In Re Kennedy's Estate

61 P.2d 998, 188 Wash. 84, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 745
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1936
DocketNo. 25857. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 998 (In Re Kennedy's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Kennedy's Estate, 61 P.2d 998, 188 Wash. 84, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 745 (Wash. 1936).

Opinions

MILLARD, C.J., STEINERT, MITCHELL, and HOLCOMB, JJ., dissent. Mary H. Kennedy died October 16, 1928, leaving a nonintervention will, in which Edwin S. Goodwin was named as executor. By the terms of *Page 85 the will, three specific bequests aggregating a thousand dollars were made, and the residue of the estate was left to Goodwin, the executor. The will was admitted to probate by the superior court of King county, and, on the filing of the inventory, an order of solvency was entered. The executor continued to administer the estate without further court proceeding, as authorized by the will.

The inventory, filed on November 8, 1928, showed an estate value of $5,085.59. This included two parcels of real estate, one appraised at two hundred dollars and another at three hundred. Household goods were appraised at fifty dollars, and the remainder of the estate, designated as liquid assets without further detail, at $4,335.59.

The executor having failed to return any inheritance tax to the state of Washington, the supervisor of the inheritance tax and escheat division, by authority of the state tax commission, on April 23, 1935, filed in the probate proceeding his findings fixing the amount of tax due from the estate to the state of Washington. The net tax due, as computed by the supervisor, after the deduction of debts owing by the decedent prior to death, funeral expenses, and the expenses of administration, was found to be $348.41, being ten per cent of the amounts severally going to the beneficiaries under the will, who, as it appears, were strangers to the blood and whose shares were, therefore, chargeable at that rate.

Notice of the findings of the supervisor having been given as provided by law, Paul Eugene Goss and Martha A. Goss, his wife, filed their objection to the findings in so far as they purported to establish the amount of the inheritance tax as a charge and lien upon the property of the estate of Mary H. Kennedy. Their objection had particular relation to lots 41 and *Page 86 42, block 27, Madison Street Addition to the city of Seattle, being the parcel appraised at the value of three hundred dollars. They set forth in their objection that they had purchased these lots from the executor at the appraised value of three hundred dollars in cash, taking title subject to the payment of an outstanding mortgage in the sum of five hundred dollars.

They alleged that the deed from the executor contained the recital: "This sale of said premises is necessary in the process of settlement of the estate of said deceased," and that the proceeds from the sale were in fact used to pay in part the expenses of the administration and claims filed against the estate. They alleged that the supervisor, by his findings, had assessed the whole of the tax against the assets of the estate and sought to impress the tax as so fixed by him as a lien against the real property purchased by them from the executor, whereas the tax due should be properly assessed against the beneficiaries of the estate, that is to say, one hundred dollars against the three legatees and the remainder of the tax, claimed by them to be $176.75, against E.S. Goodwin, the executor, as a residuary legatee.

A hearing was had before the court and testimony taken upon the findings of the supervisor and the objection thereto, and an order made sustaining the objection, finding the amount of tax due from the estate to be $338.41, and assessing it, one hundred dollars against the specific legatees and $238.41 against Goodwin, the residuary legatee. The court also ordered and decreed that the real property purchased by the objectors from the executor was free from any lien for inheritance tax due to the state. From this order, the supervisor of the inheritance tax and escheat division appealed, by notice in open court, embodied in the order. *Page 87

The supervisor assigns as error, first, the holding of the trial court that the real estate conveyed to the respondents was not subject to the state's lien for the payment of the inheritance tax; and, second, the finding that the sale of the real estate in question was necessary for payment of the expenses of administration. If the position of the supervisor on the first contention is correct, the findings of the trial court as to the necessity for the sale to pay expenses is not material.

[1] The controlling statutory provision is Rem. Rev. Stat., § 11201 [P.C. § 7051], which reads:

"All property within the jurisdiction of this state, and any interest therein, whether belonging to the inhabitants of this state or not, and whether tangible or intangible, which shall pass by will or by the statutes of inheritances of this or any other state, or by deed, grant, sale or gift made in contemplation of the death of the grantor or donor, or by deed, grant or sale or gift made or intended to take effect in possession or in enjoyment after the death of the grantor or donor to any person in trust, or otherwise, shall, for the use of the state, be subject to a tax as provided for in section 11202, after the payment of all debts owing by the decedent at the time of his death, the local and state taxes due from the estate prior to his death, and a reasonable sum for funeral expenses, monument or crypt, court costs, including cost of appraisement made for the purpose of assessing the inheritance tax, the fees of executors, administrators or trustees, reasonable attorney's fees, and family allowance not to exceed $1,000, and no other sum, but said debts shall not be deducted unless the same are allowed or established within the time provided by law, unless otherwise ordered by the judge or court of the proper county, and all administrators, executors and trustees, and any such grantee under a conveyance, and any such donee under a gift, made during the grantor's or donor's life, shall be respectively liable for all such taxes to be paid by them, with lawful interest *Page 88 until the same shall have been paid. The inheritance tax shall be and remain a lien on such estate from the death of the decedent until paid."

This section was amended, by the addition of new matter about which we are not concerned here, by the 1935 session of the legislature. Laws of 1935, p. 768, § 104.

The supervisor relies upon the last sentence above quoted to sustain his contention that the inheritance tax remains a lien on the whole of the estate of the decedent until paid. The respondents contend, first, that the "estate" referred to is the net estate after allowable deductions for debts and expenses; and, secondly, that, since under the findings of the trial court the proceeds of the real estate purchased by the respondents were applied to the payment of deductible items of expense, this real estate was thereby discharged of the tax lien.

The respondents rest their contention upon the holding of this court that the inheritance tax is not an estate tax in the sense of a tax upon the corpus of the decedent's estate, but, rather, a tax upon the right of succession. In re Corbin's Estate,107 Wn. 424, 181 P. 910, 7 A.L.R. 685. It is urged that, since this is so, the tax is only upon the property passing to the beneficiaries, and the tax being so limited, the lien of the tax is likewise limited to the property passing to the beneficiaries.

Without going further afield for authority, we think the reasoning and conclusion reached in In re Sherwood's Estate,122 Wn. 648, 211 P. 734, disposes of the question, adversely to respondents' contention.

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Related

State v. Wandell
454 P.2d 420 (Washington Supreme Court, 1969)
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191 Wash. 614 (Washington Supreme Court, 1937)
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Turner v. State
191 Wash. 145 (Washington Supreme Court, 1937)
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62 P.2d 729 (Washington Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 998, 188 Wash. 84, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kennedys-estate-wash-1936.