Sellers's Estate

191 A. 170, 325 Pa. 377, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketAppeal, 45
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 191 A. 170 (Sellers's Estate) 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
Sellers's Estate, 191 A. 170, 325 Pa. 377, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 378 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

This appeal is from imposition of a collateral inheritance tax upon certain real and personal property conveyed by Sarah P. Sellers to appellants in 1930 in trust to pay the net income therefrom to donor during her lifetime, and at her death to retain the principal for the creation, equipment and maintenance of a free, public library as a memorial to her parents. The deed of trust stipulated that the library should be under the management of a board of twelve, six of the original appointees being named in the deed, the others to be selected by the trustees. The library was preferably to be located in the dwelling then occupied by Miss Sellers, but she was to remain in enjoyment and control of the residence as long as she lived. The net income from the trust was to be turned over to the board of managers of the library for its maintenance. Donor reserved the right to revoke or alter the trust. 1

*379 Miss Sellers died in 1933. The property conveyed in the deed was appraised at $102,576.25, and a collateral inheritance tax levied in the sum of $10,257.63. An appeal taken by the trustees to the orphans’ court was dismissed, and the present appeal followed.

The Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, section 1(c), imposes a tax upon the transfer of property “by deed, grant, bargain, sale, or gift, made in contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor, or donor, or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after such death.” A similar provision existed in the statutory law of the Commonwealth as early as 1826, 2 and from Reish v. Commonwealth, 106 Pa. 521, to Cooper’s Estate, 320 Pa. 418, it has been uniformly held that where the donor continues as beneficiary of a trust until death, the interest of the remainderman does not take effect in enjoyment until that time and is therefore subject to the collateral inheritance tax.

Appellants, conceding this, rely for their claim of exemption upon section 27 of the Act of July 20, 1917, P. L. 1143, which provides that: “Any building which shall be owned and occupied by a free, public, nonsectarian library . . . shall be exempt from all county, city, borough, town, school, bounty, poor, or road taxes. . . . All gifts, devises, grants, or endowments made to such a library, and for such purposes, shall be free from collateral inheritance tax; . . ,” 3

The question here involved is whether the phrase “such a library,” as used in the act, includes a library of the nature provided for in the deed of trust. A reading of the act as a whole — it being a codification of previous statutes dealing with various phases of the subject — indicates beyond a doubt that the only libraries within its *380 intended scope are those established or maintained, in whole or in part, by a municipality. 4 Its concluding words are: “it being intended that this act shall furnish a complete and exclusive system in itself so far as relates to free, public, nonsectarian libraries, supported wholly or in part by the several municipalities, as defined in section one of this act of the Commonwealth.” (Italics supplied.) Tax exemptions are to be strictly construed, and it is impossible to arrive at a conclusion that the exemption from collateral inheritance tax — almost unique in the legislation of the State — was intended by the act to apply to libraries, even though free, public and nonsectarian, if established or maintained by private individuals as distinguished from municipalities.

Appellants, in order to find refuge under the Act of 1917, are therefore compelled to fall back upon an alleged status acquired for their library by a written agreement entered into between them and the Board of Library Directors of the Free, Public, Nonsectarian Library of the Township of Upper Darby, under date of May 17, 1934. It appears that a free, public, nonsectarian library had been established in Upper Darby Township in 1930, following a vote of the qualified electors in accordance with the provisions of the act. The agreement recited that the public could be best served “by the joining and cooperation of the two bodies.” It provided that decedent’s former home should be “used and occupied as a Public Non-Sectarian Fi’ee Library for the use of the residents of the said Township of Upper Darby,” and that the net income from the trust fund should be used for the support and maintenance of the building, which was to be under the control and management of a board of managers “subject to the *381 rights, powers and duties of the said Trustees under the terms of the said Trust, and of the Board of Library Directors as provided by law.” The Board of Managers was to consist of not more than twelve persons “to be selected in conformity with the terms of said Trust and the requirements of the law regulating the establishment and maintenance of Free Non-Sectarian Libraries. Upon such Board the Trustees shall have representatives as is provided by said Trust, and the Board of Library Directors shall have such representatives as shall conform to the law relating to the establishment and maintenance of Free Public Non-Sectarian Libraries.” There were to be periodical joint meetings of the Board of Managers and the Board of Library Directors. The agreement was subject to revocation by either of the parties upon 90 days’ notice.

After this agreement was executed, the trustees spent $11,700 in remodeling the Sellers residence from a dwelling house into a library building, and the Board of Library Directors expended approximately $6,000 in equipping it for library purposes and installed several thousand volumes. It was opened to the public in October, 1935. The trustees named the members of the Board of Managers, including among them three of the members of the Board of Library Directors. The latter Board pays the salaries of the employes; the building itself is maintained, as provided in the agreement, by the net income from the trust.

Assuming, without deciding, that the trustees had the power under the deed of trust to enter into such a plan, and that the question whether the trust property was subject to collateral inheritance tax can be legally affected by an arrangement entered into by the trustees a year after decedent’s death, it remains quite obvious that the agreement of May 17, 1934, did not confer upon the library the exemption otherwise denied to it. It has already been pointed out that that exemption, in conformity with the general scope of the Act of 1917, was *382 limited to libraries “supported wholly or in part by the several municipalities.” If the present library be regarded as the one established by the municipality in 1930, it would, by sections 5 and 9 of the act, have to be under the exclusive control of a board of library directors appointed by the “municipal authorities,” 5 whereas the present library, so far from being under the exclusive control of such a board, is governed by a board of managers appointed by the trustees under the Sellers deed of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
191 A. 170, 325 Pa. 377, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellerss-estate-pa-1937.