Gilpatric v. City of Hartford

120 A. 317, 98 Conn. 471, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 1, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 120 A. 317 (Gilpatric v. City of Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilpatric v. City of Hartford, 120 A. 317, 98 Conn. 471, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 15 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

*474 Beach, J.

The case involves a construction of §§ 1201 and 1205 of the General Statutes, the material portions of which are printed in a footnote. The italicised part of § 1205 was added to the statute by amendment in 1915.

*475 “Sec. 1205. State remits taxes to cities or towns. Cities or TOWNS TO REMIT TO TAXING DISTRICTS. NONRESIDENT STOCK. On Or before the fifteenth day of April in each year, the treasurer of the state shall remit to the treasurer of each town in the state, or, in towns where the town and city governments are consolidated, to the city treasurer, the amount of the tax received as aforesaid upon such shares of the capital stock of any of the aforesaid corporations as were, on the first day of October of the preceding year, owned by persons who resided or corporations which were located in such town ... or if owned, by the estate of a deceased person, whether held in trust or otherwise, then to the treasurer of the town or city wherein the decedent resided at the time of his death. Each of the aforesaid town and city treasurers shall, on or before the first day of May in each year, distribute the tax derived from the shares which were owned by each stockholder resident or located therein on the first day of the preceding October, among the taxing districts, including therein the town in which said stockholder then resided or was located, in the proportion that the tax rate fixed by each of such districts within the twelve months next preceding said first of May bears to the combined or total tax rate of all said taxing districts; to the end that such town and the taxing districts therein may, together, receive the same amount of tax that they would have received had said shares been listed in the name of the stockholders resident or located therein, and assessed and taxed at the valuation fixed by the board of equalization, and at an aggregate rate equal to the rate prescribed in section 1201. . . .”

Section 1201 requires the proper officer of every insurance company to report annually to the tax commissioner “the name and residence of each stockholder,” the number of shares “owned” by each on October 1st, and to pay to the State treasurer a tax of one per céntima on the fair market value of each share. When that is done the insurance company has fully complied with the statute. It is not charged with the duty of seeing that the State treasurer complies with *476 § 1205. An insurance company reasonably performs its stated obligation to report to the tax commissioner, when it reports the name and residence of each stockholder as shown by its stock records. For all its corporate purposes the shareholder of record is the owner of the stock standing in his name, and if any shareholder appears of record to be other than the absolute owner, the company does all that the statute can reasonably be held to require when it reports the fact of ownership as its record shows that fact to be. There is no allegation in the complaint that the respective insurance companies have not reported all the facts as to ownership shown by their records, and the demurrers of the iEtna Life Insurance Company, the ACtna Casualty and Surety Company, and the Travelers Insurance Company were properly sustained.

The demurrer of the Hartford-Cónnecticut Trust Company and the first ground of the demurrer of the City of Hartford, raise the question of the construction of § 1205. That section requires the State treasurer to remit to each town or city treasurer, on or before April 15th in each year, the amount of the tax received from such shares of each insurance company as were owned, on October 15th of the preceding year, by persons who resided or corporations which were located in such town or city, “or if owned by the estate of a deceased person, whether held in trust or otherwise, then to the treasurer of the town- or city wherein the decedent resided at the time of his death.” The question is whether, for the purposes of this statute, the shares of stock in question were “owned by” the Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company, a corporation located in the City of Hartford, or by the estate of Mr. Bissell, who resided in the town of Suffield at the date .of his death.

It is apparent that the phrase “owned by the estate *477 of a deceased person” is not very well expressed. In its comprehensive significance the estate of a deceased person is the sum total of the property formerly owned by him which after his death remains subject to administration and to distribution under his will or according to law in the Court of Probate. The estate of a deceased person cannot with any accuracy be said to “own” anything; but in common speech it is often personified as the owner of the several items of property making up the aggregate estate, and in this sense the words “owned by” the estate of a deceased person are synonymous with the words “belonging to” or “forming part of” the estate of a deceased person. This is the only sensible meaning which can be attributed to these words in § 1205, and all the parties litigant have tacitly adopted this interpretation of them. Thus the City of Hartford in its brief says: “The City of Hartford admits that from September 24, 1913,—the date of death of Leavitt P. Bissell in Suffield —until August 22, 1918,—the date when Leavitt P. Bissell’s estate was settled by the filing of the final account in the Probate Court by the Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company as executor—that the shares of stock of the insurance companies mentioned in the complaint were shares ‘owned by the estate of a deceased person’ within the meaning of § 1205.” But the claim is that after that date, when the legal title passed to the Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company as testamentary trustee, they were no longer owned by the estate but by the trustee; that upon the settlement of Mr. Bissell’s estate by the acceptance of the final report of the executor, and the distribution of the estate to the various beneficiaries under his will, including the testamentary trustee, his estate ceased to exist as an entity; and that it is of no consequence that prior to the distribution of these shares they were held by *478 the Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company as executor, because they were so held by it in its capacity as the personal representative of the deceased, but afterward in its capacity as trustee under the will and as one of the distributees of the estate.

The logical force of this argument depends wholly on the assumption that the delivery of these shares by the executor to the testamentary trustee, accompanied by the transfer of title, took them out of the estate as if they had been delivered and transferred to a beneficiary legatee.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Geremia v. Geremia
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2015
Schirmer v. Souza
12 A.3d 1048 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2011)
Metro North Railroad v. Miller, No. Cv 95-0380342 (Dec. 12, 2002)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 16293 (Connecticut Superior Court, 2002)
City of Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County
133 N.W.2d 393 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1965)
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Smith
209 A.2d 693 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1965)
Ficken v. Edward's, Inc.
1 Conn. Cir. Ct. 251 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1962)
Ficken v. Edward's, Inc.
183 A.2d 924 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1962)
Waters v. State ex rel. Maryland Unemployment Insurance Fund
152 A.2d 811 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1959)
Town of Darien v. State
106 A.2d 181 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1954)
McWilliams v. American Fidelity Co.
102 A.2d 345 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1954)
English v. Smith
196 A. 781 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1938)
Frost v. Fowlerton Consolidated School Dist. No. 1
111 S.W.2d 754 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)
Spencer v. Consumers Oil Co.
162 A. 23 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
H. E. Verran Co. v. Town of Stamford
142 A. 578 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Hadley v. Farmers Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City
1927 OK 183 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)
Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. v. City of Bridgeport
130 A. 164 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A. 317, 98 Conn. 471, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilpatric-v-city-of-hartford-conn-1923.