Haggerty's Estate

166 A. 580, 311 Pa. 503, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 573
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1933
DocketAppeal, 240
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 166 A. 580 (Haggerty's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haggerty's Estate, 166 A. 580, 311 Pa. 503, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 573 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal from the decree of the Orphans’ Court of Lackawanna County setting aside the transfer inheritance tax levied under the Act of May 16, 1929, *505 P. L. 1795, section 1 (e) by the Commonwealth on one-half of a joint bank account. This account was in the names of “Agnes Haggerty or Mary Haggerty.”

On June 26,1927, these two women, who were sisters, opened a savings account with the First National Bank of Scranton. The initial deposit was $4,476. The only evidence of the amounts deposited therein until November 14, 1928, was an “Account Card.” On this latter date the sisters entered into a written agreement with the First National Bank of Scranton with respect to their joint account. This agreement provided “that any and all sums of money as may from time to time stand on this account to the credit of the undersigned depositors shall be taken and deemed to belong to them as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, and in case of death of either, the First National Bank of Scranton is hereby authorized and directed to deal with the survivor as sole and absolute owner thereof.” Deposits were made in this account until March 23, 1932, when Mary Haggerty died. There were no withdrawals. At the time of this agreement the amount credited to this account was $5,997.46, representing moneys deposited in equal portions by the sisters. They continued to make deposits in equal amounts so that at the date of Mary Haggerty’s death the total sum then credited to this account, $12,454.94, represented moneys deposited by the sisters in equal shares, plus interest thereon.

On May 16, 1929, the legislature of Pennsylvania passed an act amending section 1 of the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, the amending act being found in 72 P. S., section 2301. This Act of May 16,1929, provides as follows : First, “that a tax shall be, and is hereby, imposed upon the transfer of any property, real or personal, or of any interest therein or income therefrom in trust or otherwise,” in certain cases, and among the cases is the following: “Whenever any property, real or personal, is held in the joint names of two or more persons, except as tenants by the entirety, or is deposited in banks or *506 other institutions or depositories in the joint names of two or more persons, except as husband and wife, and payable to either or the survivor upon the death of one of such persons, the right of the surviving person or persons entitled to the immediate ownership or possession and enjoyment of such property shall be deemed, prima facie, a transfer of one-half, or other proper fraction thereof, taxable under the provisions of this act, in the same manner as though this part of the property to which such transfer relates belonged to joint tenants or joint depositors as tenants in common, and had been bequeathed or devised to the surviving person or persons by such deceased joint tenant or joint depositor by will.”

The Commonwealth contends that the right of a joint owner of personal property, or of a joint tenant of real estate, under a survivorship agreement, to the interest of his coowner or .cotenant, is a contingent and not a vested right and therefore is not within the protection given vested rights against taxation by legislative enactment passed after their vesting.

As to the nature of the interest held under a joint tenancy, Blackstone says (Book 2, sections 182, 184) : “Each [joint tenant] has an undivided moiety of the whole, and not the whole of an undivided moiety....... The entire tenancy, upon the decease of any of them, remains to the survivors....... This is the natural and regular consequence of the union and entirety of their interest. The interest of two joint tenants is not only equal or similar, but also is one and the same. One has not originally a distinct moiety from the other....... While it continues, each of two joint tenants has a concurrent interest in the whole; and therefore on the death of his companion, the sole interest in the whole remains to the survivor.”

Though by the Act of March 31, 1812, 20 P. S., section 121, the right of survivorship has in Pennsylvania ceased to exist as an incident of a joint tenancy, yet it may “be legally created as a principal”: Arnold v. Jack’s Exrs., *507 24 Pa. 57; Leach’s Est., 282 Pa. 545, 549, 128 A. 497. In the case under review it was so created on November 14,1928. The status of Agnes Haggerty and Mary Haggerty in relation to the fund with its accretions, held in their joint names in the First National Bank of Scranton, was fixed by their agreement of the date just stated. The statute passed six months later purported to tax “transfers” of property. When Mary Haggerty died in 1932 nothing in respect to this joint bank account was “transferred” from her to her surviving sister; the sole interest in the whole account merely “remained to the survivor.”

The purpose of the Act of 1919, P. L. 521, which was amended by the Act of May 16, 1929, P. L. 1795, was, as is clearly expressed in the title, to provide “for the imposition and collection of property passing from a decedent......” Section e of the Act of 1929, which is now invoked by the Commonwealth only makes, as applied to this case, the right which the surviving .sister had to the immediate ownership or possession and enjoyment of the joint deposit “prima facie a transfer” of property from the deceased sister to her and therefore a subject of taxation. But since there was in fact and law no transfer from the deceased sister to the survivor, of any interest in that joint fund, there was no transfer to be taxed. Whatever initial transfer of interests in their respective moneys took place between these sisters took place when the joint deposit was created by them on November 14, 1928, six months before the taxing Act of 1929 was passed. Each deposit subsequently made to this joint fund simply increased the corpus of the deposit jointly held by the sisters.

Appellant cites the case of Tax Commission of Ohio v. Hutchinson, 120 Ohio St. 361, 166 N. E. 352. That case is based on the Ohio Statute reading: “Whenever property is held by two or more persons jointly, so that upon the death of one of them the survivor or survivors have a right to the immediate ownership or possession and *508 enjoyment of the whole property, the accrual of such right by the death of one of them shall be deemed a succession taxable under the provisions of this subdivision of this chapter in the same manner as if the enhanced value of the whole property belonged absolutely to the deceased person, and had been by him bequeathed to the survivor or survivors by will.” There is a vital difference between the phrase “shall be deemed prima, facie a transfer” (as appears in the Pennsylvania statute) and the phrase “shall be deemed a succession taxable under the provisions of this subdivision” (as appears in the Ohio statute). The latter leaves no doubt of the legislative intent to tax as a “succession” the “accrual” of whatever “rights” or “enhanced value” in a joint fund a survivor or survivors of two or more persons holding property jointly may have by the death of one of the joint owners.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 580, 311 Pa. 503, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggertys-estate-pa-1933.