The People v. Cavenee

14 N.E.2d 232, 368 Ill. 391
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1938
DocketNo. 24487. Order reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 232 (The People v. Cavenee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Cavenee, 14 N.E.2d 232, 368 Ill. 391 (Ill. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from an order of the county court of Cook county fixing an inheritance tax upon the transfer of a certain trust estate created by the will of Victor F. Lawson, who died in 1925. Under his will the Merchants’ Loan and Trust Company was made trustee with directions to pay the income of the trust here involved to the testator’s brother, Iver Norman Lawson, during his life, with power to Iver, to appoint, by will, the beneficiary of the remainder, and in default of said appointment the remainder to pass to his heirs. Iver died without having exercised the power of appointment.

The facts are stipulated and are, in substance, as follows : Following the death of Victor F. Lawson the county court of Cook county fixed the inheritance tax on the life estate given to Iver, and found the value of the remainder of the trust, after such life estate had been deducted, to be $1,707,368.63. The order fixing the tax in 1926 stated that this remainder “is not presently taxable but is taxable in the future according to law.” The order noted as to this remainder, “tax postponed.” The total inheritance tax assessed in Victor F. Lawson’s estate was fixed at the sum of $372,192.70, which the court found to be due as of August 19, 1925, the date of the death of Victor F. Lawson. No appeal was taken from this order and the tax was paid in due course.

Iver Norman Lawson, also a resident of Chicago, died March 31, 1937, and by his will he expressly declined to exercise the power of appointment granted to him by the will of his brother, Victor. He left him surviving appellants Evelyn Lawson Cavenee and Iver Norman Lawson, Jr., his children and only heirs-at-law.

On October 8, 1937, a second inheritance tax appraisement in the estate of Victor F. Lawson was instituted before the county judge of Cook county, who, on October 13, fixed the value of the remainder after the death of Iver Norman Lawson, at $1,716,'794.07 and fixed the transfer or inheritance tax of $136,147.52 against the portion passing to the daughter Evelyn, and a tax of $136,278.33 against that portion passing to the son Iver. On appeal from that order the county court fixed the appraised value of the remainders at $1,692,386.63, and fixed an inheritance or transfer tax against the portion passing to Evelyn at $134,139.49, and against that portion passing to Iver at $134,324.29. This tax was assessed as due and payable as of August 19, 1925, as a result of the death of Victor E. Lawson, deceased. This is the order appealed from.

The grounds of appellants’ appeal are, that under the Inheritance Tax act of this State, as it was when Victor E. Lawson died, and when the county court, in 1926, fixed the inheritance tax in the Victor E. Lawson estate, no tax could be assessed and collected in the Victor F. Lawson estate, in respect of the remainders after the life estate of Iver Lawson; that there was no postponement of such a tax; that the judgment of the county court in the first inheritance tax proceeding correctly followed the law and its order then entered is res judicata of all inheritance, transfer or succession taxes due by reason of his death. It is also argued that the order of the county court on November 5, 1937, deprived appellants of their constitutional rights.

To determine whether further transfer taxes may be assessed in the estate of Victor F. Lawson, it is necessary to have in mind the provisions of the Inheritance Tax act of this State at the time of his death in 1925. At that time the section of the statute imposing a tax on a transfer of property was section 1. This declared that “A tax is hereby imposed * * * in the following cases(Cahill’s Stat. 1925, chap. 120, par. 396.) This is the only section, as the law existed at that time, imposing a tax. The only section of the act as it at that time stood, fixing the time when such taxes are payable, was section 3, which provided that all taxes imposed by the act, “unless otherwise herein provided for,” shall be due and payable at the death of the decedent. Section 1, so far as applicable here, is as follows: “A tax shall be and is hereby imposed upon the transfer of any property, real, personal, or mixed, or of any interest therein or income therefrom, in trust or otherwise, to persons, institutions or corporations, not hereinafter exempted, in the following cases: 1. When the transfer is by will or by the intestate laws of this State, from any person dying, seized or possessed of the property while a resident of the State. * * * 4. Whenever any person, institution or corporation shall exercise a power of appointment derived from any disposition of property made either before or after the passage of this act, such appointment, when made, shall be deemed a taxable transfer under the provisions of this act, in the same manner as though the property to which such appointment relates belonged absolutely to the donee of such power and had been bequeathed or devised by such donee by will; and whenever any person or corporation possessing such a power of appointment so derived shall omit or fail to exercise the same within the time provided therefor, in whole or in part, a transfer taxable under the provisions of this act shall be deemed to take place to the extent of such omission or failure, in the same manner as though the persons or corporations thereby becoming entitled to the possession or enjoyment of the property to which such power related had succeeded thereto by a will of the donee of the power failing to exercise such power, taking effect at the time of such omission or failure.”

The Inheritance Tax act, as it stood in 1925, did not purport to impose a tax on all transfers at the death of the person from whom the property sprang. The right to impose inheritance taxes under the statute is to be determined as of the time of the death which effects the transfer of the property. (People v. Linn, 357 Ill. 220; People v. Flanagin, 331 id. 203; In re Estate of Graves, 242 id. 212.) At the time of Victor F. Lawson’s death the statute, as we have seen, provided no tax in his estate regarding a remainder subject to power of appointment. The tax on the transfer of such remainder was to be assessed in the estate of the donee of the power at the time when the power was to be exercised, whether it was in fact exercised or not. This was the clear holding in the Linn case. In 1933 the General Assembly amended subsection 4 of section 1 by repealing the provisions of that subsection relating to the non-exercise of the power of appointment, and appellants say there is, therefore, no authority for the tax here assessed.

The position of the Attorney General is that since our Inheritance Tax act was adopted from the State of New York, judicial constructions placed on the statute by the courts of that State are presumed to have been intended, by the General Assembly of this State, to apply to our act when passed. It is pointed out that in In re Lansing’s Estate, 182 N. Y. 238, 74 N. E. 882, a similar provision of the New York act calling for assessment of a tax on the non-exercise of a power of appointment was held to be unconstitutional, and that, as that decision came with the adoption of the New York act, subsection 4 of section 1 should not be considered as limiting other language of the Inheritance Tax act authorizing a tax in such a case as that before us, and that it was proper, on non-exercise of the power. of appointment, to fix a tax in a second proceeding in the Victor F.

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In Re Estate of Curtis
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15 N.E.2d 729 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1938)

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14 N.E.2d 232, 368 Ill. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-cavenee-ill-1938.