Estate of Dillingham

238 P. 367, 196 Cal. 525, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 337
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1925
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8224.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 238 P. 367 (Estate of Dillingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Dillingham, 238 P. 367, 196 Cal. 525, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 337 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

Caroline Frances Dillingham died testate on January 30, 1922, a resident of Los Angeles County, state of California. On or about the twenty-first, day of February, 1921, and while she was residing in said county, she created a trust, the carpus of which consisted of 900 shares of the preferred capital stock and two shares of the common capital stock of the Dillingham Manufacturing Company, a Wisconsin corporation. The certificates of stock were turned over to the First Wisconsin Trust Company, a Wisconsin corporation, as trustee, and held by it subject to the terms and conditions of the trust instrument duly executed by her.

The provisions of the trust instrument pertinent to the point presented in support of the appeal are as follows:

“The trustee shall at convenient intervals remit to the donor the net income of said trust over and above its charges and expenses, so long as she shall live.
“Donor reserves the right to revoke this trust and to secure an accounting from the trustees and a reconveyance to her of the corpus and undistributed income of the trust after deduction of trustee’s credits, by notice in writing of said revocation. The trustee shall have a reasonable time to prepare and render its account to the donor and to re-convey the assets of the trust, including the corpus and undistributed income over and above its credits, to the donor. In the meantime during the lifetime of the donor and while this trust is unrevoked, the only right, title or interest of the donor in the property, the subject matter of this trust, is the right to receive such net income as shall be derived therefrom and a right to an accounting from time to time from the trustee.
“Upon the death of the donor the trust hereby created and defined shall terminate and be closed. The trustee shall distribute and convey the trust fund and any undistributed income thereof after its deductions, to the executor or administrator of the said donor, appointed and duly qualified.”

This trust was never revoked by Caroline Frances Dillingham during her lifetime. It continued in existence up to the time of her death, and the stock, which was the corpus thereof, was at the time of her death held by the First Wis *528 consin Trust Company, as trustee under said trust. On March. 7, 1922, the last will and testament of Caroline Prances Dillingham, together with three codicils thereto, were admitted to probate in said county, and letters testamentary were on said day issued to the First Trust and Savings Bank of Pasadena, which said institution was appointed executor of the last will and testament of said deceased. In the third codicil to her last will and testament the testatrix disposed of the Dillingham Manufacturing Company stock, held subject to the Wisconsin trust, share by share.

The inheritance tax appraiser, in her “Report of Inheritance Tax Appraiser” filed in the estate proceeding, taxed the persons receiving the Dillingham Manufacturing Company stock upon the value of the amount or number of shares of stock received by each. Objections to the report of the inheritance tax appraiser were filed and a hearing was had thereon. Upon said hearing the court found that at the death of Caroline Frances Dillingham the said First Wisconsin Trust Company of Milwaukee, and not Caroline Frances Dillingham, was seized and possessed of the preferred capital stock, and two (2) shares of the common capital stock of said Dillingham Manufacturing Company. The court further found that “said beneficial interest in the trust of said First Wisconsin Trust Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was not property of which Caroline Frances Dillingham was seized or possessed at the time of her death, and was not property within the state of California, at the time of the death of said decedent and did not pass to said legatees mentioned in her last will and testament and the codicils thereto or any of them under the laws of the State of California, but passed to said legatees under the laws of the State of Wisconsin and by the transfer to them of said shares of stock by said First Wisconsin Trust Company'of Milwaukee in the State of Wisconsin.” Pursuant to said findings the court decreed as follows: “That a decree fixing inheritance tax be made, wherein it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the transfer of said shares of stock from said trustee to the beneficiaries named in the last will and testament of said Caroline Frances Dillingham is not a taxable transfer under the laws of the State of California, and more particularly the Inheritance Tax Act of *529 the State of California, chapter 821, Statutes 1921.” This appeal is taken from the decree made and entered by said court determining the amount of inheritance tax on the shares or interest in said estate and ordering a refund of the $4,855.91 paid by the executor of the estate, in the course of administration, as inheritance tax upon the transfer of the aforesaid shares of stock.

Upon the hearing of the objections to the report of the inheritance tax appraiser in the lower court no oral evidence whatever was offered or received, but all of the files, records, and papers in the estate were introducd in evidence. A search of the record before us fails to reveal any evidence to support the finding of the court to the effect that the said shares continued to be owned by and to stand in the name of said First Wisconsin Trust Company of Milwaukee, until the same were transferred by said company to the order of the persons designated in the codicil of the last will and testament of said Caroline Frances Dillingham. Nor is there to be found any evidence supporting the finding of the court below that the executors of the last will and testament of Caroline Frances Dillingham did not at any time take possession of the said shares of stock, or the certificates representing the same. The only evidence contained in the record upon this phase of the case is contrary to the findings. It is found in the “First and Final Account, Report and Petition" for Distribution,” in which the First Trust and Savings Bank of Pasadena, California, as executor of the estate of Caroline Frances Dillingham, deceased, represents itself as chargeable with the shares of the preferred and common stock of the Dillingham Manufacturing Company “issued in the name of First Trust & Savings Bank of Pasadena, California, Executor of the Estate of Caroline Frances Dillingham, deceased.” It would seem, therefore, that the finding upon this particular phase of the case is not supported by the evidence adduced upon the hearing of the objections to the report of the inheritance tax appraiser, and that the evidence does show that the certificates of stock in question were, subsequent to the death of Caroline Frances Dillingham, and during the course of the administration of her estate, indorsed over, by the First Wisconsin Trust Company, to the First Trust and Savings Bank of Pasadena, California, executor of the *530 estate of Caroline Prances Dillingham, deceased, and new stock certificates issued to and in the name of said executor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 367, 196 Cal. 525, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-dillingham-cal-1925.