Jenkins Estate

83 Pa. D. & C. 265, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 279
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedAugust 8, 1952
Docketno. 40,799
StatusPublished

This text of 83 Pa. D. & C. 265 (Jenkins Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins Estate, 83 Pa. D. & C. 265, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 279 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1952).

Opinion

van Roden, P. J. (specially presiding),

This is an appeal filed on behalf of the executor and the remainderman of decedent’s estate from a supplemental inheritance tax appraisement filed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on December 7, 1951.

The facts as set forth in a written stipulation of counsel dated May 13, 1952, are as follows:

[266]*266Decedent died December 11,1931. His last will and testament, dated February 5, 1930, was duly probated in the office of the Register of Wills of Montgomery County on January 6, 1932, and letters testamentary issued thereon to Jenkintown Bank and Trust Company, the executor named therein.

On February 11, 1932, the executor filed in the office of the Register of Wills of Montgomery County an inventory and appraisement of the assets of decedent’s estate. The inventory and appraisement contained, inter alia, an item described as follows:

“Glenside Bank & Trust Co. balance $2,306.56 app. 0”

It appears that the Glenside Bank and Trust Company was closed by the Secretary of Banking of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on October 2, 1931, and was in liquidation at the time of decedent’s death. It further appears that at the time of the filing of the inventory and appraisement, no liquidating dividends had yet been declared and the value of the claim of the estate could not then be determined.

On February 20, 1932, the official appraisement of the estate for inheritance tax purposes was filed in the office of the register of wills, and the appraisement contained the following notation:

“A portion of the-assets of this estate consist of its claim against the Glenside Bank & Trust Co., and the value of this claim is not being appraised at this time. Upon payment of the final dividends and liquidation of the affairs of this institution, or at any time when an intelligent appraisement of this claim can be made, this asset will be appraised in a supplemental appraisement.”

By written notice dated March 8, 1932, the register of wills notified thé executor that the Commonwealth claimed inheritance tax due in the amount of $581.23. [267]*267On March 9,1932, the executor paid the sum of $556.17 (being amount of tax less five percent discount).

The executor filed its account on February 4, 1933. This account disclosed that the accountant had received from the Glenside Bank and Trust Company three dividends totaling 25 percent of the deposit, or $576.65. This account was duly adjudicated by this court in April 1933. No claim was presented at the audit for any additional inheritance tax. One half of the distributive estate was awarded unto decedent’s widow, and the remaining one half to a trustee for the payment of net income to Hannah E. Jenkins for life with remainder in favor of Magdelina Alberta Zeisloft, in accordance with decedent’s will (as modified by the widow’s election).

Hannah E. Jenkins died on June 7, 1951, and the trustee filed his first and final account on August 8, 1951. In this account the accountant charged itself with dividends received on account of the one-half share of the claim against the Glenside Bank and Trust Company awarded to the trustee, which dividends received by the trustee amounted to $313.10.

On December 7,1951, a supplemental appraisement of the dividends received on the Glenside Bank and Trust Company deposit, in the total sum of $1,202.89, was filed in the office of the register of wills and inheritance tax was assessed thereon in the sum of $72.17, with interest and penalties from three months after the date of receipt of each dividend by the executor, widow and trustee, respectively. This sum of $72.17 comprises collateral inheritance tax at the rate of 10 percent on the one-half share of dividends received by the trust estate, to wit, $60.16, and direct inheritance tax at the rate of two percent on the one-half share received by the widow, or $12.01. It is conceeded that neither the executor, the trustee, the remainderman nor the widow had any actual notice or [268]*268knowledge of the reservation clause in the original inheritance tax appraisal until the question was raised in 1951.

It is well settled in this Commonwealth that an appraisement for inheritance tax purposes purports to be a final determination of the value of the property appraised, and such appraisement is conclusive, except on appeal, even though it may subsequently appear that a mistake in judgment has been made as to the value of an asset: Heberton Estate, 351 Pa. 564, 567 (1945). However, it is equally well settled that the register of wills (as agent for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) may suspend any item in the appraisement pending its final determination: Reynolds Estate, 359 Pa. 616, 620 (1948). In the instant case, the register of wills clearly and unequivocably suspended appraisement of the value of the estate’s claim against the Glenside Bank and Trust Company by noting on the original appraisement that the value of this claim was not being appraised at that time, but would be appraised “Upon payment of the final dividends . . . or at any time when an intelligent appraisement of this claim can be made”. The fact that such notation was not repeated on the bill sent to the taxpayer is not controlling, since the appraisement was filed of record in a public office and constituted due notice to all parties in interest. Accordingly, the court holds that the Commonwealth was within its rights in suspending the appraisement of the value of the asset at the time the original inventory and appraisement was filed. It follows that the Commonwealth was further within its rights in appraising the assets and assessing inheritance tax thereon in 1951, unless barred by'laches. It was held in Graham Estate, 71D. & C. 125, 127 (1950), that laches may be imputed to the Commonwealth as well as to an individual, but it was further held that a six-year delay in making an inheritance tax reappraise[269]*269ment will not bar the Commonwealth’s rights where neither the fiduciary nor the remainderman have been prejudiced. In the instant case, the delay of the Commonwealth has persisted for almost 20 years, but it does not appear that such delay was due to any culpable negligence on the part of the Commonwealth. Decedent died within a few months after the bank was placed in liquidation and it could not be determined, at the time of filing the original inventory and appraisement, the extent of recovery or probable recovery on this doubtful asset. The Commonwealth’s agent properly suspended action on this item until the payment of the final liquidation dividend or until such time as an intelligent appraisement could be made. The final dividend was not paid until October 5, 1945, and the date of such final payment was not called to the attention of the inheritance tax appraiser by any party interested in the instant estate until the trustee’s account was filed on August 8, 1951 (following the death of the life tenant on June 7,1951). Thereafter, within a reasonable time, to wit, on December 7, 1951, a supplemental appraisement, covering this particular asset was filed. Normally when an asset is called to the attention of the appropriate representative of the Commonwealth but is not included in the appraisement because of a mistaken notion as to its taxability, the Commonwealth is estopped from filing a supplemental appraisement covering the asset more than a year after decedent’s death: Romberger Estate, 74 D. & C. 196 (1950).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Heberton Estate
41 A.2d 654 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
Reynolds Estate
60 A.2d 57 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Pa. D. & C. 265, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-estate-paorphctmontgo-1952.