Decker v. Williams

215 S.W.2d 679, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 9741.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 679 (Decker v. Williams) 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
Decker v. Williams, 215 S.W.2d 679, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1255 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

McClendon,- chief justice.

This is an inheritance tax suit, brought under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act, Art. 2524 — 1, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. by the executor of the will of Dr. Williams (W. C. Williams, deceased) against the officials (County Judge of Hays County, and State Comptroller) to determine the classification, whether Class A, Art. 7118, or Class E, Art. 7122, V.A.C.S.), of 1, Mrs. Tarbutton (Myrtle Williams Tarbutton, the daughter of a sister of Dr. Williams’s deceased wife, Myrtle M. Williams, and a legally adopted daughter of the latter) and 2, her two children, Ann (Ann Tarbutton) *680 and William (William Tarbutton III), as beneficiaries under Dr. Williams’s, will. The trial court’s judgment decreed that Mrs. Tarbutton and each of the children fell in Class A. The officials have appealed.

Dr. Williams and his wife, Myrtle, were married some years prior to 1928. She died January 12, 1945. Neither spouse ever had any natural child. October. 18, 1945, Dr. Williams married Mae'Rector Williams, who survived him. June 15, 1928, Mrs. Myrtle M. Williams executed an instrument adopting Mrs. Tarbutton (then Myrtle Penn, seven years old), in which Dr. Williams joined pro forma only, the instrument reciting that he “joins herein for the purpose of consenting to and approving the adoption of the minor, Myrtle Penn, by his said wife, but it is expressly understood that the adoption hereby is the act only of the said Mrs. Myrtle M. Williams and does not affect the estate of W. C. Williams, her husband, who joins herein only for the purpose of giving validity to the act of the said Mrs. Myrtle M. Williams, if his consent and joinder be necessary.” At the same time Mrs. Carrie Penn, “a widow and mother of said minor,” executed an instrument, “in consideration of said adoption,” transferring her parental authority and custody over the minor to Mrs. Williams and surrendering to her “full authority and custody over said child.” Both instruments were recorded June 5, 1928.

Based upon the following considerations, we have reached the conclusion that the trial court correctly placed Mrs. Tarbutton in Class A; 'but that her two children fall in Class E.

The original Texas inheritance tax law, passed in 1907, Art. 7487, R.C.S.1911, levied a tax upon all property in Texas passing by will “to or for the use of any person except the father, mother, husband, wife or direct lineal descendants of the testator”. In State v. Yturria, 109 Tex. 220, 204 S.W. 315, 316, L.R.A.1918F, 1079, decided in 1918,. it was held (Mr. Justice Greenwood writing) that although an adopted child was not a “direct lineal descendant” of the adopter, yet “as it was the privilege of a child of Daniel (Francisco) Yturria, under Article 7487, to have property within the jurisdiction of this state pass to him, by will or descent, without payment of an inheritance tax, and as the persons adopted by Daniel (Francisco) Yturria were entitled, by the plain terms of Article 2 (R.S.1911, which provided that the party adopted should have all the rights and privileges of a legal heir of the party adopting him) to the same privilege, .it follows that Daniel Yturria and Ysabcl Garcia were privileged to take the property devised to them by their adopter, without payment of the inheritance tax * * *. But we do not fe'fel'warranted in extending to others the rights and privileges, which are confined by the adoption statute to the adopted persons, and therefore conclude that the property devised to the children of the persons adopted by Francisco Yturria was subject to the payment of the inheritance tax.” In 1923 the inheritance tax statute was amended classifying all beneficiaries of estates in Texas passing by will or inheritance and providing for certain exemptions and graduated rates of taxation. Class A the preferred class, carried forward in the 1925 codification as Art. 7118, provided that:

“If passing to or for the use of husband or wife, or any direct lineal descendant or ascendant of the decedent, or to legally adopted child or children, or to the husband of a daughter or the wife of a son, the tax shall be one per cent on any value in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars, * *

In 1931 the then existing adoption statutes were repealed in toto, and a new adoption law enacted, S.B. 383, Chap. 177, p. 300, Laws Reg.Sess. 42nd Leg., Art. 46a, V.A.C.S., under which a proceeding in court was required. The pertinent provisions of this amendment will be noted later.

In 1935, the above portion of Art. 7118 was amended to read:

“If passing to or for the use of husband or wife, or any direct lineal descendant of husband or wife, or any direct lineal descendant or ascendant of the decedent, or to legally adopted child or children, or any direct lineal descendant of adopted child or children of the decedent, or to the husband *681 of a daughter, or the wife of a son, the tax shall be one (1) per cent on any value in excess of Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000) * * (Italics ours to indicate wording added by 1935 amendment.)

It seems plain to us that Mrs. Tarbutton is included in Class A, as amended in 1935, independently of the adoption amendment of 1931. The phrase, “direct lineal descendant,” therein applied to “husband or wife” must of necessity be given the same meaning that this phrase was given when applied to the testator in the prior act as interpreted in the Yturria case. Appellants contend, however, that “husband or wife” in this phrase means surviving husband or wife. Obviously the only possible meaning of these words in the clause, “passing to or for the use of husband or wife,” is- surviving spouse. But the same words in the clause, “to the husband of a daughter, or the wife of a son,” were interpreted to include the surviving spouse of a deceased daughter or son, for reasons stated in Lewis v. O’Hair, Tex.Civ.App., 130 S.W.2d 379. And this; even though the affinal relation between the testator and such surviving spouse had been broken by the prior death of the daughter or son.

We find no reasonable basis for limiting the classification here in issue -to direct lineal descendants of -a surviving spouse. The reasons are just as cogent for inclusion of lineal descendants of a deceased spou-se. The reasoning of the O’Hair case is applicable here. An analogous situation was presented in American General Ins. Co. v. Richardson, Tex.Civ.App., 132 S.W.2d 161, Error Ref., wherein the O’Hair case was cited. No analogy, however, is presented in the case -of a divorced spouse. Johnson v. Davis, Tex.Civ.App., 198 S.W.2d 129, Error Ref. NRE.

As to the two children, we quote from appellee’s reply to appellants’ supplemental arguments: “But for the change made in -the adoption laws’ of 1931, the bequests to the children of Mrs. Tarbutton are taxable at the rates argued by appellants.” In this we agree. The quoted language of the 1935 amendment to Art. 7118 is plain and unambiguous, and -excludes und-er the Yturria holding the chi-1-dren -of -an adopted child o-f t-h-e testator’s spounse (living or dead). Resort may not be had therefore to the caption or emergency clause of the act to limit -or -enlarge its meaning.

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215 S.W.2d 679, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decker-v-williams-texapp-1948.