Greenough v. Newport Tax Assessors

47 A.2d 625, 71 R.I. 477, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 31, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 625 (Greenough v. Newport Tax Assessors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenough v. Newport Tax Assessors, 47 A.2d 625, 71 R.I. 477, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 26 (R.I. 1946).

Opinion

*478 Baker, J.

This is a petition for relief from the assessment of a tax and is brought under general laws 1938, chap-ter 31, §14. The petitioners are seeking to recover the tax heretofore paid by them under protest, the basis of their petition being that the tax in question was illegally and unconstitutionally assessed against one of them. The matter was heard in the superior court by a justice thereof sitting without a jury. He rendered a decision denying and dismissing the petition. A bill of exceptions containing two exceptions, one to the decision and another which is not now pressed, was thereafter prosecuted to this court by the petitioners and is now before us for consideration.

*479 The evidence shows the following pertinent facts, among others: The petitioners, William Greenough and George Henry Warren, Jr., are the duly qualified executors and co-trustees under the will of George Henry Warren, who died June 3,1943 and who was a resident of the city of New York. That will was duly admitted to probate by a decree of the surrogate’s court of the county of New York entered June 30, 1943, and letters testamentary were issued to the petitioners. A copy of the will, authenticated under the act of Congress, was also ordered filed and recorded, and letters testamentary in Rhode Island were issued to the, petitioners by a decree of the probate court of the city of Newport in this state entered November 15, 1943.

Under the fifth clause of the will the petitioners were bequeathed the sum of $400,000 to be held by them in trust to pay the net income therefrom, in the first instance, to the testator’s daughter Constance Whitney Warren for and during her natural life. The clause then contained other and further provisions respecting said sum and the income therefrom in the event of the taking place of certain contingencies not now material to the issues before us. By the sixth clause of the will the testator also bequeathed to the petitioners the further sum of $200,000 “in augmentation of and to be added to the principal of the trust created by the fifth clause of this my will for the benefit of my daughter Constance Whitney Warren to be held and disposed of by them upon the same terms and conditions as set forth in said fifth clause”.

Further, it appears from the evidence that the testator’s daughter Constance Whitney Warren is a resident of the state of New York; that the petitioner and trustee William Greenough is likewise a resident of that state; but that the petitioner and trustee George Henry Warren, Jr. is a domiciled resident of the city of Newport in this state. It is not disputed that at the time of the death of the testator and on June 15, 1944 at 12 o’clock noon, which was the time of the assessment of the tax involved in this proceeding, and at all *480 times up to the hearing in the superior court, all of the intangible personal property constituting the principal of the above-mentioned trust fund was located in the city of New York and never has been located in this state.

It is admitted that the tax in question was assessed by the respondents under the provisions of G. L. 1938, chap. 30, §9, subsec. fifth, which is as follows: “Intangible personal property held in trust by any executor, administrator, or trustee, whether under an express or implied trust, the income of which is to be paid to any other person, shall be taxed to such executor, administrator, or trustee in the town where such other person resides; but if such other person resides out of the state, then in the town where the executor, administrator, or trustee resides; and if there be more than one such executor, administrator, or trustee, then in equal proportions to each of such executors, administrators, and trustees in the towns where they respectively reside.”

According to the evidence a tax of $50 for the fiscal year 1944 to 1945 appears on the assessment roll of the city of Newport as follows: “George H. Warren junior, trustee under will of George H. Warren for Constance W. Warren, assessment of $12,500, intangible personal property”. The uhcontradictéd evidence shows that, according to information given the tax assessors of Newport, prior to the above assessment, by an attorney at law representing the trustee George Henry Warren, Jr., $12,500 was one half of the sum held by the trustees on the date of the assessment as the then corpus of the aforesaid trust created under the fifth and sixth clauses of the testator’s will.

The respondents argue that the petition was correctly denied and dismissed by the superior court because it could not properly be brought in its present form under §14, and also because the petitioners were not entitled to recover the tax which they had paid, in view of the facts appearing in evidence respecting the nature of such payment. These defenses were not set out by the respondents in any of their pleadings, were not brought to the attention of that court *481 and apparently are raised for the first time in argument before us. Because of our ultimate disposition of the present petition, it is not necessary for us to pass upon the above questions and we shall, for the purposes of this case only, assume that the petition is properly brought and that the petitioners are not prevented from recovering the tax in-question merely by reason of the evidence relating to the manner of its payment.

In support of their position, the petitioners contend that, properly construed, subsec. fifth of §9 has no application to the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence, and therefore that the tax appearing on the assessment roll of the city of Newport, as hereinbefore set out, is illegally assessed and is void. The petitioners also make the further argument that if the above statute is held to be applicable, then it is unconstitutional under section 1 of article XIV of the amendments to the constitution of the United States and under sec. 16 of art. I of the constitution of this state.

On the other hand, the respondents maintain that the only question for this court on the present record is the constitutionlity of subsec. fifth of §9 under the above-mentioned provisions of the constitution of the United States and the constitution of this state. They urge that the question of the applicability of the state statute was not before, and was not decided by, the superior court and is not properly before us.

While the record of the hearing before the superior court is not as clear and definite on that issue as is desirable, nevertheless we have come to the conclusion that such question was before that court and was decided by it adversely to the petitioners. After testimony had been taken setting out the material facts, the trial justice filed a rescript which ended in the following language: “The assessment in question was made in strict compliance with Sub-section Fifth, Section 9, of Chapter 30, of the General Laws, 1938, and there is nothing in the proof offered to justify the Court in saying that the tax assessors deviated in one iota in this *482 assessment from the law as laid down in the above-mentioned statute.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 625, 71 R.I. 477, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenough-v-newport-tax-assessors-ri-1946.