Silberman v. Blodgett

134 A. 778, 105 Conn. 192, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 134 A. 778 (Silberman v. Blodgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silberman v. Blodgett, 134 A. 778, 105 Conn. 192, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 20 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The questions of law upon which our advice is requested under the facts as stipulated concern the order and decree, of the Court of Probate for the district of Stamford approving the succession or inheritance tax as computed by the Tax Commissioner of Connecticut, and ordering the executors to pay the same to the treasurer of the State of Connecticut. Most of the items upon which the tax was imposed were *201 intangible personal property; as to a few items tangible personal property.

Our present Succession Act, Chapter 190 of the Public Acts of 1923, does not differ in material degree from our earlier Succession Acts; the decisions under the earlier Acts are therefore equally applicable to the Act of 1923. It is “not a tax upon property, but upon the right or privilege of succession to the property of a decedent.” Corbin v. Townshend, 92 Conn. 501, 503, 103 Atl. 647. Our Act specifically includes every beneficial interest of all the personal property of a domiciled decedent whether within or without the State, and claims jurisdiction over all personal property for the purposes of succession to determine its descent or distribution. We interpret our Act and determine the nature of this tax in Hopkins’ Appeal, 77 Conn. 644, 652, 60 Atl. 657, in these words: “The Act is framed in view of the principle that personal property is bequeathed by will, and is descendible by inheritance, according to the law of the domicil, and that the disposition, distribution of, and succession to, personal property, wherever situated, is to be governed by the laws of that State where the owner had his domicil at the time of his death. . . . The right to lay such a duty is independent of the right to impose a direct tax upon all the property included in the succession, and its amount may properly depend upon a valuation of property included in the succession upon which the State could not impose a direct tax.” In further explanation of their nature and origin we say in Warner v. Corbin, 91 Conn. 532, 536, 100 Atl. 354: “They are not levied, as taxes proper are, either upon property or against persons. They differ from taxes, properly speaking, in that they are exactions in the nature of death duties 'to be paid to the State upon the occasion of death and the consequent transfer of ownership in *202 the property of the decedent, through the intervening custody and administration of the law, to the persons designated by the law, through the statutes regulating wills, descents and distributions.’ ”

The justification for the imposition of this tax upon personal property having its situs outside the jurisdiction of this State, and thus involving a power of jurisdiction in that State in respect to this tax, we state in Gallup’s Appeal, 76 Conn. 617, 57 Atl. 699, at page 621: “Personal property is bequeathed by will, and is descendible by inheritance, according to the law of the domicil and not by that of its situs. Eidman v. Martinez, 184 U. S. 578, 581 [22 Sup. Ct. 515]. It is a settled principle of law that the disposition, distribution of, and succession to, personal property, wherever situated, is to be governed by the laws of that State where the owner had his domicil at the time of his death. Holcomb v. Phelps, 16 Conn. 127, 132. Under our law it is the duty of the administrator at the place of domicil to inventory and account for all such personal property, and that property is regarded as within the jurisdiction of the State for purposes of administration and distribution. It is true that the actual situs of such property in another State involves a power or jurisdiction in that State in respect to it for certain purposes, including the power through process of administration to appropriate so much as may be necessary to the satisfaction of claims of local creditors; but such administration is ancillary to that of the domicil, and the jurisdiction thus exercised is not in denial of, but in aid of, that exercised at the owner’s domicil. This principle of law, though founded in international comity, is equally obligatory upon , our courts as a legal rule of purely domestic origin. This principle is settled and unquestioned law within this State.” See also Hopkins’ Appeal, 77 Conn. 644, 655, 60 Atl. 657. In *203 Bridgeport Trust Co.’s Appeal, 77 Conn. 657, 662, 60 Atl. 662, we held it to be the duty of the administrator to inventory personal property without the State “when its inventory is required for any ordinary purpose of administration, or when required, as it has been required by statute since 1897, for the special purpose of enabling the Court of Probate to perform its statutory duty of computing the succession tax in respect to the estate in settlement.” Other cases which assert and uphold the principle upon which our succession tax rests are: Nettleton’s Appeal, 76 Conn. 235, 56 Atl. 565; Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett, 96 Conn. 361, 365, 114 Atl. 104, and Bridgeport Projectile Co. v. Bridgeport, 92 Conn. 316, 320, 102 Atl. 644.

We dwell upon these familiar decisions in order to especially emphasize three features underlying our Succession Act, and indeed every Succession Act: (1) the succession to real estate within the State and personal property everywhere is governed by the law of the State of the decedent's domicil; (2) the State exercises this right in virtue of the privilege it accords to its citizens or its domiciled residents of either disposing of their property by will, or in the event of intestacy having it descend in accordance with the statute law of the State; (3) a succession tax is not an ad valorem tax, nor to be considered upon the same basis as that tax; it is a privilege tax, an excise tax, such as a franchise tax. The decisions and the legal literature upon this subject not infrequently fail to distinguish the succession tax as wholly apart from the ad valorem tax. The taxable situs of the former depends for its jurisdiction upon the domicil of the decedent, the latter upon the situs of the property taxed. The attempt to rest the jurisdiction of each upon the situs of property taxed requires a departure from the underlying principle of the succession tax,—the right to receive from *204 the decedent, as we hold, or as many jurisdictions hold, the right to transmit from the decedent.

It is not easy to reconcile the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States upon this point, as well as their application; its latest utterance as applied to a transfer or inheritance tax upon shares of stock is: “The tax here is not upon property, but upon the right of succession to property.” Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Doughton, 270 U. S. 69, 80, 46 Sup. Ct. 256. And we must assume this still to be the law of that court as applied to intangibles.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 778, 105 Conn. 192, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silberman-v-blodgett-conn-1926.