In Re Estate of Brix

186 P. 135, 181 Cal. 667, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 409
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1919
DocketS. F. No. 8778.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 186 P. 135 (In Re Estate of Brix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 Estate of Brix, 186 P. 135, 181 Cal. 667, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 409 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an appeal by the state controller from an order declaring that a transfer of certain property made by the decedent, Herman Hugo Brix, in his lifetime, is not subject to an inheritance tax.

The transfers were made in the year 1913, and Brix at that time was about forty-eight years of age and in good *669 health. He and his wife, Helena S. Brix, had been married more than twenty years before the transfers and had accumulated a large amount of community property, real and personal. They had three children, Emma M. Brix, who was bom November 17, 1893, and two other children, Carl H. Brix and Theodore F. Brix, both of whom are minors. The decedent and his said wife were living together at the time but the relations between them were strained, and she filed a suit against him for divorce about a year afterward and obtained the divorce sued for.

The transfers in question consist of the following documents, which, for convenience of reference, we have numbered.

1. A deed executed by Herman H. Brix, as grantor, conveying to Helena S. Brix, his wife, a life estate in three lots in Fresno and to said three children the remainder therein after said life estate. This deed was dated March 3, 1913, and was recorded March 4, 1913.

2. A deed executed by Herman H. Brix and Helena S. Brix, as grantors, conveying six lots in Fresno to Emma M. Brix, subject to a life estate reserved to Helena S. Brix. This deed is dated May 26, 1913,. and was recorded June 9, 1913.

3. A deed executed by Herman H. Brix and Helena S. Brix, as grantors, conveying seven lots in Fresno to said three children, subject to a life estate reserved to Herman H. Brix. This deed is dated May 26, 1913, and was recorded June 9, 1913.

4. An agreement between Herman H. Brix and Helena S. Brix dated May 27, 1913. This refers to other papers executed by the parties “for the purpose of effecting a settlement of the property rights between said parties,” and states that its recitals “are a part and portion of the agreements by which the parties hereto have mutually settled their respective property rights.” It contains a covenant by Herman H. Brix to pay, during his lifetime, the sum of five hundred dollars per month to his said wife so long as she shall live, and after her death to the said children. It also mortgages the life estate of Herman H. Brix in the property described in deed (3), to secure payment of these monthly sums.

*670 5. A deed executed by Helena S. Brix, as grantor, dated May 27, 1913, by which she granted to Herman H. Brix, “his heirs and assigns forever, all the right, title, and interest which the grantor herein may have or acquire in any property hereinafter acquired by conveyance, bequest, or otherwise by the grantee herein and which is so received in the name of said grantee.” This deed was recorded June 3, 1914.

6. An agreement executed by Herman H. Brix and ' Helena S. Brix and dated May 27, 1913. This agreement recites that the parties are husband and wife and are living together as such and have accumulated properties and property interests, that they desire to divide their property interests and arrange that each shall have a separate income and that certain properties shall, on the death of the respective parties, or either of them, revert to their children. It also declares, at some length, that this agreement is to be binding whether the parties continue to live together as husband and wife or separate, and whether either of them shall secure a divorce for any reason, or shall remain husband and wife, and that it is not made in contemplation either of a divorce or of their remaining husband and wife. It also recites that the above-mentioned documents, which we 'have numbered (1), (2), (3), (4), and (5), have been executed to carry out the agreement of the parties, and provides that the parties “do by these presents expressly waive any and all claims which they or either of them may have to any and all property now owned by either of said parties, and each of them do further expressly waive any and all claim to any and all property which either of them may acquire in any wise,” and that “either of said parties may execute and deliver good and sufficient transfers of any and all property which they may own or may hereafter acquire, without the signature of the other party thereto, and such transfers shall be treated and considered as passing a good and sufficient . title to such properties, regardless of the consideration of said transfer, and each of said parties hereto do expressly waive hereby any and all interest which they, or either of thein, may have in or to any or all property, real or personal, noyr or hereafter owned by them, or either of them, or in which they or either of them may acquire any inter *671 est whatsoever.” The agreement further declares that it is a complete settlement of all interests which either party may have or acquire in the property of the other, and that each party releases the other from payment of any costs, attorney’s fees, or judgment which either might receive in any proceeding instituted by one against the other, and that Helena S. Brix waives any and all claims for alimony, attorney’s fees, separate maintenance, and other costs in any divorce suit, or other suit, that may be brought .by either, and waives any claim for further division of the property. It then provides again that it shall be binding, independent of whether the parties live together or live separate without a divorce, or a divorce proceeding is instituted by either.

Helena S. Brix testified that the reason her husband gave her for the execution of the agreement was that it was done so that he would not have to consult her about his business matters, and that there was nothing said by him to her about a divorce or separation in connection with the agreement, at or before its execution. N. B. Harris, who was the attorney for Herman H. Brix in the matter, testified that Brix stated to him that his purpose was that he might be freed from the objections of Mrs. Brix to his handling his property, and that if she did not get a divorce he proposed to get one himself.

The inheritance tax appraiser, to whom the matter was first submitted, made a report finding that the above-mentioned transfers, (1), (2) and (3), were not taxable as to the interest passing to Helena S. Brix thereby, but that as to the remainders passing to the children they were taxable. Upon objections by the children, the matter was heard by the superior court, and it adjudged that none of the transfers to the children made by said deeds, (1), (2) and (3), was taxable. The controller has appealed from the whole of this judgment, but states in his brief that the appeal is not prosecuted as to the transfers numbered (1) and (2). This leaves only transfer number (3) for consideration.

As already stated, this transfer was made May 26, 1913. The deed appears to have been fully delivered and effective at the time it bears date. [1] The taxability of the transfer must therefore be determined by the law in effect *672 at that time. (Hunt v. Wicht, 174 Cal. 209, [L. R. A. 1917C, 961, 162 Pac. 639]; Estate of Felton, 176 Cal. 669, [169 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 135, 181 Cal. 667, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-brix-cal-1919.