Dunkle's Estate

16 Pa. D. & C. 45, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 5
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Clarion County
DecidedOctober 18, 1930
DocketNo. 9
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Pa. D. & C. 45 (Dunkle's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Clarion County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunkle's Estate, 16 Pa. D. & C. 45, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 5 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Harvey, P. J.,

This comes before us upon exceptions of the register of wills to the report of the auditor appointed to audit the first and final account of J. H. MeElwaine, executor of the last will and testament of Catherine Dunkle, late of Perry Township, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, deceased, and to distribute the funds in the hands of accountant to and amongst the parties entitled thereto.

At the hearing before the auditor were offered the will of the decedent, the inventory and appraisement of assets belonging to the estate, the appraise[46]*46ment on the part of the Commonwealth (for transfer inheritance tax), and the account of the executor of said estate filed at No. 9, December Term, 1929.

The account of the executor shows as follows, to wit:

Total assets...................................... $984.95

Total credits claimed.............................. 190.01

Balance for distribution to heirs and devisees.... $794.94

On the audit certain adjustments were made with respect to both charges and credits claimed, viz.:

Deduction from assets:

Gas rental accrued after death of decedent........’ . $41.65

Deductions from credits asked:

Personal property taken not appraised............. 11.50

The difference to be deducted from total set out in executor’s account........................ 30.15

Amount in executor’s hands belonging to estate...... $764.79

Deduct for costs of audit.......................... 73.38

Balance for distribution....................... $691.41

The whole of decedent’s estate, real and personal, was devised to her husband (not named), “to have and to hold during his natural life. He to have the rent, issues and profits thereof for and during his natural life.”

At the death of the husband, specific legacies were to be paid to certain persons “as they become of legal age (or are so),” viz.: To Mary Harshaw, $100 paid in full; Helen Harshaw, $100 paid in full; Girth (Gerda) Agney, $100 paid in full.

Legacies unpaid set out in auditor’s report: to George Milford Harshaw, $25; Grace Harshaw, $25. Residue payable to Catherine Harshaw.

After the death of Mrs. Dunkle, a settlement was made for state transfer inheritance tax upon her estate. In the computation certain items were claimed for deduction, viz.:

Undertaker’s and funeral costs..........................$350.00

Monument in cemetery.................................. 170.00

Medical attendance upon decedent....................... 28.25

Digging grave......................................... 20.00

Total .............................................$568.25

With these items allowed (together with other costs and expenses), the amount remaining in the estate was $28.75, upon which a tax of 10 per cent, (the heirs being collateral) was assessed, amounting to $2.88, and that amount was paid.

The first and final account of the executor was duly filed and referred to an auditor. The auditor filed his report August 25, 1930. The auditor in his report adverts to the fact that Margaret Curll, Register of Wills, made a claim for additional state transfer inheritance tax upon the estate on the basis of “the amount which goes to the heirs.” The auditor disallowed the claim of the register of wills for the additional transfer inheritance tax. The register of wills, tax agent for the state, filed exceptions to the report of the auditor August 25, 1930, as follows:

[47]*471. “The Auditor erred in not allowing the transfer inheritance tax of $38.57, with interest thereon at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum from May 15, 1929, to the date of payment for the following reason, to wit:

“The records in this case show that property in this estate to the value of $385.66 passed to and became vested in the heirs without the payment of any tax thereon.”

Mrs. Catherine Dunkle died May 15, 1928. Her husband (J. C. Dunkle) died in December, 1928. No appraisement was filed in the estate of Catherine Dunkle until February 25, 1929. The account of the executor was filed October 22, 1929. Aside from personal property belonging to the estate of Catherine Dunkle of the value of $11.50, not appraised, the only credits asked by the executor in his account were entirely the costs and expenses in the administration of the estate.

Of the several items, undertaker, monument, digging grave, doctor’s bill, witnesses proving will, register’s fees, granting letters, and accountant’s expenses, claimed for deduction in computation of state transfer inheritance tax, none were included in credits claimed in the executor’s account filed. They were paid by J. C. Dunkle during his lifetime. Who actually paid the $2.88 transfer inheritance tax, assessed on settlement and paid, is not shown. The register of wills does not ask a reappraisement of the estate. She claims solely upon the provisions in the law (Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, section 16, and amendments) : “The executor or administrator, or other trustee, paying any legacy .or share in the distribution of any estate of a resident decedent subject to the said tax, shall deduct therefrom at the rate of two per centum upon the whole legacy or sum paid to or for the use of father, [etc.] . . .; and at the rate of ten per centum upon the whole legacy or sum to be paid to or for the use of any other person or persons or bodies corporate or politic, [etc.].” Any state transfer inheritance tax, direct or collateral, shall be upon the “clear value of the property.” “In ascertaining the clear value of such estates, the only deductions to be allowed from the gross values of such estates shall be the debts of the decedent, reasonable and customary funeral expenses, bequests or devises in trust, in reasonable amounts, the entire interest or income from which is to be perpetually applied to the care and preservation of the family burial lot or lots, their enclosures and structures erected thereon; reasonable expenses for the erection of monuments or gravestones, grave and lot markers; and the expenses of the administration of such estates.” The several allowable items — (1) debts (doctor bill, $28.25; digging grave, $20); (2) funeral expenses, $350; (3) monument, $170; (4) expenses of administration, $18 — were deducted in the settlement for computation of state transfer inheritance tax. These were all paid by J. C. Dunkle, husband of decedent, in his lifetime, and no account therefor presented against the estate of his wife, Catherine Dunkle. It was by reason of the payment of these items by the husband that there was sufficient to pay the legacies under the will in full. The question to be determined in this instance is, whether or not the items for funeral expenses, monument, doctor bill and digging grave were primarily the legal obligations of the husband, J. C. Dunkle, paid by him and recognized by him as such, and, therefore, no claim made by him for the same against his wife’s estate for refund to him, thus leaving in her estate funds with or from which the executor “paying any legacy or share in the distribution” should “deduct therefrom at the rate of ten per centum upon the whole legacy or sum paid to or for the use” of collateral heirs. There is nothing in the will of Catherine Dunkle directing or providing for the payment of her debts and funeral expenses or the erec[48]*48tion of a monument.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Pa. D. & C. 45, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunkles-estate-paorphctclario-1930.