Estate of Willis

215 P.2d 453, 34 Cal. 2d 782, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 293
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1950
DocketL. A. 20696
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 215 P.2d 453 (Estate of Willis) 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 Willis, 215 P.2d 453, 34 Cal. 2d 782, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 293 (Cal. 1950).

Opinions

[783]*783EDMONDS, J.

The appeal of the Controller of the State of California from an order granting a refund of inheritance tax is based upon an agreed statement of facts and presents for decision only a question of statutory interpretation.

Bertram Paul Willis was bequeathed 691 shares of common stock of C. G. Willis and Sons. The inheritance tax appraiser fixed the value of the stock according to a balance sheet submitted by the corporation showing its assets and liabilities as of the date of testator’s death and Willis paid the tax found to be due upon the property bequeathed to him.

A few months later, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue levied against C. G. Willis and Sons a deficiency income tax for previous years and it was paid. It is agreed that if this had been determined at, or prior to, the time the inheritance tax appraiser made his appraisal, he would have taken such deficiency into consideration in determining the value of the stock and the inheritance tax due from Willis would have been $1,335.22 less than the amount which he paid.

Upon learning these facts, Willis filed a petition for a refund of the amount of the asserted overpayment. The petition was granted and the appeal is from that order.

Section 14401 of the Revenue and Taxation Code provides: “If any tax has been paid to the county treasurer on a transfer subject to a contingent incumbrance or any contingency which might burden, abridge, defeat, or diminish the estate of interest of the transferee, and the gift was valued without allowance for the incumbrance or contingency, upon the taking effect of the incumbrance or the happening of the contingency the person who paid the tax is entitled to a refund. ...” The Controller contends that this section is inapplicable to the facts of the present case because the taxable transfer of the shares of stock was of the entire interest of the testator and there was no contingency or contingent incumbrance restricting the legatee’s full enjoyment and ownership of such shares. Willis argues that the income tax assessment was an unknown contingency which necessarily affected the intrinsic value of the shares and that the equitable basis of the code section authorizes a refund to correct the valuation of the stock.

Section 14401 is based upon a statute enacted in 1893 (Stats. 1893, ch. 168, §2, p. 193), which provided: “When any grant, gift, legacy, or succession upon which a tax is imposed . . . shall be an estate, income, or interest for a term of years, or for life, or determinable upon any future or con[784]*784tingent event, or shall be a remainder, reversion, or other expectancy, real or personal, the entire property or fund by which such estate, income, or interest is supported . . . shall be appraised ... at what was the market value thereof . . . provided, that the person or persons . . . beneficially interested . . . may elect not to pay the same until they shall come into the actual possession or enjoyment of such property [in the event a bond is posted].” Obviously, this section was designed to regulate the taxation of presently enjoyed interests and contingent remainders or future estates. If the interest subject to a tax was determinable by a contingent event, the assessee might withhold payment of it until that event occurred.

The same language was carried into the amendment of the section made in 1895 (Stats. 1895, ch. 28, §1, p. 33). Each of these statutes was entitled “An act to . . . establish a tax on collateral inheritances, bequests, and devises.” Considering the purpose and scope of the legislation, unquestionably the term “collateral” was used to call attention to the fact that it applied to present and future estates including, in the latter category, a contingent interest.

The quoted language was retained by the Legislature in 1905 (Stats. 1905, eh. 314, §§5, 27, pp. 343, 350), and again in 1911 (Stats. 1911, ch. 395, §§ 5, 28, pp. 716, 727.) In each of these years the statute was reenacted. The 1911 version of it {supra, at p. 720 et seq.) reads: “In estimating the Value of any estate or interest in property, to the beneficial enjoyment or possession whereof there are persons . . . presently entitled thereto, no allowance shall be made on account of any contingent incumbrance thereon, nor on account of any contingency upon the happening of which the estate or property or some part thereof or interest therein might be abridged, defeated or diminished; provided, however, that in the event of such incumbrance taking effect as an actual burden upon the interest of the beneficiary, or in the event of the abridgement, defeat or diminution of said estate or property or interest ... a return shall be made to the person properly entitled thereto of a proportionate amount of such tax ... or so much as will reduce the same to the amount which would have been assessed on account of the actual duration or extent of the estate or interest enjoyed. . . . [When] the rights, interest or estates of the transferees are dependent upon contingencies or conditions whereby they may be wholly or in part created, defeated, extended or abridged, a tax shall be [785]*785imposed upon said transfer at the highest rate which, on the happening of any of the said contingencies or conditions, would be possible ...”

It is manifest that the Legislature, in using the word “contingencies,” was referring to a contingent interest in property which might affect “. . . the actual duration or extent of the estate, of interest enjoyed . . .’’by the one presently having possession or enjoyment. The word was used in its technical meaning, and described something by which rights, interests or estates might be “. . . created, defeated, extended or abridged, ” as in the case of a contingent remainder.

When the act was repealed and reenacted in 1913 (Stats. 1913, eh. 595, §§ 9, 26, pp. 1071, 1083) the provisions last quoted were left intact. Once again, the Legislature provided, in effect, that one presently enjoying an estate would not be permitted a tax allowance because of the existence of a contingent interest in another, but that in the event the contingency occurred and effected “. . . the abridgement, defeat or diminution of said estate or property or interest . . .,” the taxpayer would receive a proportionate return of the tax paid upon the market value of the whole estate.

A 1915 amendment (Stats. 1915, ch. 198, § 2, p. 436) retained the same language as did reenactments made in 1917 (Stats. 1917, eh. 589, §§ 8, 25, pp. 887, 901); in 1921 (Stats. 1921, ch. 821, §§ 8, 25, pp. 1507, 1522); in 1927 (Stats. 1927, ch. 646, §4, p. 1097); in 1929 (Stats. 1929, ch. 844, §9%, p. 1842) and in 1935 (Stats. 1935, ch. 358, §§ 8, 25, pp. 1276, 1292). Subsequent amendments (Stats. 1937, ch. 296, §2, p. 651, and Stats. 1941, ch. 833, § 2, p. 2390) continued this wording.

Effective July 1, 1945, these provisions were transferred into the Revenue and Taxation Code (Stats. 1943, ch. 658, § 1, p. 2308). Section 13956 of that code includes some of the former statute. It provides: “In determining the value of any estate or interest to the beneficial enjoyment or possession of which there is a person presently entitled, no allowance is made on account of any contingent incumbrance on the estate or interest, nor on account of any contingency upon the happening of which the estate or interest, or some part of it, might be abridged, defeated, or diminished.” This is a part of the statute of 1911 retained as section 8 of the 1935 act.

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Bluebook (online)
215 P.2d 453, 34 Cal. 2d 782, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-willis-cal-1950.