Estate of Letchworth

255 P. 195, 201 Cal. 1, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 430
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9339.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 255 P. 195 (Estate of Letchworth) 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 Letchworth, 255 P. 195, 201 Cal. 1, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 430 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This appeal is from an order of the superior court of the county of Los Angeles fixing the inheritance tax to be paid by the devisees under the last will and testament of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased. Sarah E. Letch-worth was the surviving wife of Pierre E. Letchworth and the sole devisee under his will. Pierre E. Letchworth died June 1, 1924. His will was admitted to probate in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles and his estate was administered upon in said court. Pending the settlement of her deceased husband’s estate, and on April 16, 1925, the said Sarah E. Letchworth died, leaving two sons as her sole devisees. Her will was also admitted to probate in said superior court and letters testamentary issued thereon. Upon the final settlement of the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, the property belonging to said estate was distributed to the estate of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, and upon the final settlement of the latter estate the property belonging thereto was distributed to her two *3 sons as her sole devisees. The property of the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, was appraised at $99,033.93. The expenses of administration, the debts of said deceased, and such other charges as were necessary to close said estate amounted to the sum of $11,546.31. The latter sum deducted from the total appraised value of said estate left $87,487.62 as the net value of the property of said estate. From this amount was deducted the sum of $24,000, the exemption allowed by the statute to the surviving wife. The amount remaining, the sum of $63,487.62, was the amount upon which an inheritance tax was actually paid in the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased. Due to the fact that the property left by the said Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, was income producing, the amount of property actually distributed in the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, as appraised in said estate was $93,638.44. This property was distributed to the estate of Sarah E. Letch-worth, deceased, and was appraised in the latter estate at the sum of $102,190.44. In computing the tax to be paid by the heirs of said Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, the inheritance tax appraiser in said estate fixed the value of the property distributed to said estate upon which a tax had been actually paid in the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, at the sum of $65,510.77, which amount was found to be exempt from inheritance tax in the Sarah E. Letchworth estate under subdivision 2 (b) of section 6 of the Inheritance Tax Act (Stats. 1921, c. 821). It is not necessary for any purpose in this proceeding to discuss the method by which the inheritance tax appraiser arrived at the above result, except to state that in arriving at this result, among the deductions made by him from the appraised value of the property to which the estate of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, succeeded from the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, was the sum of $24,000, being the exemption allowed the wife under said statute. Upon the report of the inheritance tax appraiser the court fixed the tax to be paid by the heirs of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, and in accordance with said report, and it is from this order that this appeal has been taken. It is conceded by respondent herein that said computation was erroneous in certain respects and that the amount of property distributed to the estate of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, *4 from the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, upon which a tax had been paid in the estate of Pierre E. Letch-worth, deceased, and which was therefore exempt from tax in the estate of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, under said statute, was the sum of $78,190.94 instead of $65,510.77 as fixed by said inheritance tax appraiser. This amount was obtained by deducting from said sum of $102,190.94, the appraised value in the estate of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, of the property distributed to said estate from the estate of Pierre E. Letchworth, deceased, the sum of $24,000, the exemption allowed the surviving wife under said statute. The principal controversy in this proceeding from its inception, and the only one now remaining after the concession of respondent just referred to, involves the right to deduct said sum of $24,000 from the appraised value of the property distributed from the estate of the husband to the estate of the wife for the purpose of determining the amount of property belonging to the wife’s estate, which is exempt from an inheritance tax. The respondent contends that said deduction was proper and allowable under the terms of the statute and the amount of the exempt property coming from the husband’s estate to the wife’s estate was the sum of $78,190.94 only. Appellant, on the other hand, insists that said deduction should not be made and that no tax whatever should be paid by the devisees under the will of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, upon any part of said sum of $102,190.94 coming to her estate from that of her deceased husband.

The solution of this controversy depends upon the construction to be given to subdivision 2 (b) of section 6 of the Inheritance Tax Act already referred to and which reads as follows: “All property transferred by a decedent to any person described in the first subdivision of section four, providing the same was transferred to such decedent not more than five years prior to his death by another decedent of the class described in the first subdivision of section four, and a tax paid thereon, shall be exempt.”

The persons “described in the first subdivision of section four,” mentioned above, are “husband, wife, lineal ancestor, lineal issue of the decedent,” etc. The facts in this case bring it squarely within the terms of subdivision 2 (b) of said section 6. The property on which it is sought to *5 collect a tax from the devisees under the will of Sarah E. Letchworth, deceased, was acquired by her by will from her husband within five years prior to her death and by her will this same property was devised to her two adult sons. Was all this property exempt from inheritance tax in the second or the wife’s estate or was only that portion of it exempt from tax which was not exempt from an inheritance tax in the estate of the deceased husband? In other words, was the exemption of $24,000 which the statute gave to Mrs. Letchworth as the surviving wife of her husband exempt also from an inheritance tax upon its transfer by her will to her two sons?

It is well settled in this state, as well as in other jurisdictions where the laws provide for the collection of an inheritance tax, that the tax imposed by the inheritance tax statute is on the transfer of the property or on the right to succeed to the property rather than on the property itself (In re Wilmerding, 117 Cal. 281 [49 Pac. 181]; McDougald v. Low, 164 Cal. 107 [127 Pac. 1027]; Estate of Potter, 188 Cal. 55 [204 Pac. 826]; Estate of Bodwitch, 189 Cal. 377 [23 A. L. R. 735, 208 Pac. 282]; Estate of Watkinson, 191 Cal. 591 [217 Pac. 1073]).

Appellant argues, therefore, as the tax was on the transfer of the property and not on the property itself, that when the tax was paid by the Sarah E. Letchworth estate on the property transferred to it from the estate of Pierre E'. Letchworth, deceased, it was paid upon the transfer of all of the property received by said estate of Sarah E.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 195, 201 Cal. 1, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-letchworth-cal-1927.