Girard Trust Co. v. McCaughn

3 F.2d 618, 5 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 5244, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 879, 5 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 5244
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 3, 1925
DocketNo. 11084
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 618 (Girard Trust Co. v. McCaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girard Trust Co. v. McCaughn, 3 F.2d 618, 5 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 5244, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 879, 5 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 5244 (E.D. Pa. 1925).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The question raised is a demurrer question. It is , the lawfulness of .a tax exaction. It was admittedly lawful if certain property was properly included- in the “value of the es--tate,” which measures the sum of the tax. This takes us to this property. What is it? The physical things were two pieces of real estate situate on Walnut street, Philadelphia. This real estate was under date of April 17, 1916, conveyed by the then gran-tor (now the decedent) to the Girard Trust Company et al. Admittedly all interest, right, or title of any kind which she had in the real estate was at an end when she died. She had made a will, which following her death was duly probated. Of this will the. plaintiffs are the executors. The will, however, deals in no way with this real estate, for the reason, already stated, that all interest of any and every kind which the testatrix had formerly had in it ceased at' her death. The tax, however, which her estate was required to pay, was fixed by measuring it by the value of her estate as if she had died seized of this real estate and it had passed at her death as part of her estate.

This takes us back to the deed of conveyance. Aside from the taxing statutes, and assuming that no such laws had ever been enacted, an analysis of this conveyance discloses the following as its effect in law and fact: What is commonly called the legal title passed to the grantees. This title, however, included no beneficial ownership in the grantees. Their title was that of trustees. The terms of the trust were (or included) that the title should be held and used so that the rents, issues, and profits thereof should be paid to the grantor, or, at her election, she should be permitted to occupy the premises as long as she might live. In short, the- grantor reserved or became the beneficial owner of a life estate in the real estate premises. This life estate' was qualified or defined by the obligation of the life tenant or grantor to keep down incumbrances, by paying for the upkeep of. the premises if the income was insufficient for this purpose. The conveyance was made upon the “further trust upon the death of said grantor to assign, transfer, and convey unto Emma Wood Hays, * * * her heirs and assigns, absolutely and in fee,” the premises conveyed, or any property which under the powers given the trustees might be substituted for the property conveyed. This means that the title to the real estate was held by the grantees in trust for the decedent, who held therein a particular estate for life, and for Mrs. Hays for an estate in remainder in fee.

The defense to - the claim for the return of the tax payment is that the taxing act measures the sum of the tax properly payable by the value of the decedent’s estate [619]*619plus the value of that of which the decedent had dispossessed herself in her lifetime, which dispossession was not to become effective until her death. The conveyance of an estate in remainder after the death of the grantor, or the conveyance of property reserving a life estate in the grantor, is claimed to be (although property whieh is not a part of the decedent’s estate) nevertheless the kind of property whieh is to be included in the measure of the tax.

This takes us to the act of Congress. Act Feb. 24, 1919, § 402, 40 Stat. 1097 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 6336%c). Its pertinent language is that there is to be added to that of other property the value of “any interest” which the decedent had in any property “with respect to which” the decedent had “at any time created a trust, in contemplation of or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after” the death of decedent. The real difficulty in all cases of this general type is that words are used in wholly different senses.

The word “property” is one of them. There are physical things, and the concept of the right of property in things. The word “property” is indiscriminately used to convey the thought of either. When the word is used, in whieh of these two senses is it used? Inasmuch as this grantor reserved to herself the right and power to occupy as long as she lived the premises, the title to whieh she had conveyed away, it can be said with perfect truth that the grant to the remainderman was “intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment” of the physical premises “after the death” of the grantor. Inasmuch, however, as (ignoring the trust features) there was an absolute conveyance in presentí of an estate in fee in remainder to the grantee, it can be said with equal truth that the interest or estate or “property” granted to the re-mainderman at once took effect in both possession and enjoyment, and was not postponed until the death of the grantor.

We do not see that the circumstance that the conveyance took the form of a conveyance of the legal title in trust, nor that the trustees are directed to convey the legal title to the remainderman upon the death of the grantor, works any real difference in results. Disrobed of all its form features, what the deed of conveyance did was to vest in the remainderman an estate in fee (that is, all the estate and interest and all the right of ownership which a citizen of Pennsylvania can have in real estate) in remainder after a particular life estate had been carved out of it. The direction to the trustees to convey to the remainderman the legal title was under the law of Pennsylvania wholly superfluous. The trust was then a dry trust, and the statute of uses made as effective a conveyance of the ler gal title as the trustees could do. When, and indeed before, the trustees made the contemplated conveyance, it had already been made by the law. The act of Congress does not, however, use the word “property” of common speech, but the word “interest,” which is a word of legal import and a word of art. What was the “interest” whieh (before the grant) the grantor had in the real estate premises? Her “interest” or estate was a fee simple, the full and absolute ownership. This gave her several rights of property. One was to possess and enjoy the physical premises for life or as long as she chose, another was to part with her ownership for a consideration if she so chose, another was to pledge it for a loan, and still another was to transmit it to her heirs or to devise it to whom she chose. All of these rights, except only the first, she granted absolutely and irrevocably to another. The grant was not in futuro, but in presentí. , What she granted was real estate. This is not a thing, but a right, interest, or estate in land, and what has become so far incorporated with land as to be a part of it. The possession and enjoyment of this estate or interest was immediate, and not postponed to the time of the death of the grantor, because admittedly the estate conveyed was a vested interest.

These distinctions are so well known, and indeed so obvious, that they must have been in the legislative mind. The thought at once obtrudes that if Congress had meant that for which the defendant contends, it could have been and would have been unmistakably expressed. What is expressed is, as already quoted, “any interest.” Here the “interest” was in land. Land in its law phase is not a corporal, physical, tangible thing. It is a concept — the concept of the right to appropriate a described portion of space. It is associated, of course, with material things, which have some more or less permanent relation to this space. What is commonly called ground is one of them. Brick and mortar, in the form of a building reared upon the ground, is another.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 618, 5 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 5244, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 879, 5 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 5244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girard-trust-co-v-mccaughn-paed-1925.