Maguire v. Tax Commissioner

120 N.E. 162, 230 Mass. 503, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 1094
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 162 (Maguire v. Tax Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maguire v. Tax Commissioner, 120 N.E. 162, 230 Mass. 503, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 1094 (Mass. 1918).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

The petitioner, a resident of Cambridge in this Commonwealth, prays in accordance with St. 1916, c. 269, § 20, for the abatement of a tax alleged to have been assessed illegally. The tax was levied upon income received during 1916 from a trust .established by the will of a deceased resident of Pennsylvania. That trust now is and always has been administered at Philadelphia in that State by the Girard Trust Company, a Pennsylvania corporation having no place of business in Massachusetts, under appointment by a court of competent jurisdiction in that State. The trust fund consists of mortgages, stocks and bonds. All the securities, documents and other evidences of title of the property belonging to the trust at all times since its creation have been kept physically in the exclusive custody of the trustee in Philadelphia. Some of these securities were taxable and taxed to the trustee in Pennsylvania. The rest were not so taxed or taxable under the laws of Pennsylvania. Of these latter there were bonds of three corporations exempted from direct taxation to the trustee because the debtor corporations under a Pennsylvania statúte paid to that State a tax for and in behalf of the owners of the bonds. Certificates of the Southern Railway Equipment Trust were exempt from such taxation because all payments under them were rental for the use of tangible personal property, which in fact had a situs outside of Massachusetts, and shares of stock in two corporations were exempt from such taxation because the corporations paid to the State a tax on their capital stock.

[505]*505The income, received by the petitioner from the securities taxed to the trustee in Pennsylvania is not subject to taxation under our income tax law. It is provided by § 9 of St. 1916, c. 269 (hereafter referred to as the income tax law), that “The income received by estates held in trust by trustees, any one of whom is an inhabitant of this Commonwealth or has derived his appointment from a court of this Commonwealth, shall be subject to the taxes assessed by this act to the extent that the persons to whom the income from the trust is payable, or for whose benefit it is accumulated, are inhabitants of this Commonwealth. The tax shall be assessed to such of the trustees as are inhabitants of the Commonwealth. Such part of the income of intangible personal property held in trust as is payable to or accumulated for persons who are not inhabitants of the Commonwealth, shall be exempt from the taxes imposed by this act. If an inhabitant of this Commonwealth receives income from one or more executors, administrators or trustees, none of whom is an inhabitant of this Commonwealth or has derived his appointment from a court of this Commonwealth, such income shall be subject to the taxes assessed by this act, according to the nature of the income received by the executors, administrators or trustees.” This section standing by itself is broad enough to include the income in question.- But this section must be read in connection with the other terms of the income tax law in order to gather the complete intent of the General Court. These broad provisions of § 9 are cut down by § 11. Reference is made in the earlier part of that section to the exemption from taxation under St. 1909, c. 490, of “property, whether held by an executor, administrator, trustee or otherwise,” after the income tax law shall take effect; and a later sentence, so far as material, is in these words: “This act shall not be construed to impose a tax upon any . . . person in respect to income derived from property exempted from taxation by provisions of law existing prior to the passage of this act.” It is manifest from the phraseology of § 11 of the income tax law, that it was intended to apply to trustees so far as they may be within the general scope of any portion of it, because, as has been pointed out, they are named in the first part of the section.

The reference in the sentence quoted from § 11, to the provisions of law existing at that time, manifestly is to the general [506]*506tax law, St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, § 23, cl. 5, as amended. It there was provided that “All personal estate, within or without the Commonwealth, shall be assessed to the owner in the city or town in which he is an inhabitant on the first day of April, except as provided in Part III and in the following clauses of this section: . . . Fifth, Personal property held in trust by an executor, administrator or trustee, except as provided in section thirty-seven of Part III, the income of which is payable to another person, shall be assessed to the executor, administrator or trustee in the city or town in which such other person resides, if within the Commonwealth; and if he resides out of the Commonwealth it shall be assessed in the place where the executor, administrator or trustee resides; and if there are two or more executors, administrators or trustees residing in different places, the property shall be assessed to them in equal portions in such places, and the tax thereon shall be paid out of said income. If the executor, administrator or trustee is not an inhabitant of the Commonwealth, it shall be assessed to the person to whom the income is payable, in the place where he resides, if it is not legally taxed to an executor, administrator or trustee under a testamentary trust in any other State.” The final sentence of that clause has direct reference to the taxation of trust property held by a foreign trustee for the benefit of a resident cestui que trust.

It is of no consequence in this connection that this sentence does not occur in Part I' § 5 of the • general tax law, which relates exclusively to exemptions of persons and property from taxation. It is none the less an exemption from taxation. It is described as “An act to exempt property . . . from double taxation” in the title of St. 1894, c. 490, by which it first became a part of our statute law. The substance of the provision is an exemption from taxation. The purpose of this provision doubtless was to avoid duplicate taxation of the same property in two different sovereignties. It cannot be presumed that the same , legislative purpose did not continue when the tax on incomes was substituted for certain other kinds of property tax. Moreover, § 5 of Part I does not purport to include all exemptions, for other sections of the general tax law relate to the same subject. See, for example, Part I, §§ 6, 8, 16, 17, 19. The classification of exemptions in Watson v. Boston, 209 Mass. 18, 22, does not pur[507]*507port to be comprehensive. While the income, tax law made a complete change in the basis of taxation of intangible property, there is nothing to indicate that it was designed to return to.duplicate taxation of trust property even though it might be in degree less burdensome than was illustrated in Hunt v. Perry, 165 Mass. 287. No reason is perceived for narrowing the plain exemption of § 11 of the income tax law and excluding from its operation the clear exemption of the final sentence of Part I, § 23, cl. 5 of the general tax law. It is more consonant with the canons of statutory interpretation to construe the income tax law as a consistent and harmonious whole, the apparently absolute provisions of one section being modified by the equally explicit limitations of another section, than by construction to import into one section an exception which is not readily discernible there and which in this particular would involve recurrence to a kind of double taxation heretofore expressly discarded by the Legislature.

The effect of § 11 of the income tax law in connection with the final sentence of § 23, cl.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 162, 230 Mass. 503, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maguire-v-tax-commissioner-mass-1918.