Fry Estate

41 Pa. D. & C.2d 187, 1966 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 174
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedDecember 16, 1966
Docketno. 439
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Pa. D. & C.2d 187 (Fry Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry Estate, 41 Pa. D. & C.2d 187, 1966 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 174 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Shoyer, J.,

The corporate trustee under the will of Henry A. Fry, who died a resident of Philadelphia on August 30, 1912, has excepted to the dismissal of its appeal from assessment [188]*188by the Commonwealth of collateral inheritance tax under the Act of May 6, 1887, P. L. 79.

Decedent devised a share of his estate in trust to his daughter, Anna, with a general power to appoint the remainder by will. The daughter died testate, a resident of Massachusetts, on August 17, 1960.

By her will, Anna D. Fry, in item “FIRST”, bequeathed her tangible property to a nonlineal of her father, and then, without mention of her debts or creditors, provided as follows: “SECOND: I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my property, both real and personal and intending hereby to exercise any powers of appointment which I may have including the power of appointment given to me under the will of my father, Henry A. Fry, late of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY as Trustee under Indenture of Trust dated June 20,1955, between me as Donor and Second Bank-State Street Trust Company (now called State Street Bank and Trust Company) as Trustee,... THIRD: I direct that all estate and inheritance taxes and other taxes in the nature of death taxes occasioned by my death whether or not based on property passing through the hands of my executor, shall be paid from the residue of my estate . . .”

The revocable deed of trust, referred to in the daughter’s will (effective on her death, according to exceptant’s brief), provided in item 5 for distribution of settlor’s property and “the property over which she may have power of appointment or disposal” to various individuals and charities. One half the residue was to be held in trust for Margaret Hutchinson, with remainder to charity. No beneficiary under Anna’s deed of trust qualifies as a lineal descendant of Henry A. Fry.

Item 4 of the deed provided in part: “. . . The Trustee is also authorized and empowered to pay from the [189]*189principal of the trust property any debts of the Donor which may be outstanding at the date of her death, expenses of administration of the Donor’s estate and any estate and inheritance taxes or other taxes in the nature of death taxes occasioned by the death of the Donor whether or not based upon the trust property but is to be under no obligation to do so except as required by law. .

Following the death of Anna D. Fry, the Commonwealth made a collateral remainder appraisement in her father’s estate, assessing a five percent transfer inheritance tax on the value of the property passing from his testamentary trust to the daughter’s inter vivos trust. The amount of the tax in question is $7,-550.21.

Counsel for taxpayer-appellant argues that the do-nee blended the appointive estate with her personal estate in giving both to the trustee under her inter vivos trust, and in effect appointed to herself, a lineal descendant of the donor, thereby effecting a non-taxable transfer under the tax law of 1887, in force at her father’s death.

The learned hearing judge, Saylor, J., adopted the contention of the Commonwealth that since Anna had exercised her power of appointment in favor of a trust, the beneficiaries of which are not lineal descendants of testator, she had exercised the power in favor of col-laterals, and the five percent tax then became due. Appellant’s theory was rejected as a “convenient tax evasion scheme”, and Morris’ Estate, 42 D. & C. 522 (1941), was relied on to sustain the assessment.

Here, as in Morris, the applicable statute is the Act of 1887, supra, enacted “To provide for the better collection of collateral inheritance taxes”. A tax of five percent was thereby imposed upon transfers “in trust- or otherwise, other than to or for” lineal relatives as therein defined. Section 3 provided for assessment of [190]*190future interests when the subject of the transfer should “take effect in possession, or come into actual enjoyment . . . upon the value of the estate at the time the right of possession accrues to the owners .. . ”, subject to a right of prepayment not here involved.

In Morris, it was ruled that properties passing under powers of appointment were subject to this tax, although powers of appointment were not specifically mentioned in the tax statutes until the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, sec. 1(d). We do not understand that that interpretive ruling is here controverted. Additional authority, if needed, is supplied by Commonwealth v. Williams’ Executors, 13 Pa. 29 (1850); Hess’ Estate, 11 D. & C. 311 (1928); Cassatt’s Trust, 3 D. & C. 340 (1923); Blakiston’s Estate, 25 Dist. R. 365 (1916); and Stokes’ Estate, 20 W.N.C. 48 (1887). Not only was the tax imposed on the donor’s estate in these cases, but the rate was that prescribed by the law existing at the donor’s death for the donor-appointee relationship. Exceptant, while conceding that the facts in Morris are analagous, even in the appointment to a previously created trust, argues that from a property law concept, that case was erroneously decided. When the taxation of the donor’s estate is considered, so the argument goes, the essential question is just who is the beneficiary of the power of appointment?

We believe that the property law concept given expression by the legislature in 1887, prior thereto and since, and consistently so recognized by the courts (except during the term of the “blending” theory), is that the donor has entrusted the donee as his alter ego with the proper and discreet exercise of the general power to appoint by will. Authorities here and abroad differ as to whether the power in the hands of the donee is an interest in property. The exercise of the power is [191]*191considered an event sometimes, in other circumstances a conveyance. In many jurisdictions, the donee’s creditors may reach appointive property, but here it is not subject to his creditors, nor to inheritance tax as his property. “It could not be a part of the appointor’s effects while he was living, and it cannot be so when he is dead; for a title which did not vest in him when he had capacity to take, could not vest in him when his capacity was lost”: Commonwealth v. Duffield, 12 Pa. 277, 279 (1849). See also Anderson Estate, 373 Pa. 294. Whether the exercise of the power by the donee is to be treated as a conveyance or devise for any given purpose is purely a question of policy: see Simes & Smith, “Law of Future Interests”, chs. 30 and 31, §911 etseq. (2ded.).

In Pennsylvania, while the tax thrust is upon the transfer of decedent’s property, the rate determinant is the relationship of the ultimate beneficiaries to the donor, so that blending, or even direct appointment to the donee’s estate, carries no greater tax significance than does transfer of the legal title in trust to a trustee. The Commonwealth has always ignored the identity of the testamentary trustee and assessed the transfer tax at a rate determined by the relationship of testator to his designated beneficiaries.

The doctrine of blending distorted this concept in the early part of this century by holding that the property, along with its appointment, came not from the donor, but from the donee, because the latter had “blended” or mixed it with his individual estate. The history of the blending doctrine in Pennsylvania is traced in Valentine’s Estate, 297 Pa. 99 (May 13, 1929), from its origin in McCord’s Estate, 276 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. D. & C.2d 187, 1966 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-estate-paorphctphilad-1966.