In Re Settlement of Estate of Newberry

75 S.E.2d 851, 138 W. Va. 296, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 27
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1953
Docket10511
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 S.E.2d 851 (In Re Settlement of Estate of Newberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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 Settlement of Estate of Newberry, 75 S.E.2d 851, 138 W. Va. 296, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 27 (W. Va. 1953).

Opinion

Given, Judge:

The question before the Court on this writ of error, granted to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Ohio *297 County, affirming an assessment made by the State Tax Commissioner and appealed to the circuit court, pursuant to Code, 11-11-21, relates to the method adopted by the commissioner in the allowance of the exemptions provided in the applicable inheritance tax statutes. The market value of the estate presently involved, as determined by provisions of Code, 11-11-5, as amended, was $142,392.75. The taxpayer figured the tax due the State, under the statutes, as being $5,207.09, after deducting a claimed discount, and remitted that sum to the commissioner. The commissioner, using .the same market value of the estate, except as to an unimportant mathematical error made by the taxpayer, found owing the State an additional tax of $301.50. The present controversy relates to such additional amount of tax.

The widow of the testator, named in the will under which the property passed, is the sole beneficiary thereof and, under Code, 11-11-4, as amended, is entitled to an exemption of fifteen thousand dollars, against which no tax can be assessed. The manner of the allowance of the exemption, however, raises the controlling question.

The procedure followed by the taxpayer, in the determination of the amount of the tax, was to deduct the exemption of fifteen thousand dollars from the total amount of the value of the estate, assess the next fifty thousand dollars of the estate at the rate of three per cent, the minimum rate of tax, and the remainder of the estate at five per cent, the next higher rate provided by the statute. The procedure of the commissioner was to deduct the fifteen thousand dollars exemption from the first fifty thousand dollars of the estate, assess the remainder of the fifty thousand dollars at the three per cent rate, and the amount of the estate over and above the fifty thousand dollars at the five per cent rate. The result of the procedure contended for by the commissioner is, of course, a larger tax assessment, since a smaller proportion of the estate, under that procedure, is assessed at the three per cent rate, and a larger proportion at the five per cent rate.

*298 Sections 2 and 3 of Article 11, Chapter 11 of the Code, as amended, establish the rates for such assessment. Section 2, in so far as material, reads: “When the property or any beneficial interest therein passes by any such transfer where the amount of the property considered as a unit shall exceed in value the exemption hereinafter specified, and shall not exceed in value fifty thousand dollars, the tax hereby imposed shall be; (a) Where the person or persons entitled to any beneficial interest in such property shall be the wife, husband, child, stepchild, or the descendants of a living or deceased child per stirpes, or father or mother of the decedent, at the rate of three per cent of the market value of such interest in such property; * * Section 3, in so far as material, reads: “When the market value of any such property considered as a unit exceeds fifty thousand dollars, the rate of tax upon such excess shall be as follows: (a) Upon all in excess of fifty thousand dollars, up to and not exceeding one hundred fifty thousand dollars, the rate shall be as follows: Transfers to those persons in subdivision (a) of section two, five per cent; * *■ It will be noticed that Section 2 relates to estates or interests, against which the tax may be assessed, which do not exceed fifty thousand dollars, and to the first fifty thousand dollars of any estate or interest where the value of the estate or interest exceeds fifty thousand dollars. It is also clear that Section 2 provides a complete method for taxing any such estate or interest, where the value thereof does not exceed fifty thousand dollars. In other words, Section 2 exclusively provides the tax as to estates or interests which do not excéed, in value, fifty thousand dollars, while Section 3 exclusively provides the tax as to that part of any estate or interest which does exceed fifty thousand dollars. Therefore, in determining the amount of the tax as to an estate of a greater value than fifty thousand dollars, we must deal with both sections and, in such circumstances, the’ two sections must be read pari materia.

Eliminating from Section 2 languáge not pertinent *299 to the point, and not applicable to the estate here involved, it simply says: “When the property or any beneficial interest * * * shall exceed in value the exemption * * *, and shall not exceed in value fifty thousand dollars, the tax * * * shall be * * * at the rate of three per cent of the market value * * * ” of the amount above the exemption. Here we find definite language clearly saying that after the deduction of the amount of the proper exemption, the remaining part of the value of the interest shall be taxed at the rate of three per cent, if the value of such interest is less than fifty thousand dollars, or, if the value of such interest is greater than fifty thousand dollars, the remainder of the fifty thousand dollars, after deduction of the exemption, shall be at the rate of three per cent. This section mentions or provides no tax as to that part of any estate or interest the value of which is in excess of fifty thousand dollars, although it specifically provides a tax, at different rates, for each possible class of beneficiaries.

Eliminating from Section 3 language not pertinent to the point or applicable to the estate here involved, it simply says: “When the market value * * * exceeds fifty thousand dollars, the rate of tax upon * * * all in excess of fifty thousand dollars, shall be * * * five per cent; * * Again we find clear, definite language. How can “all in excess of fifty thousand dollars” be taxed at five per cent, if some proportion of such excess is to be deducted and taxed at the lower rate? It is significant, we think, that no exemption, is even mentioned in Section 3, dealing with interests of greater value than fifty thousand dollars. All matters as to exemptions have been taken care of in Section 2, out of the first fifty thousand dollars value of the estate. Thereafter* the graduated rates provide the only differentials as to the several classes of beneficiaries.

Acts of the Legislature, dealing with inheritance taxes in this State, have been numerous and varied. We think a history thereof not very helpful. Decisions of other *300 states are helpful only where statutes considered are similar to the statute under consideration here. In Commonwealth v . Carter, 126 Va. 469, 102 S. E. 58, the statute considered, in so far as material here, reads: “Where any estate * * * shall pass under a will * * *, the estate so passing shall be subject to a tax of one per centum on every hundred dollars’ value thereof: Provided, that estates passing to * * * wife * * * shall be subject to a tax of one per centum on every hundred dollars’ value thereof in excess of fifteen thousand dollars; * * *. When the amount of the market value of such property or interest exceeds fifteen thousand dollars, the rate of tax upon such excess shall be as follows: (1) Upon all in excess of fifteen thousand dollars up to fifty thousand dollars, at the primary rates.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.E.2d 851, 138 W. Va. 296, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-settlement-of-estate-of-newberry-wva-1953.