Ex Parte Garey

95 A.2d 298, 202 Md. 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1995
Docket[No. 95, October Term, 1952.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 A.2d 298 (Ex Parte Garey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Garey, 95 A.2d 298, 202 Md. 11 (Md. 1995).

Opinion

Sobeloff, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The correct method of computing the tax on an executor’s commissions is the question to which our attention is directed by this appeal.

The appellant, as executor of the estate of the late John J. Raskob, having filed his first administration account showing a total personal estate of $11,643,791.64 and a tax of $23,447.58 on his commissions, and having paid the same, later filed an ex parte petition in the Orphans’ Court of Queen Anne’s County, praying’ to *13 be allowed to correct his account by reducing the tax to $17,244.22. The difference of $6,203.36 is the amount of the tax computed at the rate of one-fifth of one per cent on the indebtedness of $3,100,000 plus interest which the decedent owed to a family holding company, known as Radelco Corporation. At the time of his death the decedent owned 83.5%, and his family the rest of the stock, in Radelco. Another way of stating the matter is that the executor now contends that in calculating the estate (which is the basis of the tax on the executor’s commissions) the Radelco stock should not have been included at its full market value, but that this sum should have been reduced by offsetting the amount of Mr. Raskob’s debt to the corporation. From a denial of the prayer of the petition the executor has taken this appeal.

The pertinent statute is Art. 81, Sec.. US, of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1951 Edition), which reads as follows: “All commissions allowed to executors by the Orphans’ Courts of this State shall, except as provided in Section 172 of this Article [not here involved], be subject to a tax, for the benefit of the State, of an amount equal to one per-cent on the first Twenty Thousand ($20,000) Dollars of the estate, and one-fifth of one per cent on the balance of the estate, and said tax shall be due and payable whether the executor waives his commissions or not, it being hereby intended that no commissions less than this tax shall be allowed by the Orphans’ Courts of this State, and that no waiver of commissions or devise or legacy as compensation or in lieu of commissions shall defeat the payment of this tax.”

Soon after Mr. Raskob’s death, the executors turned in the estate’s stock holdings in Radelco to the corporation and received from it a pro rata share of the securities owned by it. The estate’s pro rata share of the corporation’s net cash and receivables amounted to $2,743,993.98. Against this, in the settlement between the corporation and the executor, the estate’s indebtedness of $3,100,000 *14 was off-set, resulting in a net payment by the executor to the corporation of the balance of $356,006.02 plus interest.

Before the passage of the Act of 1884, Chapter 470, now codified as Section 5 of Article 93 (Code of 1951), commissions were allowed oh the “inventory or inventories”, excluding what was lost or perished. By the Act of 1884 it was provided that commissions should be computed on the “estate”. The tax on commissions was formerly calculated on the amount of the commissions, but since 1916 the statute above quoted requires the tax to be computed on the estate regardless of the amount actually allowed or paid as commissions.

The appellant attaches a special significance to this change in formula. He points to it as lending support to his contention that only the net amount (i.e., the value of the stock less decedent’s indebtedness) should have been included in the estate, and that only the net amount is the proper basis for computing the allowable commissions and the tax thereon. While the appellant acknowledges that the calculation of commissions and of the tax thereon is based on the gross value of the estate and not on the net value after deduction of debts and expenses, he nevertheless maintains that the question here is the proper method of valuing one of those assets, namely, decedent’s stock interest in Radelco Corporation. The executor insists that the true value of this asset is not the fair value of the stock itself, but such value diminished by the $3,100,000 debt the decedent owed the corporation.

To achieve the desired result the appellant urges this Court, as he urged the Orphans’ Court, to be “realistic”, and to treat Mr. Raskob’s indebtedness to Radelco Corporation as essentially an indebtedness to himself. This would require us to disregard the corporate form and to treat Radelco Corporation as Mr. Raskob’s alter ego. The precise point has not been decided in this State, but we turn first to somewhat analogous cases to learn the general trend of the Maryland decisions and to *15 discover what if any answer they indicate to the question raised here.

In the case of York v. Md. Trust Co., 150 Md. 354, 133 A. 128, 46 A. L. R. 231, the decedent owned property most of which consisted of large blocks of stock worth about $1,700,000, but he had delivered this property to bankers as collateral for a loan of approximately $1,000,000. The executor arranged for the sale of the stock in small lots and at different times at prices yielding more than the original inventory value, and liquidated the bankers’ loans. The controversy was between the widow of the testator and the executor over the allowance of commissions. The executor claimed commissions on the estate computed at the full market value of the pledged securities, while the widow contended that commissions should have been based on the testator’s equity in these securities. The Orphans’ Court, having regard for the extent and the nature of his services, upheld the executor’s claim and was affirmed on appeal. This Court noted that the availability of an asset to an executor gives him such qualified possession, though physically held by a creditor as pledgee, as to justify inclusion of the gross asset in the estate for the purpose of calculating commissions.

Judge Walsh’s opinion in that case is interesting here chiefly because it carefully reviewed the earlier cases, particularly Handy v. Collins, 60 Md. 229, and Hardt v. Birely, 72 Md. 134, 19 A. 606, tracing the statutory changes made from time to time in respect to the calculation of commissions. In Hardt v. Birely, thip Court said it could see no reason why a value may not be ascertained for private securities in the same or some other more desirable manner as is now in use to fix the value of public securities. This was decided after the Act of 1884 had shifted the basis for computing commissions from “inventory” to “estate”, and the Court distinguished Handy v. Collins, decided under the earlier statute, which as interpreted excluded from “inventory” certain private bonds.

*16 Appellant correctly, points out that York v. Md. Trust Co., involved, as we have seen, no question of tax on commissions.' It is obviously true, however, that if securities, whether listed on the market and freely traded in or closely held, are includable in “estate”, .in calculating. commissions, they are certainly includable in “estate” in computing the tax' on commissions. The present statute^ Sec. H3 of Article 81,

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95 A.2d 298, 202 Md. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-garey-md-1995.