State v. Union Trust Co.

161 N.E. 17, 27 Ohio App. 156, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 531, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 474
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 N.E. 17 (State v. Union Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Union Trust Co., 161 N.E. 17, 27 Ohio App. 156, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 531, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 474 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Vickery, J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county, and from the record we learn that Levi D. Johnson died on the 12th day of February, 1924, testate, leaving an undivided one-half interest in a parcel of real estate situated in the city of Cleveland, at the northwest corner of Fourth street and Prospect avenue, N. E. The Union Trust Company, under the last will and testament, was appointed the executor of the estate of the said Johnson, and duly qualified as such.

*158 The questions in the instant case grow out of the inheritance tax laws of Ohio, and involve the proper application of them to the instant case and the construction of the statutes relating to the same.

From the agreed statement of facts we learn that exceptions were filed to the finding of the probate court assessing an undivided one-half interest for inheritance tax purposes; that, the probate court making the assessment adopted the rule laid down in Section 5342 of the General Code in capitalizing the income from said estate on a 5 per cent, basis. By such method the estate amounted, for taxation purposes, to $271,858. The Union Trust Company, as executor, took an appeal from the finding of the probate court to the "common pleas court, where the case was heard upon an agreed statement of facts, and the common pleas court arrived at a different conclusion and assessed the property for taxation purposes at $222,620, as the sum upon which the inheritance- tax should be figured. Whereupon the state tax commission filed a petition in error in this court.

We have heard the case upon the error proceedings, and the only question to be determined is the proper method for arriving at the value of the estate; that is, Did the probate court, or the common pleas court, adopt the right method?

The two statutes to which we must address ourselves are Sections 5341 and 5342, General Code, and, if the contention of the state tax commission is correct, Section 5342 is the proper statute, and not Section 5341.

From the agreed statement of facts we learn that Levi D. Johnson died seized in fee simple of an *159 undivided one-half interest in the real estate in question. That real estate was subject to a lease, which, we learn from the record, had been extended about 8 days before the death of Johnson, the original lease having 5 years still to run at a rental of $8,500 a year, which was renewed or extended shortly before Johnson died for a further period of 75 years, the whole lease having 80 years to run at the time of his death, 5 years at the rental of $8,500 per year and the sum of $15,000 per year for the remaining 75 years.

Now the probate court seems to have got the notion that, inasmuch as this fee was incumbered by a lease, the value of the property left by Johnson should be assessed for inheritance tax purposes under the rule laid down in Section 5342, General Code, which is, in part, as follows:

“The value of a future or limited estate, income, interest or annuity for any life or lives in being, or of any dower interest or other estate or interest upon which any estate or interest the succession to which is taxable under this chapter is limited, shall be determined by the rule, method and standard of mortality and value employed by the superintendent of insurance in ascertaining the values of annuities for the determination of liabilities of life insurance companies, except that the rate of interest shall be five per centum per annum. ’ ’

Now an examination of this statute, will at once convince one that it refers to incorporeal property, such as incomes, interests, or annuities, but we have nothing of this hind in this case. We do not have here a future or limited estate, income, interest, or annuity for any life or lives in being, or any dower *160 interest, or any estate or interest upon which an estate or interest is limited. We have simply an undivided one-half interest in real estate, the whole of said real estate being incumbered by a long term lease. It is perfectly clear, then, that this statute does n'ot apply to the estate as left by Johnson upon his demise.

Section 5341, in so far as it relates to the present inquiry, is as follows:

‘ ‘ The county auditor shall be the inheritance tax appraiser for his county. The probate court, upon its own motion may, or upon the application of any interested person, including the tax commission of Ohio, shall by order direct the county auditor to fix the actual market value of any property the succession to which is subject to the tax levied by this subdivision of this chapter.”

It is manifest from this section of the statute that it was" the duty of the county auditor, upon having his attention called to the property, to appraise it at its true market value in money, and then report that finding to the probate court, from which finding the probate court should determine the amount of taxes that ought to be levied against the inheritor of this property as an inheritance tax.

As indicated "in the briefs of the various parties, the quarrel seems to be between the methods used to ascertain the value. The county auditor capitalized the yearly income from this property on a 6 per cent, basis, and from his computation on that basis the value of the estate was determined to be $222,620. Therefore the question that we must determine, and the only question that we need to determine, is, Does Section 5341 or Section 5342 *161 govern in the instant case? In other words, Does the fee, or does the income from the fee, descend by the inheritance?

We think that Section 5341 is unambiguous and gives a plain, decisive method for arriving at the value of the estate left by the decedent, subject to inheritance taxes. In other words, it is the duty of the county auditor to appraise the property at its true market value in money at the time of the devolution of the assessment of the tax. There is nothing in the statute which indicates the way or the manner in which this value should be arrived at. The method is left to the county auditor’s discretion, and if he can arrive at the true value by capitalizing the income from the property on a basis of 6 per cent., and adopts that method in arriving at the true value of the estate, taking into consideration all the things which influence the value of the estate, such as location, the value of the surrounding property, the leasehold value, or the rental, if there be a leasehold and if there be a rental, or any other thing which influences the value of property, we say he could take them into consideration, and, after he has considered them all, he can form his opinion as to what the real market value of the property is, and, when he has determined that, he reports that to the probate court, upon which the probate court must determine how much inheritance tax must be paid by those who inherited the property.

This method, we understand from the arguments of counsel and from the briefs in this case, was adopted by the county auditor. Apparently men skilled in the value of down-town real estate were called in by the county auditor, and, after consider *162

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161 N.E. 17, 27 Ohio App. 156, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 531, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-union-trust-co-ohioctapp-1927.