In Re Atherton's Estate

52 N.W.2d 660, 333 Mich. 193
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1952
Docket46, Calendar No. 45,338
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 N.W.2d 660 (In Re Atherton's Estate) 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
In Re Atherton's Estate, 52 N.W.2d 660, 333 Mich. 193 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

333 Mich. 193 (1952)
52 N.W.2d 660

In re ATHERTON'S ESTATE.
HELLER
v.
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE.

Docket No. 46, Calendar No. 45,338.

Supreme Court of Michigan.

Decided April 7, 1952.

Keip & Timms, for plaintiff.

Frank G. Millard, Attorney General, Edmund E. Shepherd, Solicitor General, and T. Carl Holbrook and William D. Dexter, Assistants Attorney General, for defendant.

NORTH, C.J.

The Michigan inheritance tax statute in part provides:

"Sec. 2. First. (a) Where the person or persons entitled to any beneficial interest in such property shall be the grandfather, grandmother, father, mother, husband, wife, child, brother, sister, wife or widow of a son, or the husband of a daughter * * * such transfer of property of the clear market value of 5,000 dollars shall be exempt from all taxation under this act; * * *

"Second. In case the clear market value of the property transferred to each individual of the persons included in the classes specified in paragraph 1 hereof exceeds the exemptions specified in paragraph *195 1, such exemptions shall first be deducted therefrom; when the clear market value of such property shall not exceed 50,000 dollars before deducting such exemptions the transfer of such property in excess of the exemptions herein provided and up to said 50,000 dollars shall be taxed under this act at the rate of 2 per centum of the clear market value thereof." CL 1948, § 205.202 (Stat Ann 1950 Rev § 7.562).

Plaintiff, Charles J. Heller, under facts about to be noted, asserts that incident to fixing the inheritance tax on a bequest to him in the will of Florence Atherton, deceased, he is entitled to the statutory exemption of $5,000 provided in section 2, subd First (a), and to the so-called preferential rate of 2% provided in section 2, subd Second, of the statute. The defendant, Department of Revenue of the State of Michigan, contends that plaintiff is not entitled to the $5,000 exemption or to the preferential rate. If plaintiff's contention is correct, the inheritance tax against the property he would take under the will of Florence Atherton would amount to $393.40, but otherwise it would be in excess of $2,500. The circuit court held with plaintiff. Defendant has appealed.

Decision herein turns upon whether plaintiff comes within the statutory designation of "husband of a daughter" of testatrix, who died in 1950; or whether, on the contrary, since he became a widower upon the death in 1946 of the daughter, Hazel E. Heller, his former wife, he must be held to be the "husband" of a deceased daughter of testatrix and not within the statutory designation of one who, upon fixing the inheritance tax, is entitled to the statutory $5,000 exemption and the preferential rate of 2%.

In determining what is the proper construction of the controverted portion of the statute, we must first look to the context of the statute itself. In doing so *196 a persuasive reason for holding in accord with plaintiff's contention at once appears. In designating what persons are entitled to the exemption and the preferential rate, the statute reads: "Husband, wife, (and in the next line) * * * or the husband of a daughter." Obviously as to an inheritance or bequest to a "husband" or "wife" the statutory provision would be entirely meaningless unless the word "husband" were construed to mean widower, and the word "wife" to mean or include widow. Hence, it seems almost inescapable that when in the next line of the statute the words "husband of a daughter" appear, "husband" as there used should be held to include or be synonymous with widower.

Further, originally the Michigan inheritance tax law[*] was copied in substance from the New York statute[†] in which there was used in like context the identical words in controversy in the instant case; and prior to the enactment of the Michigan statute it was adjudicated in New York that the phrase "husband of a daughter" was intended to include a widower whose spouse had predeceased the testator.

"A legacy to the husband of a daughter of the testator is not subject to taxation under L 1885, c 483, although the daughter died before the testator." Matter of Woolsey (1887), 19 Abb NC 232 (6 Demarest's NY Reports 145).

In another New York case, which antedated the 1899 Michigan statute, in passing upon an 1892 New York statute pertaining to inheritance taxes, the holding was:

"Laws 1892, c 399, § 2, exempting from the transfer tax a legacy to the `husband of a daughter' of *197 testator, includes the husband of a deceased daughter, though he has remarried." In re Ray's Estate (NYS syllabus), 13 Misc 480 (35 NYS 481).

In the body of the Ray Case the court also said:

"The word `husband' or `surviving husband' has become so imbedded in our statutes and in all legal phraseology that it has the same force and meaning and the same legal effect as if he had been described as `widower.' If the legislature had intended not to use the word `husband' in the same sense as it has always been used by the laws of this State and by its courts, it would have made its meaning clear, definite, certain, by saying the `husband of a daughter, if she be living.' By omitting to restrict this exemption to a husband whose wife was living, it seems very clear that the word `husband' is here used in its general and accepted sense, which not only common usage but the statutes of this State make use of, and as the word is ordinarily used and understood in speaking of a surviving `husband.'"

It is true that the above-noted New York decisions were by surrogate courts, which are not courts of last resort. But no appeal to a reviewing court was taken and for years these decisions seem to have stood as the law of New York, without conflicting decisions so far as we have been able to ascertain, and without any modifying legislation prior to 1930. We are mindful that incident to amending numerous particulars of its inheritance tax statute in 1930, the New York legislature modified the phrase "husband of a daughter" to read as follows: "The husband or a widower of a daughter." But that circumstance affords no convincing reason for holding that the prior interpretation of the statutory words was not as intended by the enacting legislature. The amplification of the statutory words may as well have been for clarification as for modification. At least for many years the judicial interpretation seems to have *198 been accepted without legislative action to void such interpretation.

The court of last resort in each of the States about to be noted has held in accord with the New York decisions. While these courts make some comment concerning the provisions of the New York inheritance tax law and pertinent earlier decisions of New York courts, other reasons are also assigned in support of the conclusions reached.

"In the provision of section 1 of the inheritance tax act of 1909 fixing the rate of tax and the exemption as to near relatives, the term `husband of the daughter' includes the husband of a deceased daughter of the donor. (Syllabus.) * * *

"It is true that, as generally defined, the word `husband' means a man having a wife, and does not include a widower or a man whose wife has died and who has not remarried, but it is also true that the word `husband' is often used as synonymous with `widower' or `surviving husband.' It is so used in the very section of the act under consideration." People v. Snyder,

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.W.2d 660, 333 Mich. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-athertons-estate-mich-1952.