Estate of Glessner v. Carman

118 S.E.2d 873, 146 W. Va. 282, 1961 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1961
Docket12055
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 S.E.2d 873 (Estate of Glessner v. Carman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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 Glessner v. Carman, 118 S.E.2d 873, 146 W. Va. 282, 1961 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1961).

Opinion

BrowNING, Judge:

Martha W. Glessner, a resident of Wheeling, Ohio County, West Virginia, died February 17, 1956. By her will, which was duly admitted to probate, she made specific bequests to various individuals and provided further that her executor should pay all inheritance and estate taxes that might be assessed against any *283 beneficiary. On December 11, 1956, her executor prepared and filed with the State Tax Commissioner the required Inheritance Tax Return, and paid the inheritance tax believed due. The amount of the tax was computed by applying the applicable statutory rate to the amount of the specific bequest. On January 7, 1957, an additional amount of tax was paid to the Tax Commissioner after a preliminary audit. Subsequently, on April 16, 1957, the executor applied for a refund of a portion of such taxes on the ground that the amount of Federal Estate Tax actually paid exceeded the amount claimed as a deduction on the Inheritance Tax Return. There followed several conferences and some correspondence between the parties until January 26, 1960, when the Tax Commissioner, by letter, informed the executor that the full amount of Federal Estate Tax paid was allowable as a deduction in computing the West Virginia inheritance tax. In the same letter, however, in recomputing the West Virginia inheritance tax, the Tax Commissioner treated the tax due upon each bequest, which the executor was directed to pay out of the residual estate, as an additional bequest, thus imposing a “tax on a tax ad infinitum”, and assessed a deficiency in the inheritance tax due in the amount of $3,061.90. The plaintiff, Wheeling Dollar Savings & Trust Company, as executor of the Last Will and Testament of Martha W. Glessner, then petitioned the Circuit Court of Ohio County, under the provisions of Code, 11-11-21, praying for an exoneration of such alleged deficiency.

On the trial of the case, the plantiff introduced the testimony of trust officers of three of Wheeling’s largest banks, all of whom testified that they had no knowledge of the method of computation used by the Tax Commissioner until, at the earliest, 1958, and that, since 1958, that method had been applied in some instances and disregarded in others.

The Tax Commissioner introduced the testimony of the Supervisor of the State Tax Department who testified that the instant method of computation had *284 been used by tbe department for at least five years, and that: Snob procedure is not set forth in writing; is not recorded in tbe Secretary of State’s office under tbe provisions of Code, 5-2-3; and is not set forth in any instructions or brochures which are sent out to fiduciaries to assist them in the preparation of inheritance tax returns.

The trial court, in a memorandum opinion, found for the plaintiff on the grounds that the “imposition of a tax upon a tax ‘ad infinitum’ was improper and unwarranted.”, and even if otherwise proper was improper in the instant case for failure to give proper notice, and entered judgment granting the relief prayed for on May 23, 1960, to which judgment this Court granted a writ of error on July 11,1960.

The sole issue for determination by this Court is whether the Tax Commissioner has the authority under the provisions of Article 11, Chapter 11, of the Code of this State to impose a tax upon the transfer of property by the terms of the Glessner will in a larger amount, since the will provided that such a tax would be paid from the estate of the testatrix, than could have been assessed against such propery if no such provision had been contained in the will. Code, 11-11-1, as amended, a very long section, begins with this language: “A tax, payable into the treasury of the State, shall be imposed upon the transfer, in trust, or otherwise, of any property, or interest therein, real, personal, or mixed, if such transfer be: (a) By will QJ, * ^

Section 2, entitled “Primary Rates”, relates to the specific transfer of property where the value of each transfer does not exceed $50,000.00. Different rates are established depending upon the relationship by blood of the devisees or legatees to their benefactor ranging from three per cent for a near relative to ten per cent for a beneficiary who is of no blood relationship to the decedent, and in each category the per centum rate of the tax is upon “the market value of such interest in such property.”

*285 Section 3 is entitled “Rates on Excess Market Value”, and relates in part to transfers by bequest or otherwise “When the market value of any such property exceeds fifty thousand dollars, * * *.” The tax rate upon such transfer is higher in each classification set up under Section 2. For example: If a stranger to the decedent received a bequest of $50,000.00 the rate is ten per centum of the market value of the property transferred, whereas if the value of the property is in excess of $50,000.00, but less than $150,000.00, the tax is at the rate of twelve per centum.

Section 4 is entitled “Exemptions” and provides, among other exempt transfers, that devisees or legatees within certain degrees of relationship stated therein shall receive property of varying values tax free. For example: A widow, or a widower, is entitled to an exemption of $15,000.00.

Section 5 is entitled “Determination of Market Value”, the first sentence of which is pertinent: “The market value of property is its actual market value after deducting debts and encumbrances for which the same is liable, and to the payment of which it shall actually be subjected. * *

The decedent by her will, after making several substantial charitable bequests that are exempt under the applicable statutory provisions, bequeathed her personal property to a sister, Ellen W. Wilson, which was appraised at $5,126.00, and made eight bequests of a sum equal to five per cent of her net estate, but not to exceed the sum of $50,000.00, seven to nieces and nephews, and one to Lillian H. Wilson, a stranger, as defined by statute. The Tax Commissioner imposed what the plaintiff refers to as “a tax upon a tax ad infinitum” upon each of these nine bequests. The mathematical formula by which the amount of the tax was fixed as to these bequests can best be illustrated by reproducing the figures applicable to Lillian H. Wilson, the stranger, this table being contained in briefs of both counsel for the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error:

*286 10% on $50,000.00
12% on 5,000.00
12% on 600.00
12% on 72.00
12% on 8.64
12% on 1.04
12% on .13
12% on .01
$55,681.82
(The bequest) $5,000.00
(Tax on the tax) $600.00
(Tax on the tax) 72.00
(Tax on the tax) 8.64
(Tax on the tax) 1.04
(Tax on the tax) .13
(Tax on the tax) .01

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.E.2d 873, 146 W. Va. 282, 1961 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-glessner-v-carman-wva-1961.