Pennsylvania Co. v. McClain

105 F. 367, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 1900
DocketNo. 45
StatusPublished

This text of 105 F. 367 (Pennsylvania Co. v. McClain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Co. v. McClain, 105 F. 367, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745 (circtedpa 1900).

Opinion

J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.

This is an action to recover back a sum of money collected from the plaintiff under the following circumstances: The residuary clause of the will of Isaiah Y. Williamson, who died in 1889 in the city of Philadelphia, directed his executors to transfer to the plaintiff the residue of the estate, to be held for accumulation during 10 years after his death, and at the end of that period to be divided among such of his grandnephews and grandnieces as might then be living. In April, 1899, the trustee filed its account in the orphans’ court of Philadelphia county, and the whole of the balance appearing thereon, which amounted to nearly §6,000,000, without any deduction for legacy tax that might be due to the United States, was distributed among the persons described in the residuary clause of the will. After the distribution had been made, the defendant, who is the collector of internal revenue for this district, demanded a legacy tax, under section 29 of the war revenue act of 1898. and, upon the refusal of the plaintiff to pay, was, on April 17,1900, about to collect the tax and a penalty of 5 per cent, by distress, when payment was made under protest. The sum thus paid was §280,021.38, but as the tax had been wrongly assessed according to a rate determined by the value of the whole estate, and not bv the value of each legacy (Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, 20 Sup. Ct. 747, 44 L. Ed. 969), the defendant on June 29, 1900, repaid the sum of §94,660.07. The amount in controversy, therefore, is $185,-361.26, with interest from April 17, 1900, and the sum of $1,151.69, [368]*368being the interest upon $94,660.07 from April 17th until the day when it was repaid.

The question for decision is this: Does section 29 of the act of June 13, 1898, impose any tax upon the estate of a person who died before the act was passed? The section is as follows:

“Tliat any person or‘persons having in charge or trust as administrators, executors, or trustees, any legacies or distributive shares arising from personal property, where the whole amount of such personal property as aforesaid, shall exceed the sum of ten thousand dollars in actual value, passing, after the passage of this act, from any person possessed of such property, either by will or by the intestate laws of any state or territory, or any personal property or interest therein, transferred by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift, made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment after the death of the grantor or bargainer, to any person or persons, or to any body or bodies, politic or corporate, in ’trust or otherwise, shall be, and hereby are, made subject to a duty or tax, to be paid to the United States. * * *”

It will be observed that this section lays a tax upon such legacy or distributive share as may arise from personal property that may pass after the passage of this act from any person possessed of such property to any person or body politic or corporate, in trust or otherwise, by will or by the intestate laws. The tax is laid upon certain legacies or distributive shares; not upon all legacies or shares, but only upon such as pass after the passage of the act. But, in ordinary speech, a legacy or distributive share (both words necessarily implying an antecedent death) passes immediately upon the death of the testator or intestate; and unless, therefore, other language in the section indicates that some other time is in contemplation, the conclusion would be inevitable that the act only taxes legacies or shares passing from persons who died after June 13, 1898. Let us look, then, at the rest of the section, in order to discover, if possible, the legislative intention upon this subject. The legacy or share, we further observe, is described as “arising from personal property”; and if it is the “property” that passes, and not the legacy or share, the passing must still be after the passage of the act. The method of passing is directly described, namely, “either by will or by the intestate laws of any state or territory,” and this also necessarily implies that the person from whom the property is to pass must die before the passing can take place. Therefore, as the passing of the property or of the legacy or share must be .after the passage of the act, so must be the death. It follows inevitably, as I think, that the “person possessed,” from whom the property is to pass, must die after the passage of the act, and that the passing must be by his will or by the operation of the intestate laws.

It is at this point that we encounter the argument of the government. Its right to the tax must depend upon the construction to be placed upon the phrase “from any person possessed of such property.” If, as I believe, this phrase refers to the testator or the person dying intestate, clearly there was ho claim to the tax now in dispute, because Mr. Williamson di'ed before the passage of the act, possessed at the time of his death of the personal property from which the legacies arose, and the property passed by his will to a body corporate,. [369]*369to be held in trust, and tbis occurred several year's before tbe statute took effect. The government’s argument, therefore, is that the words “any person possessed of such property,” in their application to the facts of the present case, mean the trustee to whom the residuary estate was directed to be paid; that the trustee is the person from whom the property is to pass; and that the property did not: thus pass until the period for accumulation had come to an end. because only then could it be known to whom the legacies should be paid. The argument concedes that the legacies would not have been taxed by the section, if they had been vested, but asserts tbe right to tax because they were contingent when the act was passed, and did not vest until the end of the period of accumulation in 380S).

I have already given some reasons for declining to admit the correctness of this construction. It seems to me quite clear that the words do not bear the meaning contended for by the government, and that the section does not tax any legacy or distributive share unless tbe testator or intestate died after the passage of the act. This, I think, is the ordinary and natural meaning of the words employed; and, in accordance with well-known principles of statutory interpretation, such meaning should prevail. It is only by what I cannot help but regard as a strained and difficult construction that the phrase in question, “person possessed,” can be made to include such a person as the present plaintiff. The manner in which the personal property is to pass from “the person possessed of such property” is either by “will or by the intestate laws of any state or territory.” Certainly, as we ordinarily use these words, when we speak of property passing from a person possessed thereof by will or by the intestate laws, we mean by his own will, or by tbe immediate operation of the intestate laws at the time of his death. But, if the government’s argument be sound, this cannot be the meaning here. That argument requires us to sa.y that “the person possessed” here is the trustee, but nevertheless the property is to pass, not by Ms own will, but by the will of the creator of the trust.

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Related

Erskine v. Van Arsdale
82 U.S. 75 (Supreme Court, 1872)
Knowlton v. Moore
178 U.S. 41 (Supreme Court, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
105 F. 367, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-mcclain-circtedpa-1900.