Kahn v. Herold

147 F. 575, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 21, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 F. 575 (Kahn v. Herold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahn v. Herold, 147 F. 575, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898 (circtdnj 1906).

Opinion

CROSS, District Judge.

The plaintiffs, as executors of the last will of Abraham Wolff, deceased, sue to recover the sum of $37,673.13, which they claim was the amount of the tax illegally collected by the defendant upon a life estate devised by said will, to Clara W. Wertheim, a daughter of said deceased. The testator died October 1, 1900, leaving a last will and testament, whereby he appointed the plaintiffs his executors, who duly qualified as such, and took upon themselves the burden of the administration of his estate November 7, 1900. The twenty-eighth section of his will, which it is admitted is the only one affecting this case is as follows:

“All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, of which I may die seized and possessed and wherever situate or being, except as hereinbefore otherwise provided, including all lapsed legacies, I give, devise and bequeath to my trustees, the survivors and survivor of them and his successors, upon the following trusts, that is to say: (1) To divide, set apart and hold the same in as mans-- equal portions or shares as I shall leave daughters me surviving and the issue of a deceased daughter, allotting, however, and turning over to the issue of a deceased daughter only the portion or share which their parent would have taken if living, that is to say per stirpes and not per capita, and as to the share of a surviving daughter, to invest and keep invested the personal estate and proceeds of real estate of such share, if sold, in such securities as by the thirty-sixth article of this my will they are authorized to invest in. (2) To collect and receive the rents, issues, interest and income of the portion or share so to be set apart for each of my said daughters and to apply the same to her use so long as she shall live free from any control of her husband. (3) Upon the death of such daughter leaving issue her surviving, to dispose of her share or portion among such issue in shares as she may appoint by will, and in default of such appointment, or so far as such appointment shall not be made, to dispose thereof among such issue in shares per stirpes and not per capita, and if she shall leave no issue her surviving to continue to hold her share or portion for the benefit of her sister, if living, for life, in trust to collect and receive the rents, issues, interest and income thereof, and to apply the same to her use so long as she shall live, and upon or in case of her death, to divide the same to and among her issue, if any, in shares as she may appoint by will, and in default of such appointment, or so far as such appointment shall not be made, to dispose thereof among such issue, in shares per stirpes and not per capita, and in default of such issue to divide the same to and among the following persons in the proportions herein provided, that is to say: [naming them.?’

Other paragraphs follow which need not be recited. The testator left him surviving two daughters, Addie W. Kahn and Clara W. Wertheim, and under the foregoing section of his will, each was entitled to a life • interest in one-half of his residuary estate. The said Clara W. Wertheim, died August 15, 1903, 2 years. 10 months and 14 days after the death of said testator, Abraham Wolff.

On May 19, 1903, the executors, pursuant to the requirements [577]*577of sed ion 30 of war revenue act (Act June 13, 1898, c. 418, 30 Stat. 465 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2308]) filed with the defendant a schedule and return, together with an affidavit showing the legacies and distributive shares arising from the personal property of every kind, belonging to the estate of Abraham Wolff, including therein the life interests of the two daughters, Mrs. Kahn and Mrs. Wertheim, under the foregoing section of his will. This affidavit was filed with the return for the purpose of bringing to the attention of the collector, certain items not included in the return, which the executors claimed were not taxable. These disputed items, however, had no relation to the claim in suit. On July 10th the plaintiffs were informed by a letter from the defendant that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue claimed that the returns and schedules as filed were, for certain reasons specified, erroneous and defective, and the executors were requested to forward a new return for transmission to the department. Some correspondence thereupon ensued between the executors, the Commissioner and collector, and one of the counsel of the executors, on August 13, 3903, went to Washington in their behalf and attended personally before the Commissioner and discussed with him the legal questions involved, and claimed that there was no occasion to file a new return until after the legal propositions in dispute had been settled. The Commissioner said that he would take the matter under advisement. There was some further correspondence between the Commissioner and the counsel of the executors, and on September 8, 1903, the Deputy Commissioner advised them that no 'further information was desired, and that action would he be taken in the matter in the near future. This was in reply to a letter from them dated September 2, 1903, asking whether anything further by way of proof or brief was required, and to which was appended this statement: “We understand that no assessment has yet been made.” Nothing further transpired until October 26, 1903. when the plaintiffs received a notice from the collector stating that a tax of $107,398.36 had been assessed upon the estate, and demanding its payment. The tax so assessed included a tax on the life interests of the two daughters of the testator in the estate of their father. The portion of the estate which was given Mrs. Wertheim, in trust for her benefit for life, amounted, as computed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, to $2,647,768.97, and the clear value of her life interest, as computed under the mortality tables, was $1,870,367.08, which, taxed at the rate of $2.25 per $100, amounted to the sum of $12,081.91, which sum, included with other taxes of the estate, was paid under protest November 4, 1903. The assessment as finally made by the Commissioner was based, not upon any new return made by the executors, but upon the original return and affidavit which at first were adjudged insufficient by the Commissioner. The Commissioner did, however, add to the assessment some items not included in the schedule, but which were brought to his attention by' the supplemental affidavit filed therewith. The Lax thus assessed was not paid until between two and three months after the death of Mrs. Wertheim. The payment when made by the executors was made under protest, [578]*578but without notice or knowledge that the life tenant was then dead. So far' as the record shows, both parties were ignorant of her death when the tax was paid.

Some time after its payment, and on April 4, 1904, a petition was filed by the executors asking to have $26,637.59 of the total amount paid by them, refunded. This petition did not embrace the taxes for which recovery is sought in this suit, but only such part as had been in dispute between the executors and the Commissioner before the assessment was made. The claim made under the foregoing petition was subsequentfy, and on April 11, 1905, allowed to the extent of $13,983.36. Almost immediately thereafter, and before payment to the executors of the amount of such allowance, the department was notified by them that they intended to file a further petition, asking that another portion of the taxes paid, be refunded.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. 575, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-herold-circtdnj-1906.