Hopkins' Appeal From Probate

60 A. 657, 77 Conn. 644, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 60 A. 657 (Hopkins' Appeal From Probate) 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
Hopkins' Appeal From Probate, 60 A. 657, 77 Conn. 644, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 26 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

The act of 1897, “ Providing for a Succession Tax ” (General Statutes, §§ 2367-2377), was fully considered in the recent cases of Nettletons Appeal, 76 Conn. *649 235, and Gallup’s Appeal, ibid. 617. These cases were appeals from the same probate order fixing the succession tax in the same estate, and constitute subtantially one case. The decisions then rendered did not turn upon the peculiar condition of the particular estate in settlement, but did turn upon the construction and effect of the Act in its essential features, and settled its meaning and legal effect as respects these features. This determination involved a consideration of all the provisions of the Act in their relation to the conclusion reached, and substantially controls the disposition of the claims advanced in the present- case.

The Act does not provide for the taxation of any property left by a decedent, nor of any person interested in his estate. “ The Act imposes death duties and prescribes their amount and the machinery convenient for their collection.” A “ death duty ” as thus used is an exaction by the State, to be collected from the property left by a deceased person while in its custody, prescribed upon the occasion of his death and the consequent devolution of his property by force of its laws. The particular name given the duty iivany statute —as probate, legacy, succession, transfer, or estate tax or duty — depends for its meaning upon the terms of that statute. A man’s property is subject to taxation while in the custody of the law after his death, in a similar manner as before, which may create a lien upon the property in whosesoever hands it may come; a tax may be laid upon property immediately after it has devolved upon any person by will or inheritance, so as to be not easily distinguishable from a form of taxation sometimes called a legacy tax; a tax may be laid upon the execution of all documents, the conveyance of all property, and the signing of all receipts, which may include the documents, transfers, and receipts incident to the administration of the estate of a deceased person; but such taxes do not come within the true meaning of “ death duty ” as here used. The succession tax provided for, as defined by the terms of the Act in force when the testatrix died, is a death duty prescribed in view of the death of a domiciled resident of this State whose *650 land within this State and whose personal property, wherever situate, is governed as to its disposition, distribution and succession, by the laws of this State; and of the death of a nonresident owning land within this State which is governed as to its distribution and succession by the same law; prescribed in respect to the beneficial interest which thus by force of our laws devolves upon all beneficiaries of the decedent; and fixed as to amount by a percentage upon the value of the whole interest thus devolving on the decedent’s beneficial successors, based upon a valuation previously made of all the decedent’s property inventoried by the administrator. The Act contains no express direction as to who shall compute the tax or the manner of computation ; but by necessary implication, the duty of computation is placed upon the Court of Probate, proceeding in the following manner: A valuation is made of the whole interest that would, except for the tax, pass to all the decedent’s beneficial successors, by deducting from the total amount of the valuation of all property left by the decedent (as it appears in-the inventory and appraisal returned by the administrator and accepted by the court, or by a new appraisal that may be ordered at the instance of the State treasurer or any party interested), the amount of debts paid and expenses of administration, with other amounts required by the Act. A sum equal to one half of one per cent, upon such proportion of the beneficial interest thus valued as would pass to husband or wife, parents or lineal descendants, and three per cent, upon such proportion as would pass to any others, fixes the amount' of the death duty or succession tax payable to the State, on occasion of that succession, by the administrator from property, or proceeds of property, which had belonged to the decedent. Neither the amount of the duty nor the process of computation is controlled by an actual valuation of the precise property each particular successor may receive, nor by the nature of his estate in that property. Whether the succession is statutory or testamentary, whether the estate in any particular property received is absolute or for life, the amount *651 of the duty imposed on occasion of each death and consequent succession, and the manner of its computation, is the same, although in § 2371 special provision is made in relation to the payment of a proportional part of this duty in certain cases. The Act makes no express provision for the collection and payment of the duty, except the direction to the administrator to pay the duty, and (by necessary implication) from the property or from the proceeds of the property of the decedent not applied to the satisfaction of debts and administration expenses. The administrator is empowered to sell so much of the estate as will enable him to pay the duty, and is made liable for failure to pay which is due to his own misconduct. The direction to sell a piece of property specifically bequeathed, unless the legatee shall pay to him a sum equal to the proportion of the duty based upon the value of that property, is in furtherance and not in abridgement of his power to sell any property in his hands when necessary to enable him to pay the duty. In so far as the Act relates to estates of domiciled residents, it imposes a death duty in respect to the succession that takes place within the jurisdiction of this State upon the death of every such person possessing land within this State and personal property wherever situate. The duty is not imposed unless the succession involves some beneficial succession, and in that case its amount is arbitrarily determined through the prescribed process, including an indirect valuation of the whole beneficial succession, and the administrator is charged with the payment of the whole duty from property remaining after the estate, whether testate or intestate, has been cleared of debts and administration expenses, and before distribution is completed. To this extent the Act affects the law of distribution.

The substantial and principal claim advanced by the appellant in this case is, that the Court of Probate, in computing the amount of the duty, necessarily held that the interest in the personal property owned by the decedent at the time of her death, .wherever situate, which devolved upon *652 her beneficial successors in consequence of that death, did not pass by will or the inheritance laws of this State within the meaning of the Act of 1897, and therefore the court erred in computing the amount of the succession duty at $4,872.18.

This is the precise point settled by our former decisions. The Act is framed in view of the principle that personal property is bequeathed by will, and is descendible by inheritance, according to the law of the domicil, and that the disposition, distribution of, and succession to, personal property, wherever situated, is to be governed by the laws of that State where the owner had his domicil at the time of his death. Gallup’s Appeal, 76 Conn. 617;

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Bluebook (online)
60 A. 657, 77 Conn. 644, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-appeal-from-probate-conn-1905.