Goodenough v. Dept. of Revenue

43 N.W.2d 235, 328 Mich. 57
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1950
Docket4, Calendar No. 44,583
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 N.W.2d 235 (Goodenough v. Dept. of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodenough v. Dept. of Revenue, 43 N.W.2d 235, 328 Mich. 57 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

328 Mich. 57 (1950)
43 N.W.2d 235

GOODENOUGH
v.
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE.

Docket No. 4, Calendar No. 44,583.

Supreme Court of Michigan.

Decided June 5, 1950.
Rehearing denied October 2, 1950.

Daniel W. Goodenough, for plaintiffs.

Stephen J. Roth, Attorney General, Edmund E. Shepherd, Solicitor General, T. Carl Holbrook and Daniel J. O'Hara, Assistants Attorney General, for defendant.

Amici curiae: Dickinson, Wright, Davis, McKean & Cudlip.

NORTH, J.

After having paid an intangibles tax under protest, plaintiff, Margaret B. Goodenough, brought suit in the court of claims for a refund. Judgment was entered for defendants, being the State of Michigan, the department of revenue of Michigan, and Louis M. Nims, commissioner. Leave having been granted, plaintiff has appealed. The material facts are quite fully summarized as follows in the opinion filed by the circuit judge:

"In 1919 Lawrence S. Holt, a resident of the District of Columbia and never a resident of the State of Michigan, now deceased, established two inter vivos [irrevocable] trusts [of intangible securities] in Pennsylvania to be administered by Pennsylvania corporate trustees in Pennsylvania, as its situs, for the benefit of his children and grandchildren. The terms of the trust agreements are identical. The trustees are given full legal title and full management *59 and control of the principal, and none of the beneficiaries is given any power in regard thereto. The net income is to be distributed equally six times each year between the settlor's children and grandchildren living at such times. At the expiration of 20 years after the decease of the last survivor of the children and grandchildren living at the establishment of the trust, the principal is to be transferred outright in equal shares to the settlor's then living grandchildren born after the establishment of the trust and to the issue per stirpes of each deceased grand child. The settlor expressly declared that the beneficiaries' shares of principal and income shall not be subject to `their anticipation, sale, pledge, debts, contracts, engagements or liabilities, and not subject or liable to attachment or sequestration under any legal or equitable or other process.' The trustee is not given the power to pay out any part of the principal to any beneficiary except upon the termination of the trust, as above stated.

"The trust administration and the trust securities are wholly and permanently outside the State of Michigan. The investments made by the Pennsylvania trustees are evidenced by bonds, certificates of stock and other paper physically located outside the State of Michigan."

Plaintiff, a granddaughter of the settlor living at the time (1919) he established the 2 trusts here involved, was and is a resident of Michigan. She has neither actual nor equitable ownership, nor any right of control or management, of the corpus of the trust or any part thereof. The tax involved was for substantially one-third of a year — June 6, 1947, the effective date of the 1947 amendment to the intangibles tax law, to September 30, 1947, which marked the end of the trustees' fiscal year.

Plaintiff received one-ninth of the net income from the 2 Pennsylvania trusts. She concedes that a tax may be justly assessed against her "right to net income *60 in a trust estate located in Pennsylvania," since such "right has value as property and its benefits are enjoyed in Michigan." The basis of plaintiff's asserted right to a refund is that in fixing the amount of her tax the computation was not confined to her net income from the trust estates. Instead, the amount of plaintiff's tax was increased by including in the basis of computation an alleged ownership of or beneficial interest in the assets of the trusts including the nonprofit-paying assets thereof. In that respect plaintiff claims a violation of her constitutional rights in that she is deprived of property without due process of law because she is "being taxed in respect to property which she does not own in fact or in law and as to which the State of Michigan has no jurisdiction in fact or in law. The (intangibles tax) act[*] purports to tax plaintiff's interest as a beneficiary under 2 Pennsylvania trusts, but, on a theory contrary to fact for the purpose of describing the object and measure of the tax, enlarges her interest to include rights not owned by her and not within the jurisdiction of the State of Michigan. The bare fact that a resident beneficiary's only right is to receive net income from an out-of-State trust, if she is living on the specified dates of income distribution, does not make her the `owner,' in fact or in law, of the separate intangibles comprising the out-of-State trust and thus taxable on each separate intangible."

The conditions essential for imposing and the method of computing the intangibles tax, so far as herein applicable, are provided in the statute as follows:

"Sec. 2. * * * For the calendar year 1940, and for each year thereafter or portion thereof there is hereby levied upon each resident or nonresident *61 owner of intangible personal property not hereinafter exempted having a situs within this State, and there shall be collected from such owner an annual specific tax on the privilege of ownership of each item of such property owned by him. Except as hereinafter provided the tax on income producing intangible personal property shall be 3 per cent. of the income but in no event less than 1/10 of 1 per cent. of the face or par value of each item (or in the case of corporate stock or other evidence of corporate ownership having no par or face value, of the average per share contribution to capital, surplus and other funds in consideration of which all of the then outstanding shares of stock of the same class of such corporation shall have been issued). Except as hereinafter provided the tax on nonincome producing intangible personal property shall be 1/10 of 1 per cent. of said face, par or contributed value." CL 1948, § 205.132 (Stat Ann 1950 Rev § 7.556 [2]).

As to the statutory meaning of "intangible personal property," "situs," and "owner," the pertinent provisions are:

"Sec. 1. That when used in this act: * * *

"(b) The term `intangible personal property' means: Moneys on hand or on deposit or in transit, shares of stock, * * * annuities; accounts and notes receivable, * * * conditional sale contracts receivable, and other obligations for the payment of money; equitable interest in any of the foregoing classes of intangible personal property, including interest of beneficiaries under trusts whether created inter vivos or by will; * * *

"(c) The `situs' of intangible personal property for the purpose of taxation under the provisions of this act shall be the domicile of the owner thereof, except that any intangible personal property, not otherwise exempt under the laws of this State, owned by a person having his domicile outside of this State but used in connection with or acquired from the conduct *62

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.W.2d 235, 328 Mich. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodenough-v-dept-of-revenue-mich-1950.