Cooley v. S. C. Tax Commission

28 S.E.2d 445, 204 S.C. 10, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 9, 1943
Docket15599
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 445 (Cooley v. S. C. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooley v. S. C. Tax Commission, 28 S.E.2d 445, 204 S.C. 10, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 64 (S.C. 1943).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is a proceeding, in the original jurisdiction of the Court, brought by the executors of the estate of Cornelia W. Roebling, deceased, involving the liability of the estate for income and inheritance taxes. The defendants are the South Carolina Tax Commission, and Honorable John M. Daniel, Attorney General. For the purposes of the limited problem now before the Court and hereinafter specifically defined, it suffices to say that the principal issue made by the complaint and answer, is whether thedpmicile (rési *14 dence?) of the testatrix at the time of her death and for some years prior thereto was in the State of South Carolina, so as to subject the estate to liability for inheritance and income taxes under the laws of this State relating to residents of the State (see Code, Secs. 2480, 2437).

The case was referred by this Court to Harold A. Mouzon, Esq., a Charleston attorney, as Referee, to take the testimony of the parties and to make findings of law and fact on the issue above stated. While the case was thus, under reference, and after hearings before the Referee had begun, a compromise agreement was entered into between the executors of the estate and the Attorney General (the latter acting on behalf of the South Carolina Tax Commission) under the terms of which the estate agreed to pay, and the Attorney General agreed for the State to accept, the sum of $400,000.00 in full settlement of all claims of the State of South Carolina for income and inheritance taxes which the Tax Commission had contended were payable by the estate.

In this state of the case, before the settlement was consummated by the payment of the agreed amount, and some weeks after the settlement agreement was entered into, a petition was filed with this Court by two of the three members of the Tax Commission attacking the compromise settlement on a number of grounds. The petitioners describe themselves as “W. G. Query and John P. Derham, as members of the South Carolina Tax Commission,” but no reason is given in the petition for the failure of the third member thereof to join in it. The counsel who signed the petition as attorneys for the petitioners are two eminent lawyers, one residing in Charleston and one residing in Columbia, neither of whom has any stated connection with the Tax Commission. The general counsel of the Tax Commission did not sign the petition.

Attached to the said petition is a notice of motion for an order “disapproving such settlement and any other settle *15 ment of the liability of the estate of the above-named decedent to the State of South Carolina for inheritance or income taxes until the issue of domicile of said decedent now pending in said cause shall have been adjudicated and determined.”

Upon said petition and motion, Associate Justice Stukes of this Court made.an order granting leave to file the petition and motion, providing for a hearing before this Court on the matters therein referred to at a stated time, and restraining the .consummation of the compromise settlement pending the hearing of the matter.

To the above-stated petition the Attorney General interposed a demurrer and also served an answer and return. There is no pleading on behalf of the third member of the Tax Commission who did not join in the making of the petition.

In broad outline the issue made by the petition and motion above referred to is whether, under the facts of this case, the making of a compromise settlement of the tax liability of the Roebling estate by the Attorney General was within or exceeded the powers of the Attorney General.

The matter was heard before this Court on the petition and motion above referred to, and the sole matter presented to and considered by the Court at said hearing was the above-stated question as to the power of the Attorney General to make a compromise settlement of the character in question. And that is the sole question with which we deal in this opinion. In other words, none of the questions of law or fact presented by the complaint and answer in the original cause are now before the Court or are in any way adjudicated by anything stated in this opinion.

In the above light it will be understood that wherever we refer hereinafter to the pleadings (except where otherwise stated) we are referring to the petition and motion of Messrs. Query and Derham, as members of the South Carolina Tax Commission, and to the answer and return thereto.

*16 The facts that need to be stated for a full understanding of the problem herein dealt with, are as follows:

The net estate of the testatrix, as appraised for inheritance and estate tax purposes, is approximately $6,550,000.00. The approximate value of such of the property of the estate as is located within the State of South Carolina is $200,000.00. The amount of the State inheritance tax on the whole estate as calculated by the Attorney General would be $593,200.00. As calculated by-the Tax Commission the tax would be $600,000.00. The claims of the State for income taxes, as calculated by the Attorney General, would amount to $150,-000.00 and by the Tax Commission, to $200,000.00. The amount of income taxes collectible would be $600,000.00 or more if fraud were established in connection with the faib ure to file annual returns, so as to render the statute of limitations inapplicable, but the record discloses no claim that fraud is involved. Thus it appears that the amount of the State’s claim, if fully sustained, is somewhere between $743,200.00 and $800,000.00.

The matters involved in the original complaint first came to the attention of the Tax Commission in July, 1942, when the attorney who had been the personal counsel of the testatrix in New Jersey addressed the Tax Commission on th.e subject of the domicile of the testatrix, evidently in response to inquiries that had been made of him by the .inheritance tax examiner of the Commission. The conclusion of his letter is: “Unless I hear from you otherwise I shall assume that it is in order for the executors to file with you the regular nonresident form of transfer inheritance tax return, as now contemplated.”

In reply to this letter, under date of July 9, 1942, the inheritance tax examiner said among other things: “It is in order for you to file with us the regular nonresident affidavit form in connection with this estate * *

The attorney replied to this letter under date of July 21., .1942,-saying among other things: “From your statement *17 that it is in order to file with the Commission the regular nonresident form of return for this estate, I am assuming and am so advising the executors, that the Commission is now fully satisfied that Mrs. Roebling was domiciled in the State of New Jersey at the time of her death and that the estate need concern itself only with the matter of preparing and filing as soon as possible the South Carolina return. If I am in anywise incorrect in this assumption, you will please advise.”

The inheritance tax examiner replied to this letter under date of July 23, 1942, referring to the requirements of the South Carolina law relating to the time of filing a nonresident return and indicating a willingness to grant an extension of thirty days without penalty.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 445, 204 S.C. 10, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-s-c-tax-commission-sc-1943.