Platt v. Wagner

31 A.2d 499, 347 Pa. 27, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 1943
DocketAppeal, 26
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 A.2d 499 (Platt v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platt v. Wagner, 31 A.2d 499, 347 Pa. 27, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 390 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

Jane Livingston Armour, a resident of the State of New York, died on February 22,1928. The Auditor General assessed a transfer inheritance tax against her estate in the sum of $2,726.69 because of her ownership of the shares of certain Pennsylvania corporations. On May 3, 1928, her executors paid this amount to the State Treasurer. On July 6, 1932, they filed a petition with the Board of Finance and Revenue for a refund of the tax. For some reason not apparent the Board withheld action on this petition for a period of ten years, but finally, on June 4, 1942, made an order refusing it. The executors then filed a petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County for a writ of mandamus to compel the Board to allow the refund. On a demurrer to the Board’s return to the writ the court entered judgment in favor of the executors. The Board appeals.

The entangled facts giving rise to this controversy had their inception in a misinterpretation by the taxing authorities of New York of the laws of that State; the statutes, judicial opinions and administrative rulings which followed served only to accentuate the original misunderstanding and to increase the confusion. Unfortunately, the legislative action necessary to remedy the situation has not been taken, with the result that the claim of the Armour Estate to this refund cannot be allowed and the decree of the court below must be reversed.

In New York the Act of March 16, 1925, c. 143, section 248-p, and in Pennsylvania the Act of May 14,1925, P. L. 717 (amending the Act of June 20,1919, P. L. 521), each contained a provision to the effect that personal property of a non-resident decedent should not be subject to transfer inheritance tax if the laws of the state of the decedent’s residence contained a reciprocal exemption *29 provision. In pursuance of this legislation exemptions were allowed by each of these states to estates of deceased residents of the other until July 20, 1927, when the Court of Appeals of New York, in the case of Smith v. Loughman, 245 N. Y. 486, 157 N. E. 753, held the major portion of the Act of March 16,1925, unconstitutional. Thereupon, laboring under the mistaken impression that this decision invalidated also the reciprocity provision of that act, the New York State Tax Commission ruled that a stock transfer tax on estates of nonresidents should be collected, and notified the Auditor General of Pennsylvania of its intention to make such collections. The result was that Pennsylvania proceeded to follow the same course and to collect transfer inheritance taxes 1 from the estates of New York decedents who died between July 1,1925, (which was the effective date of the Act of March 16, 1925), and March 12, 1928, the date of the New York statute hereinafter referred to. Thus, whatever the provisions in the laws of the two states, reciprocity in fact had ceased.

On March 12, 1928, New York passed a new transfer inheritance tax act (c. 330) which avoided the unconstitutional features of the 1925 act, re-enacted, retroactive to July 1,1925, the provision for reciprocal exemptions, and authorized a refund of taxes collected under the 1925 act from estates of non-resident decedents which should have been entitled to exemption under that act; such retroactive exemptions and such refunds were not to be made, however, if the state where the decedent was a resident had collected taxes from estates of New York decedents dying during the period for which exemption *30 was now being retroactively established and “shall not make provision for the refunding of the same.”

In 1929 there came before this court the case of Commonwealth v. Taylor’s Executor, 297 Pa. 335, 147 A. 71, in which Mr. Justice Simpson in his opinion pointed out that the condition on which New York thus agreed to make refunds had not been complied with, that our state had not enacted the necessary legislation for refunding inheritance taxes imposed by it on estates of New York decedents collected after the Smith v. Loughman decision, and that not only had New York made no refunds under its 1928 act but its State Tax Commission had announced that it would not do so unless similar refunds were made by Pennsylvania. Under such circumstances it was held that actual reciprocity between the two states did not exist and that “our taxing authorities should continue to collect such transfer inheritance taxes from the estates of New York decedents who died between the dates stated [July 1, 1925, and March 12, 1928], until our legislature chooses to make provision for the return of the taxes collected by us from the estates of New York decedents who died between these dates.” 2

The next complication in the situation resulted from the decision of the New York Court of Appeals in February, 1930, in the case of City Bank Farmers’ Trust Co. v. New York Central R. R. Co., 253 N. Y. 49, 170 N. E. 489, in which it was held that the decision in Smith v. Loughman did not invalidate the reciprocity provision of the Act of March 16, 1925, that the position taken by the State Tax Commission was incorrect, that reciprocity had legally existed at all times since the Act of 1925, and that the condition attached to the retroactive ex *31 emption provision of the Act of 1928 was invalid; however, since Pennsylvania had held in the Taylor case that transfer inheritance taxes should be imposed upon the estates of New York decedents, New York was bound by that decision, and therefore a corporation incorporated in Pennsylvania was not subject to a duty of transferring shares of stock owned by the estate of a New York decedent without exacting proof of the payment of transfer taxes thereon to Pennsylvania. In May, 1930, the Attorney General of New York advised the State Tax Commission that until Pennsylvania changed its attitude the Commission would be proceeding in accordance with the court’s opinion if it collected taxes and withheld refunds upon the basis that reciprocal exemption from inheritance taxation did not exist between the two states during the period from July 1,1925, to March 12, 1928, inclusive.

A re-argument having been allowed by this court in the Taylor case, it was stated by Mr. Justice Simpson, who again wrote the opinion of the Court (Commonwealth v. Farmers Loan & Trust Co., Executor and Trus tee, 301 Pa. 114, 151 A. 692), that whatever the construction placed by the New York Court of Appeals upon the law of that state, the fact was, because of this advice given by its Attorney General, that “the estates of Pennsylvania decedents cannot now recover back the taxes heretofore paid, nor successfully claim exemption from future demands for payment, if their testators died between the dates stated, no matter what they may have done or may do”; furthermore, that no refunding could be made by the treasurer of Pennsylvania to the estates of New York decedents who died between the dates stated until and unless an enabling statute was passed by our legislature; it was reiterated that actual reciprocity had not existed between the two states since the decision in Smith v. Loughman.

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Related

Sabatine v. Commonwealth
442 A.2d 210 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1981)
Dulles v. Dulles
85 A.2d 134 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Federal Deposit Insurance v. Board of Finance & Revenue of Commonwealth
84 A.2d 495 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
United Wallpaper Factories, Inc. v. Wagner
66 Pa. D. & C. 225 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1948)
Tax Refunds
60 Pa. D. & C. 677 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 499, 347 Pa. 27, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-wagner-pa-1943.