Mason v. Sargent

104 U.S. 689, 26 L. Ed. 894, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2065
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1882
Docket380
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 689 (Mason v. Sargent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason v. Sargent, 104 U.S. 689, 26 L. Ed. 894, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2065 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. JüstíCE Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

The action was brought by William P. Mason and Walter C. Cabot, to recover back the amount of a legacy tax, paid, under protest, by them to John Sargent, the defendant, as collector of internal revenue for the Fourth Massachusetts District.

The facts upon which the judgment- was rendered in the court below, it was agreed, were as follows: William P. Mason, the plaintiffs’ testator, died Dec. 4, 1867. By his will, duly proved and allowed, the personal property upon which the tax in question was levied -was bequeathed to plaintiffs in trust for his widow for her life, and upon her death one-half to the plaintiff, William P. Mason, and one-half to Elizabeth R. Cabot, *690 . children of .the testator of full age at his death. The widow 'died on June 17, '1872.. In April, 1878, the tax in question was •assessed by Jonathan H. Mann, assessor of said district; and, May 13, 1873, plaintiffs paid defendant said tax under protest, to avoid distraint or other forcible process to collect the same. May 19,1873, plaintiffs duly made claim upop the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for the refunding of said tax, for the reason that the said property did not vest in possession in •thé plaintiffs’ eestuis que trust, until the death of the testator’s widow, which- océúrred after Óct. 1,1870, the date at which the repeal of the legacy succession tax went, in to effect,'and that the tax had not accrued at said date so as to come within the' saving clause of the Rest'of repeal. Act of July 14, 1870,. sect.. 17. Aug. 5, 1873, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue •rejected the appeal, “ for the reason that the tax accrued under the 124th section of the act of June 30, 1864, and was saved by section 17 of the act of July 14, 1870, and, still existing, was properly assessed.” Judgment was rendered in favor of the collector, and the plaintiffs sued out this writ of error.

The tax in question was imposed by sect. 124 of the act of June 30,'1864, c. 173 (13 Stat. 223, 285), upon legacies or distributive shai’es of personal property exceeding the sum of $1,000,' passing; after the passage of the act, from a decedent, either testate ór intestate,., in the hands of an executor,, administrator, or trustee? varying in rate, as ' the' party' beneficially entitled was less or more remote in consanguinity, or a stranger in blood, to the person from whom it passed; with a proviso that legacies or distributive interests in intestate estates, passing to husband or wife, should be exempt from such tax.

Section 125 of the same act, as amended by the act of July 13,1866, c. 184 (14 id. 98,140), provides that this legacy tax or duty “shall be due and payable whenever the party interested in such legacy or distributive share or property or interest aforesaid shall become entitled to the possession or enjoyment thereof, or to the beneficial interest in the profits accruing therefrom,” &c. It also provides that it shall be a-lien for twenty years, unless sooner paid, upon the property taxed ; and .the executor, administrator, or trustee, having charge of the *691 property, is required, within thirty days after he shall have taken charge of- the trust, to give notice thereof to the assessor .of the district in which the deceased last resided. He is also required, before payment of the legacy to the legatee, to pay the tax to the collector. As a preliminary to the payment of the tax to the collector, he is further required to make out in duplicate a schedule, list, or statement, containing the names of every person entitled to any beneficial interest in the property, together-with the clear value of such interest, the original of which he renders to the assessor, and the duplicate of which “ shall be by him immediately delivered, and the tax thereon paid to such collector.” The collector gives him a receipt, which is his voucher for that much paid on account of the legacy in his settlement with the legatee.

By the third section of the act of July 14,1870, c. 255 (16 id. 256), the taxes imposed by the laws then in force on legacies and successions, among others, were repealed “ on and after the first day of October, eighteen hundred and seventy; ” and by the seventeenth section.of that act (p. 261) it was enacted that “all acts and parts of acts relating to the taxes herein repealed, and all the provisions of said acts, shall continue in full force for levying and collecting all taxes properly assessed, or liable . to be assessed, or accruing under the provisions of former acts, or drawbacks the right to which has already accrued, or which may hereafter accrue, under said acts, and for maintaining and continuing liens, fines, penalties, and forfeitures incurred under and by virtue thereof. And this act shall not be construed to affect any .act done, right accrued, or penalty incurred under former acts, but every such right is hereby saved.”

The court below decided that the tax in question had been properly exacted and collected on the ground that the right to it had accrued to the United States before Oct. 1, 1870, when the repealing act took effect, and was within the saving clauses of the seventeenth section.

The contention of the plaintiffs in error, on the other hand, is that, until the legacy itself became payable, the tax upon it did not becomé a claim in favor of the government; and as the legacy was vested in the widow during her life and the payment of it was postponed until her death, which occurred *692 June 17, 1872, after the repealing act had. taken effect, no right.that could be saved by the exceptions had at that time accrued.

It is our opinion that the tax. was illegally demanded and collected.

The property or fund which' is the subject .of the legacy was expressly exempt from tax or duty, in. the hands of the trustee, during the life of the testator’s widow. It seems to us very plain that the trustee was .not bound to make return of the legacy upon the-schedule, list, or statement specified in sect. 125 of tl^e act of 1864, until,, by the death-of the owner of the life-estate, the legacy became payable to those entitled in remainder; for the delivery of that list or statement to the assessor is ■ to be followed immediately by a delivery by the trustee of its duiplieate to the collector, and the tax paid thereon to such collector; whereas, by the express terms of the section, ns amended by’the act of 1866, the tax or duty becomes due and payable only when “ the party interested in such legacy, &c.', shall become entitled to the possession or enjoyment thereof,” &c. The return for assessment and the actual payment of the. tax, therefore, are made by the law so nearly simultaneous as that one follows the other in immediate succession ; and it cannot well be said, upon the terms of the act, that the right to the tax has become vested until the obligation arises to list-the property-for taxation. The subject of the tax is the interest of the legatees.in remainder; but it is not taxable as a remainder, for by the terms of the law it does not become a subject of taxation until the right accrues to reduce it to possession. Until then it is expressly exempt from taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 689, 26 L. Ed. 894, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-sargent-scotus-1882.