State v. First National Bank

154 A. 103, 130 Me. 123, 1931 Me. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 A. 103 (State v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. First National Bank, 154 A. 103, 130 Me. 123, 1931 Me. LEXIS 41 (Me. 1931).

Opinion

Farrington, J.

This case comes up on report on an agreed statement of facts. Edward H. Haskell, a resident of Massachusetts, died testate January 8, 1924. The largest part of the property of the deceased consisted of shares of stock in the Great Northern Paper Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Maine. The will of the deceased was duly probated in the County of Middlesex, Massachusetts, and the above mentioned shares of stock were there subjected to an inheritance tax, of like character to the inheritance tax in Maine, and a tax thereon, amounting to $32,190.53, was paid to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on legacies and distributive shares, in greater part made up from the proceeds of said stock. Ancillary administration having been taken out in the County of Androscoggin in this state, an inheritance tax of $62,350.41 was assessed by the Probate Court in that county on the property passing by the will of the deceased, and an appeal was taken by the executor from the assessment of this tax by the Androscoggin County Probate Court on the ground that the assessment was unconstitutional, and in violation of Article 4, Section 2, of the Constitution of the United States of America and Article 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution and that the provisions of Chap. 69, Sec. 4, of the Revised Statutes of Maine (1916) were not applied in assessing said inheritance tax because Edward H. Haskell was not a resident of the State of Maine.

After this case was, on an appeal, argued in this court and while [125]*125there pending, the parties thereto made the following agreement:

“First: That the following decree be entered in the Probate Court of Androscoggin County, —•

‘STATE OF MAINE

‘Androscoggin, Probate Court

‘Amended Decree

‘Whereas, the executors of the will of the late Edward H. Haskell have appealed from the decree of this court assessing a gross inheritance tax of sixty two thousand three hundred and thirty dollars and forty one cents ($62,330.41) and,

‘Whereas said appeal was pending before the Law Court for decision and determination, and

‘Whereas, the State of Maine, represented by Clement F. Robinson, its Attorney General, and the executors represented by Franklin Fisher, have arrived at the following agreement, namely: that said executors be allowed a credit of thirty two thousand one hundred and ninety dollars and fifty three cents ($32,190.53) being the amount of the inheritance taxes paid by these executors to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

‘It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the gross tax as computed by the court in its original decree determining said inheritance tax to be sixty two thousand three hundred and thirty dollars ánd forty one cents ($62, 330.41) be and hereby is reduced by granting to the estate of Edward H. Haskell credit for inheritance tax paid to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts amounting to thirty two thousand one hundred and ninety dollars and fifty three cents ($32,190.53) leaving a balance of inheritance taxes assessed by the State of Maine of thirty thousand, one hundred and thirty nine dollars and eighty eight cents ($30,139.88).

‘February 19th, 1930.

‘B. L. Berman, Judge.’

Second: That the attorney general under the statute would bring an action of Debt for the collection of the amount of tax decreed in the amended decree of the Judge of the Probate Court of Androscoggin County.

[126]*126Third: That the executors of the will of Edward H. Haskell would avail themselves of any defense possible in said action of debt.

Fourth: That an entry should be entered in the Law Court, —

‘Appeal Dismissed. Settled below.’ ”

In accordance with this agreement the decree as quoted above was duly entered on February 19,1930, and from that decree there has been no appeal and the decree has not been modified, reversed, annulled or satisfied.

Follbwing this the attorney general, under the statute, brought an action of debt for the collection of the tax against the executors of the estate of Edward H. Haskell, the writ being dated April 19, 1930, returnable at the May Term, 1930, of the Superior Court in Cumberland County.

The writ, service of which was accepted by the attorneys for the defendant, was duly entered in court with general appearance on the part of the defendant through its attorneys.

Under the general issue the defendant also filed a brief statement as follows:

“The inheritance tax provided for by Chapter 69 of the Revised Statutes of Maine and additions thereto and amendments thereof is an excise or duty upon the right or privilege of taking property by will or descent under the law of the State of Maine and is assessed on transfers from the dead to the living in those cases where it is by virtue of the laws of the State of Maine that the right or privilege of taking by will or descent at all exists.

“The transfer of the stock in the Great Northern Paper Company owned by Edward H. Haskell and transferred by his will is not so transferred as right or privilege of taking by will or descent by virtue of the laws of the State of Maine and it is not by virtue of the laws of this State that the right or privilege of such transfer to the Legatees at all exists. The assessment of an inheritance tax on the transfer of stock in the Great Northern Paper Company owned by Edward H. Haskell is wholly heyond the power of the State of Maine and an attempt to tax something not within the jurisdiction of the' State of Maine contrary to the provisions of the Fourteenth Article of the Articles in Addition to and in Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America.

[127]*127“An assessment of an inheritance tax by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts amounting to thirty two thousand one hundred and ninety dollars and fifty three cents ($32,190.53) was paid by the executors of Edward H. Haskell. As Edward H. Haskell was domiciled in Massachusetts, the situs of his stock in the Great Northern Paper Company for inheritance tax purposes was in Massachusetts. An inheritance tax on the transfer of the stock in the Great Northern Paper Company owned by Edward H. Haskell is beyond the jurisdiction of the State of Maine and constitutes double taxation of intangible property contrary to the provisions of the Fourteenth Article of the Articles in Addition to and Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America.

“The benefit or privilege conferred by the State of Maine in assisting in the transfer of the stock in the Great Northern Paper Company owned by Edward H. Haskell is so small compared with the tax claimed by the State of Maine that it clearly results in such flagrant and palpable inequality between the burden imposed and the benefit received as to amount to the arbitrary taking of property without compensation, — to spoliation under the guise of exerting the taxing power contrary to the provisions of the Fourteenth Article of the Articles in Addition to and Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 A. 103, 130 Me. 123, 1931 Me. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-first-national-bank-me-1931.