, 59th Leg., p. 830, ch. 402, sec. 2, eff. July 1, 1965)

Credit for state death taxes, as originally provided by Congress in the Revenue Act of 1926, was preserved in the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 in Section 2011(d) which provides:

“(d) Basic estate tax. — The basic estate tax and the estate tax imposed by the Revenue Act of 1926 shall be 125 percent of the amount determined to be the maximum credit provided by subsection (b). The additional estate tax shall be the difference between the tax imposed by section 2001 or 2101 and the basic estate tax.”

The Code of 1954 prescribes rules which “represent a substantial simplification” of prior “complicated computation of the federal tax” which complications were brought about in 1932 when Congress “decided to effect a major increase in the federal tax rates.” (Stephens and Maxfield: The Federal Estate and Gift Taxes, 2d ed., 1972, sup. 1973, pp. 13-14) Under changes found in the Statutes of 1932, “ . the 1926 tax was continued as the ‘basic tax,’ which served to determine the amount of the [state] credit, and an ‘additional tax’ was separately imposed, against which no credit for state death taxes was allowed. This accomplished the congressional purpose but unduly complicated computation of the federal tax; a dual computation was required, and computation of the ‘basic tax’ served no purpose other than to fix the maximum credit for state death taxes.” (Stephens and Maxfield, supra, p. 14)

Thus it is found in the Code of 1954 that “ . . . partly for the benefit of the state statutes that are geared to the federal ‘basic’ tax, the present statute includes a definition of ‘basic’ and ‘additional’ taxes in section 2011(d). Since the maximum credit provided in section 2011(b) is in effect 80 per cent of the old ‘basic’ tax, that tax is now defined as 125 per cent of the maximum credit. The additional tax is defined as the difference between the basic tax and the tax imposed by the 1954 Code.” (Stephens and Maxfield, supra, p. 14)

Further explanation of the changes effected in the Code of 1954, which were made without disturbing the credits for state death taxes, is found in American Jurisprudence, 2d Series: “Some state death tax statutes employ the terms ‘basic estate tax’ and ‘additional estate tax’ as used in the ’39 Code or the term ‘estate tax’ imposed by ‘the Revenue Act of 1926.’ [Emphasis added]u For the purpose of supplying a means of computing state death taxes under such local statutes (so-called ‘pickup’ taxes), the law continues to include a definition of such terms.” (34 Am.Jur.2d, 1974, sec. 8720, p. 857)

It is clear that the additional tax assessed by the Comptroller on the eighty percent credit allowed by the United States, when calculated under the formula now provided, resulted in an amount equal to eighty percent of the tax under the rates of 1926. The tax was lawfully assessed as provided under Article 14.12 and conformably to the formula permitted under the federal statutes.

We agree with appellees that since the allowable federal credit is the same in [145]*145amount as it was prior to repeal of the Revenue Act of 1926, and since the credit has been carefully and intentionally preserved in the Code of 1954, there has been no need to amend the Texas statutes dealing with the credit following enactment of the 1954 federal statutes.

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Related

Citizens Nat. Bank of Paris, Ill. v. Calvert
527 S.W.2d 175 (Texas Supreme Court, 1975)

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515 S.W.2d 142, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-national-bank-of-paris-v-calvert-texapp-1974.