Estate of Teddy

214 Cal. App. 2d 113, 29 Cal. Rptr. 402
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1963
DocketCiv. No. 20752
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 214 Cal. App. 2d 113 (Estate of Teddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Teddy, 214 Cal. App. 2d 113, 29 Cal. Rptr. 402 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

214 Cal.App.2d 113 (1963)

Estate of MARTIN FREDERICK JOSEPH TEDDY, Deceased. ALAN CRANSTON, as State Controller, Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
RUTH ANNA GIANASSI, as Executrix, etc., Objector and Respondent.

Civ. No. 20752.

California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. Two.

Mar. 15, 1963.

Charles J. Barry, Chief Inheritance Tax Attorney, Milton D. Harris, Senior Inheritance Tax Attorney, and R. Edgar Sanderson, Associate Inheritance Tax Attorney, for Petitioner and Appellant.

Henry C. Clausen, Sheldon C. St. Clair, Henry C. Clausen, Jr., and Clausen & St. Clair for Objector and Respondent.

KAUFMAN, P. J.

Martin Frederick Joseph Teddy died testate on August 13, 1960, naming the respondent, Ruth Anna Gianassi, as executrix and the residuary legatee of the bulk of his estate. On this appeal by the Controller of the State of California from an order of the probate court sustaining respondent's objection to the report of the inheritance tax appraiser and fixing the tax, the only question presented is whether the respondent is entitled to be classified as a Class A transferee under section 13307, or as a Class D transferee under section 13310 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.

The record reveals the following facts: Respondent was born on July 21, 1896. Her natural father died in 1905 and her mother thereafter took in boarders. In January 1911, her mother met the decedent at a party. About two months later, the decedent came to live with respondent, her mother sister and uncle, as a paying roomer and boarder. A friendly relationship developed between the decedent and respondent's mother. Soon thereafter, there was talk of a marriage between the respondent's mother and the decedent. Thus, on the respondent's 15th birthday (July 21, 1911), the decedent was living in respondent's mother's home and paying board and room. Respondent and her sister welcomed the idea of decedent as a stepfather. During this entire period, the decedent paid his board and room, made gifts of clothing and other items to the respondent and her sister, and helped their mother in disciplining them. On July 15, 1913, less than one *116 week prior to respondent's 17th birthday, the decedent and respondent's mother were married.

The inheritance tax appraiser in his report classified the respondent as a Class D transferee, a "stranger," and taxed her legacy at the higher rate and lower exemption under section 13407 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. Respondent filed her objections to this report, contending that she was entitled to the lower rates and higher exemption provided for a Class A transferee by section 13404 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. The trial court found that the respondent was a Class A transferee pursuant to section 13307 of the Revenue and Taxation Code and accordingly fixed the tax under section 13404.

Appellant contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law, as a paying roomer and boarder cannot stand in the mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent to his landlady's daughter, and that the evidence does not support the conclusion that the respondent has met all of the statutory prerequisites for classification as a Class A transferee.

Section 13307 of the Revenue and Taxation Code provides, so far as relevant: " 'Class A transferee' means any of the following: * * * (c) A transferee to whom the decedent for not less than 10 continuous years prior to the transfer stood in the mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent, if the relationship commenced on or before the transferee's fifteenth birthday."

[1a] The case is one of first impression, although the above portion of the statute has been in effect since 1905 (Stats. and Amendments to the Codes 1905, ch. CCCXIV, 2, p. 342). A reading of the statute indicates that subsection (c) contains three prerequisites before the transferee can qualify as a Class A transferee: (1) the existence of a mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent (between the decedent and the transferee); (2) the commencement of this relationship before the 15th birthday of the transferee; (3) the duration of the relationship for 10 continuing years prior to the transfer. As the third item is not in issue here, we will confine our discussion to the first two requirements. The first requirement of the mutually acknowledged relationship first became law in 1903 (Stats. 1903, ch. CCXXVIII, pp. 268-269), and the second in 1905 (Stats. 1905, ch. CCCXIV, p. 342).

[2] As our inheritance tax statute was taken bodily from the former New York inheritance tax statute (McDougald v. *117 Lilienthal, 174 Cal. 698, 700 [164 P. 387]), the interpretation of the New York courts is relevant as an indication of the qualities which transform an ordinary affectionate relationship into the "mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent." The first case (In re Moulton's Estate (1895) 11 Misc. 694 [33 N.Y.S. 578, 1 Gibbons 257]) arose under the New York statute which, like the pre-1905 California statute, required only a mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent. The question was whether a mutually acknowledged parent-child relationship existed between an uncle and his nieces. The surrogate's court concluded that the relationship did not exist, as it appeared that the nieces did not leave their own parents and go to the home of the testator but that after the death of their father, the uncle went to live with their mother and became a member of their household. He contributed his share of the household expenses and while not dependent on them for maintenance, he received at their hands the attention and care one would naturally expect from an affectionate sister and nieces, but he did not make any sacrifice for his nieces and did not support or educate them. The court continued at page 579: "The word 'acknowledged' would seem to indicate that it was necessary that the deceased person had held the person to whom the transfer was made out to the world as a child, or as one to whom he bore that relation, or that he treated and considered such a one as a child; and that the word 'mutually' would seem to require that such a relation was mutual, and that the character of the relation was reciprocal."

The next case, In re Beach's Estate (1897) 154 N.Y. 242 [48 N.E. 516], also arose under the old version of the inheritance tax statute after some lower court decisions had indicated that the clause referring to the mutually acknowledged relation of a parent applied only to illegitimate children. The New York Court of Appeals settled the interpretation of the statute by stating that the clause was intended to have a broader scope and to include "... those cases, not infrequent, where a person without offspring, needing the care and affection of some one willing to assume the position of a child, takes, without formal adoption, a friend or relative into his household, standing to such person in loco parentis or as a parent, and receives, in return, filial affection and service." (P. 518 [48 N.E.].)

In the Beach case, the legatee was a married lady of middle age living with her husband and who had resided for the *118 statutory period with the testator and had managed the household affairs of the testator. The court held that the fact that at the inception of the relation, the legatee was adult, did not take the case out of the statute or prevent the existence of the mutually acknowledged relationship of a parent.

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Bluebook (online)
214 Cal. App. 2d 113, 29 Cal. Rptr. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-teddy-calctapp-1963.