George Hyman v. District of Columbia

247 F.2d 585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 1957
Docket13549
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 247 F.2d 585 (George Hyman v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Hyman v. District of Columbia, 247 F.2d 585 (D.C. Cir. 1957).

Opinions

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

We have before us for the first time this question concerning local inheritance taxation: when realty is devised “subject to whatever claim or lien” the devisee may have thereon, should the tax on the transfer be computed on the gross value of the realty, as the District of Columbia Tax Court held, or on the net value after the devisee’s claim thereon has been deducted, as the petitioner contends ?

We glean the following facts and figures from the findings of the Tax Court. In 1928 the petitioner, George Hyman, purchased certain real estate in the District of Columbia and arranged for his sister, Mrs. Leah Rome, a resident of Maryland, to have an interest therein which was to be, and in fact was, paid for out of her share of the rents. In 1938 Mrs. Rome’s husband died. She was then in poor health and progressively grew worse until her death in 1954. During those years Hyman paid the sum of $153,033.75 for his sister’s care and maintenance and the further sum of $26,-499.44 for income taxes owed by her — a total of $179,533.19. In the same period Mrs. Rome’s share of the rents from the District realty amounted to $99,696.28, which Hyman credited to her account. Thus at death Mrs. Rome owed her brother the sum of $79,836.91.

The decedent’s will was probated in Maryland and an exemplified copy was lodged with the District’s Register of Wills to serve as a muniment of title. There was no ancillary proceeding in this jurisdiction. Hyman did not file a proof of his claim in the probate proceeding in Maryland, nor did he file one with the Register of Wills or any other District official or agency. The pertinent language of the will is as follows:

“The one-fifth interest which I ■ now own in the real estate and other assets which formerly belonged to George Hyman Properties, Inc., was acquired by me from or through my brother, George Hyman. I hereby give, bequeath, and devise, absolutely, my entire interest in the said [587]*587real estate and other assets unto my said brother, George Hyman, his heirs, personal representatives, and assigns * * * and * * * a one-fifth interest in bonds of the Washington Auditorium, of the face amount of $67,000; the said real estate and bonds are subject to whatever claim or lien the said George Hyman may have thereon.”

The District of Columbia Assessor valued Mrs. Rome’s undivided interest in the District real estate at $193,000 and computed Hyman’s inheritance tax on that sum without any deduction for his debt claim to which the devise was subject.1 Hyman paid the tax computed by the Assessor and demanded by the District and petitioned the Tax Court for redetermination and refund.

In his petition to that tribunal, Hyman alleged that, as the devise of the District realty and the bequest of the bonds having a Maryland situs were both subject to his sister’s debt to him,2 the taxable value of the realty should have been reduced in the same proportion that the value of the realty bore to the total value of the devise and the bequest. On that basis, he contended that the gross value of the devised realty should have been reduced by the sum of $8,524.09 in order to determine the taxable value. Hyman petitions for review of the adverse decision of the Tax Court.

While a tax on inheritance or succession is not a property tax but a duty or excise laid on the privilege of taking property by descent, it is measured nevertheless by the market value of the transferred property at the time the owner died.3 It is true that an unqualified devise transfers the legal title, but it does not follow that the gross value of the realty so transferred is the yardstick by which the tax should be measured. If it is encumbered at the date of death, the then market value of the property transferred is the gross value less the encumbrance. Any other construction of the statute could lead to absurd results which we cannot believe Congress intended. For example, to say it was legislatively intended that a devisee of realty worth $10,000 subject to a mortgage of $9,500 must pay an inheritance tax on $10,000 strains credulity; for, if the devisee were a brother of the testator, he would be required to pay a tax of $240' although he received property worth on the market and worth to him only $500-Examples might be given where, on that basis, the tax would devour the whole devise.

It therefore seems to us that the only sensible view of the Congressional intention is that it was to require the tax to be computed on the value of what the beneficiary actually receives. That being true, decision here as to the value of the interest transferred depends on the construction of Mrs. Rome’s will as to what estate the petitioner took thereunder; and that in turn depends on the intention of the testatrix, as ascertained from the language of the will interpreted according to established canons of construction, unless in the circumstances and conditions at the time of its execution it should clearly appear that the testatrix did not intend the testamentary words to be construed in their usual connotation. In this case, the attendant circumstances and conditions indicate that Mrs. Rome intended the words “subject to,” et cetera, to have the qualifying effect which the law assigns to such testamentary language, as will appear. The crucial language in the will is simple and exact: “subject to whatever claim or lien the said George Hyman may have thereon.”

That, at her death, Mrs. Rome owed Hyman the sum of $79,836.91 is established by the finding of the Tax Court. Her will provides that if her brother had [588]*588a claim or lien on her realty interest, the devise of the interest to him should be subject to such claim or lien. The existence and amount of the debt, having been found by the Tax Court, are not in doubt or dispute, so the first question is whether Hyman had a “claim or lien” on the devised interest.

We must construe these testamentary words in the light of the circumstances which existed when Mrs. Rome used them. She knew she owed her brother something but she probably did not know how much, which explains the word “whatever” in the expression “whatever claim or lien” he may have thereon, It is logical, we think, to suppose she thought he had, or at least that she wanted him to have, a claim or lien on the realty interest she had acquired through his good offices, to secure the large advances he made for her benefit. But she restricted his “claim or lien” to the property he had enabled her to own; she did not want him to look to the remainder of her estate for reimbursement. Moreover, she may have been advised of the provisions of § 18-501, D.C.Code 1951, which protect a District creditor with respect to his foreign debtor’s District realty.4 We think it reasonable to conclude that the considerations just mentioned moved Mrs. Rome to bequeath and devise to her brother the property she had acquired through him “subject to whatever claim or lien” he may have thereon.

But whether so or not, the testamentary words “subject to” which she used had the legal effect of transferring the realty interest burdened by whatever debt she owed him, thus reducing the devised estate accordingly and correspondingly shortening the yardstick by which the tax is measured.

Such “subject to” provisions in deeds and wills have a definite legal meaning. They qualify or limit the estate conveyed or devised. Brown v. South Boston Sav. Bank, 1889, 148 Mass. 300, 19 N.E. 382, 384; Consolidated Coal Co. v.

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George Hyman v. District of Columbia
247 F.2d 585 (D.C. Circuit, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
247 F.2d 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-hyman-v-district-of-columbia-cadc-1957.