Estate of Wartenhorst v. State

211 N.W.2d 705, 87 S.D. 538, 63 A.L.R. 3d 911, 1973 S.D. LEXIS 154
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1973
DocketFile 11063
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 211 N.W.2d 705 (Estate of Wartenhorst v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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 Wartenhorst v. State, 211 N.W.2d 705, 87 S.D. 538, 63 A.L.R. 3d 911, 1973 S.D. LEXIS 154 (S.D. 1973).

Opinions

WINANS, Justice (on reassignment).

The executor of the estate of Peter Wartenhorst, deceased, instituted this proceeding to obtain a refund of state inheritance taxes alleged by him to have been erroneously paid.

The facts have been stipulated and, in brief, are as follows: On or about September 11, 1970 an inheritance tax report and inventory in the matter of the estate of Peter Wartenhorst was filed with the South Dakota Department of Revenue and on September 15, 1970 the State of South Dakota entered into a stipulation with the estate as to the amount of inheritance tax due, based upon the valuation of the estate and claims as shown in the report. The stipulation was on October 6, 1970 approved by the court and payment of the tax was made on the same day.

On December 11, 1970 a proof of claim against the estate in the amount of $10,550.82 was presented to the court and allowed in the amount of $6,000. This claim was unknown to the executor at the time the stipulation was entered into and was not taken into account in the determination of the inheritance tax. On June 16, 1971 the executor of the estate made application to the Department of Revenue for a refund of $720 which was denied on August 31, 1971. The bona fides of the claim filed and allowed is not disputed by the state, nor is it disputed that the claim was timely filed, was unknown to the executor and had not been taken into account in the determination of the inheritance tax.

The settled record further discloses that from an adverse determination disallowing the claim for a refund by the Department of Revenue the estate petitioned for a judicial review by the circuit court and “that upon such review, the said Order of the Department of Revenue be vacated and the petition for refund be [540]*540granted.” The matter was tried to the court on October 15, 1971 and the trial court made its decision consisting of findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the Commissioner of Revenue of the State of South Dakota and judgment was entered on December 1, 1971, reading in pertinent part as follows:

“ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the Order of the Commissioner of Revenue of the State of South Dakota, dated August 31, 1971, denying to the said Estate of Peter Wartenhorst, deceased, its claim for refund of inheritance taxes paid by it, is hereby affirmed and the application for refund by said estate is hereby denied.”

From this judgment the estate appeals.

It is patent from the settled record in this case that the basis for the order denying the refund by the Department of Revenue and for the judgment of the circuit court upon review of such order is the holding in this court in 1928 in the case of Security National Bank v. Twinde, 52 S.D. 352, 217 N.W. 542, and the opinion of the Attorney General of the State of South Dakota found in the 1939-1940 AGR, p. 389. It is our opinion that the facts in Twinde, supra, are distinguishable from the facts here and that the sections of law involved in this court’s opinion in Twinde are likewise distinguishable from the sections of law involved in the case at bar. In Twinde the capital stock of the bank was listed as personal property, whereas it should have been listed as moneys and credits. As personal property the capital stock was taxed much higher than it would have been taxed as moneys and credits.

The law with respect to the refunding of real and personal taxes, as distinguished from inheritance taxes, at the time of Twinde is found in Sections 6813 and 6826 of the Code of 1919. Section 6813 of the 1919 Code is the source of SDCL 10-18-1, which provides six different situations, as it does now, where taxes may be abated or the tax, if paid, refunded by the Board of County Commissioners. The fifth reason for abatement or refund is:

[541]*541“(5) When taxes have been erroneously paid or error made in noting payment or issuing receipt therefor;”

Section 6826 of the Code of 1919, as amended, is the source of SDCL 10-27-2 and is generally referred to as the protest statute.

The bank sought to have a refund of the difference, claiming it erroneously paid the higher tax. The court in Twinde said:

“Was the tax ‘erroneously paid’ so as to be recoverable under the provisions of subdivision 5? It seems clear that the words ‘erroneously paid’ as here used cannot be applied to the payment of any tax which for any reason is invalid, as is contended by plaintiff. To give that meaning to these words would render superfluous all the other five subdivisions of the section. So construed, taxes would be. erroneously paid when the property was exempt from taxation or if the complainant was not the owner of the property, and in fact would be erroneously paid in this sense when paid in any situation presented in all of the six subdivisions of the section. We cannot ascribe to the Legislature the sedulous ineptitude implied in the supposition that it painstakingly enumerated in six separate subdivisions the specific situations in which a refund might be had if the plain language of one of the shortest of the subdivisions covered every situation enumerated in all the others.
We think the word ‘erroneously,’ as used in subdivision 5 of section 6813, must be taken in its ordinary sense of ‘mistakenly.’ There was no error or mistake in the payment made by the plaintiff. It paid the very tax and the amount of tax that it intended to pay; nor was there any error in noting the payment or in issuing the receipt. In our view, the words ‘erroneously paid’ were clearly intended to cover cases where payment was made under a misapprehension as to what was being paid. But a tax intentionally and understandingly paid, although the assessment was made or the tax levied in[542]*542correctly, is not erroneously paid, and we do not think that section 6813 was designed to allow a refund of taxes in such a situation.”

Twinde, supra, is one of those cases that must necessarily be limited in application to the fact situation with which it deals. The court there was concerned with the payment of ordinary taxes as we usually understand the term “taxes”. It was not writing law on inheritance taxes. That this is too plain to admit of any doubt is established because the court further wrote in Twinde that Sections 6813 and 6826, Code of 1919, “remains the only remedy for the recovery of taxes paid.” Section 6855, Code of 1919, was the law when Twinde was before the court and it provided, as its counterpart SDCL 10-41-83 does today, a remedy for recovery of inheritance taxes erroneously paid. SDCL 10-41-83 does not contain six different situation's where the tax may be refunded and the words “erroneously paid, wholly or in part” contained in this section are not boxed in and strictly and severely limited because of five other subdivisions of the same section, as they were in Twinde, supra. The court did not define the word “erroneously” standing alone. We write on a clean slate here.

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Related

Matter of Estate of Davis
524 N.W.2d 125 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1994)
Matter of Estate of Erdmann
447 N.W.2d 356 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1989)
Estate of Wartenhorst v. State
211 N.W.2d 705 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 N.W.2d 705, 87 S.D. 538, 63 A.L.R. 3d 911, 1973 S.D. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-wartenhorst-v-state-sd-1973.