McKinstry v. State

67 P.2d 876, 190 Wash. 333, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 373
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1937
DocketNo. 26489
StatusPublished

This text of 67 P.2d 876 (McKinstry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinstry v. State, 67 P.2d 876, 190 Wash. 333, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 373 (Wash. 1937).

Opinions

Geraghty, J.

The issue raised by this appeal is the applicability of the inheritance tax statute to a gift made by Carrie C. Button to Helen McKinstry, the appellant.

In 1926, Mrs. Button, then eighty-four years of age, removed from her home in Illinois to Seattle. From the time of her removal there until her death, she lived with her niece, Hazel McKinstry. Mrs. McKinstry and ten brothers, children of a deceased sister, were Mrs. Button’s sole living blood relatives. In 1928, she transferred her entire property, securities of the value of seventy thousand dollars, to Seattle and, later in the year, executed an agreement, under the terms of which the Seattle National Bank, of Seattle, was to hold the property in trust, the income and so much of the principal as was necessary for her use to be paid to her and any balance remaining at her death to be divided ratably between her niece and nephews. She reserved the power to alter or revoke the trust.

[335]*335In September, 1931, Mrs. Button executed a written modification of the trust, making Mrs. McKinstry sole beneficiary at her death. In September, 1932, she revoked the trust and, on the same day, executed an instrument conveying all of her property to Mrs. Mc-Kinstry. Mrs. McKinstry thereupon took the securities from the bank and placed them to her credit in the Pacific National Bank, of Seattle, and thereafter exercised all the rights of property over them. Subsequently, on November 22,1932, Mrs. Button executed a will, reciting that she had already given all of her property to Mrs. McKinstry and that, if she died possessed of any other property, she desired it to go to her niece. She died December 21, 1933, fifteen months after making the gift, being then ninety-one years of age.

The will made by Mrs. Button was not offered for probate until after a petition for letters of administration had been filed by Harold Lewis, brother of Mrs. McKinstry, on February 20, 1935. Thereupon the will was filed in court and, on July 19th, duly admitted to probate.

On March 9, 1936, the supervisor of the inheritance tax and escheat division filed in the estate of Carrie C. Button his findings, reciting the death of Mrs. Button leaving property taxable under the inheritance tax laws of the state of Washington of the value of seventy thousand dollars, passing to Mrs. McKinstry, and finding the property so passing taxable in the sum of $13,250, to which interest, at the rate of eight per cent from the date of death, amounting to $2,340.82, was to be added for non-payment, making, in all, $15,590.82, for which amount he sought judgment against the beneficiary and a hen against the assets, of the estate of Mrs. Button.

The appellant filed formal objections to the findings' [336]*336of the supervisor, alleging that no tax was due because, at the time of her death, Mrs. Button wás possessed of no property in the state of Washington or elsewhere, having before her death conveyed all her property to Mrs. McKinstry, and that the conveyance was not made in contemplation of death. The objections also challenged the validity of the statute under which it was sought to tax the gift. It was further objected that the state was, by its acts and omissions, estopped from claiming the tax set forth in the findings, or of any amount above the tax due the state, if any, under the law in effect upon the death of Mrs. Button.

After a hearing on the findings of the supervisor and the objections of the appellant, the court made an order dismissing the exceptions and finding th^t the gift was taxable as having been made in contemplation of death; that the tax was to be computed at the rate provided in chapter 180 of the 1935 Session Laws and amounted, with interest, to $15,590.82, less $1,700 on account of allowable deductions, leaving a net amount due of $13,890.82. In this amount was included the sum of $2,340.82 as interest from the date of Mrs. Button’s death to the date of the entry of the order. The appeal is taken from this order.

The errors assigned by the appellant are grouped under five heads. We will discuss these in the order in which they are presented in the brief.

It is first urged that the evidence does not establish that the conveyance to the appellant in September, 1932, was a gift in contemplation of death.

Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), §11201 [P. C. § 7030-164] (Laws of 1935, p. 768, § 104), imposes a tax upon all property within the jurisdiction of the state which shall pass “by deed, grant, sale or gift made in contemplation of death of the grantor or donor.” Section [337]*33711201-a [P. C. § 7051-1] provides that any transfer made by a decedent within two years prior to death, without a valid and adequate consideration therefor, shall be presumed to have been made in contemplation of death.

That there was no adequate consideration for the gift under consideration here, would seem not to admit of question. The transfer recites that the gift was made in consideration of love and affection and for the donee’s better maintenance, support, protection and livelihood. The aunt had paid Mrs. McKinstry fifty dollars a month during the first four years of her residence with her and thereafter one hundred dollars a month until the date of the gift. Doubtless, this was considered adequate compensation for the services rendered.

The transfer, having been made without adequate consideration, was taxable if made in contemplation of death. As we have said in other cases, the statute does not define the term “made in contemplation of death.” In In re Carvill’s Estate, 181 Wash. 627, 44 P. (2d) 768, 47 P. (2d) 825, we quoted with approval the definition given in Armstrong v. State ex rel. Klaus, 72 Ind. App. 303, 120 N. E. 717, as follows:

“The words fin contemplation of death,’ as used in the inheritance tax statutes, do not refer to that general expectation of death entertained by all persons, but they do refer to that expectation of death which arises from such bodily or mental conditions, irrespective of the cause in any particular case, which prompts persons to dispose of their property to those they deem entitled to their bounty.”

This definition has been incorporated into the Federal regulations. Milliken v. United States, 283 U. S. 15, 51 S. Ct. 324.

The gift, having been made within two years before death, is presumed, under the statute quoted above, [338]*338to have been made in contemplation of death. The burden of showing that it was not so made rested upon the appellant. The trial court reached the conclusion that she had not sustained the burden. We agree with the court in this conclusion.

The record is somewhat voluminous, much of it having relation to the mental condition of Mrs. Button at and before the gift was made. Her mental capacity is not in question; indeed, in the contest over the will executed by her sometime after making the gift, the court found her mentally competent. She came of a long-lived family and made frequent reference to the fact that her mother had lived to be ninety-seven years old. As she advanced in years, she became more dependent upon the services of others and much of her business was done by the appellant. Latterly she became blind, partially deaf, and suffered from arthritis and bladder trouble.

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Related

Milliken v. United States
283 U.S. 15 (Supreme Court, 1931)
In Re Fotheringham's Estate
49 P.2d 480 (Washington Supreme Court, 1935)
In Re Peterson's Estate
45 P.2d 45 (Washington Supreme Court, 1935)
Kenworthy v. Kleinberg
47 P.2d 825 (Washington Supreme Court, 1935)
In Re Carvill's Estate
44 P.2d 768 (Washington Supreme Court, 1935)
State v. Strong
206 P. 1 (Washington Supreme Court, 1922)
Katz v. Herrick
86 P. 873 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1906)
Armstrong v. State ex rel. Klaus
120 N.E. 717 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1918)
Johnson v. Harrison
50 N.W. 923 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P.2d 876, 190 Wash. 333, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinstry-v-state-wash-1937.