Rex's Estate

46 Pa. D. & C. 443, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 291
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedDecember 4, 1942
Docketno. 47,297
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Pa. D. & C. 443 (Rex's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rex's Estate, 46 Pa. D. & C. 443, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 291 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Holland, P. J.,

— The appeal from the appraisement of decedent’s estate for Pennsylvania transfer inheritance tax was filed because a deduction was disallowed.

The facts have been stipulated by counsel, and are as follows: Decedent died on November 18,1941. Letters of administration c. t. a. were granted to his wife, [444]*444Clara E. B. Rex. She is also the sole residuary legatee under his will and the appellant here.

On February 5,1941, decedent and his wife executed and delivered to Montgomery National Bank, of Norristown, their joint and several collateral note, for $10,000, payable on demand. There were delivered to the bank, at the time, 100 shares of Norristown Water Company and 400 shares of Pennsylvania Railroad Company stock, as collateral security. These shares of stock were then owned by decedent and his wife as tenants by entireties, and the certificates were thus issued. At decedent’s death the entire principal of the note remained unpaid, and accrued interest amounted to $28.33.

Decedent’s gross estate was appraised for inheritance tax purposes at $19,676.09. This did not include the above-mentioned shares of stock, the ownership thereof by entireties being recognized as excluding them for that purpose.

Deductions aggregating $12,025.90 were claimed. These did include the principal and interest due on the above-mentioned note. However, this was not allowed, and tax is claimed by the register in the amount of $353. Appellant contends the amount of tax due is $153, which would be the amount if the questioned deductions are allowable in full.

The register of wills of this county, who passes upon the debts and deductions claimed, takes the following view, where a debt is secured as collateral. In such cases, he looks at the collateral only. If the collateral was owned by decedent, alone, and is included in the gross assets appraised for inheritance tax, the debt is allowed as a deduction. But if, for any reason, the collateral was not thus included among the gross assets, the debt secured thereby is not allowed as a deduction.

There is no justification whatever for any such test in determining the allowability of a debt as a deduc[445]*445tion. The Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, art I, sec. 2, as last amended by the Act of June 24,1939, P. L. 721, sec. 1, 72 PS §2302, provides that the clear value of a decedent’s estate subject to inheritance tax shall be ascertained by taking the gross value, and then by deducting therefrom, inter alia, “the debts of the decedent” (italics supplied). The Inheritance Tax Act nowhere, by express words or implication, makes any distinction between secured and unsecured debts. To break down secured debts into sub-classifications, depending upon the nature and ownership of the collateral security, is to take still another step further away from the statute. The one and only way to find the correct answer is by looking at the alleged debt and by determining whether or not it actually is a debt of the decedent. Inquiry into the collateral security is wholly immaterial.

There have been several cases before this court arising from this view of the register toward secured debts in general. However, the debt was in each case that of the decedent alone. No question of joint, several, or joint and several obligations was present. The only question was of the significance, if any, of the fact that the collateral security for the debt, in whole or in part, was not included in the appraisement of decedent’s gross estate. Because the ownership of the collateral security is without significance, the debt in each of those cases was held deductible in full.

This same question was before the Orphans’ Court of Fayette County, in Jeffrey’s Estate, 34 D. & C. 186 (1938). There husband and wife owned real estate by entireties. They executed their joint and several bond and mortgage secured thereon. After the husband’s death, the balance due on the mortgage was claimed as a deduction for inheritance tax purposes. It was disallowed as a debt and this action was sustained by the court. The method of approach was as stated above [446]*446to be the proper one, by inquiry into whether or not the mortgage was a debt of the husband. The court held it was not, because the equitable doctrines of subrogation and marshalling assets are applicable. These would compel the mortgagee to go against the real estate security first, and would deny him recovery against the husband’s separate estate on the bond until the security had been exhausted. In the absence of evidence that the real estate was not sufficient to discharge the mortgage debt in full, it was presumed to be sufficient.

In Miller Lumber & Coal Co. v. Berkheimer, Admx., et al., 342 Pa. 329 (1941), the principle relied on in Jeffrey’s Estate, supra, for the conclusion was also in question. There, husband and wife owned real estate by entireties, and the husband also owned other real estate, alone. A joint mortgage of husband and wife was a first lien on both the “entireties” real estate and the husband’s separate real estate. Another creditor, of the husband only, had a junior lien on the husband’s separate real estate. After the husband’s death, the joint creditor took proceedings to enforce his debt against the husband’s separate real estate. As that would exhaust the separate real estate and leave nothing for the husband’s separate creditor, he brought ,a bill in equity to compel the joint creditor to proceed against the joint property. The Supreme Court held that the doctrine of marshalling assets, which was relied upon, was inapplicable. That doctrine affords relief only “where both funds are in the hands of a common debtor of both creditors or unless the fund not taken is one which in equity is primarily liable” (p. 331).

That case is not an inheritance tax deduction case. Yet it removes the doctrine of marshalling of assets from application to prevent a joint creditor of husband and wife, secured by a lien on entireties property, from [447]*447proceeding against the husband’s separate estate first. Jeffrey’s Estate was not discussed or cited, but with the foundation on which it rests thus removed it must fall.

Does it follow, without more, in the case now before us, that the obligee of the note could recover the full principal and interest due, from the decedent husband’s estate alone? In the Miller Lumber & Coal Co. case, supra, at page 331, the opinion goes on to state that: “Each debt was in fact the debt of the husband alone and the wife has a right to insist that the husband’s land be sold first in satisfaction of what was in reality his debt. She has the rights of a surety . . .”

The report of the opinion by the court below shows clearly that the wife in that case received none of the proceeds of the joint mortgage with her husband: Miller Lumber & Coal Co. v. Berkheimer, 54 York 141, 142 (1940). Here, there is no evidence whether the proceeds of the loan went to the decedent, his wife, or both.

In the absence of such evidence it must be presumed that the proceeds went to both, equally: McGlinn’s Estate, 55 Montg. 5 (1938). We held there that a wife who paid in full certain joint obligations of her husband and herself was entitled to recover one half from the deceased husband’s estate, under the equitable doctrine of contribution. Being equally liable with her husband, she had no right to insist that his property be taken first to satisfy the debt. She was not a surety but a joint obligor.

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Related

Miller Lumber & Coal Co. v. Berkheimer
20 A.2d 772 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
46 Pa. D. & C. 443, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rexs-estate-paorphctmontgo-1942.