Town of Darien v. State

106 A.2d 181, 141 Conn. 336, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 8, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 A.2d 181 (Town of Darien v. State) 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
Town of Darien v. State, 106 A.2d 181, 141 Conn. 336, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 196 (Colo. 1954).

Opinion

Inglis, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff town seeks to recover from the state a share of a penalty tax which it claims should have been collected by the state from the estate of James A. Trowbridge even though, by reason of a compromise agreement between the state and the executors of Trowbridge’s will, no penalty tax was actually collected. The case comes to this court by reservation.

The stipulated facts, so far as they are necessary for our decision of the crucial questions propounded, are the following: James A. Trowbridge died on May 30,1931. For more than five years prior to his *338 death he had been a resident of Darien. He left a will dated October 25, 1921, in which he described himself as a resident of the city and state of New York, and that will was admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court in New York. He had business interests in New York and owned residential property there in which he occasionally stayed. The inventory of his estate listed bonds, mortgages and choses in action which, with the accrued interest thereon, were appraised at $8,609,173.83. All of these securities he had kept in a safe deposit box in New York, and he had never paid a tax on them either to the town of Darien or the state of Connecticut. The only property standing in his name in Connecticut was real estate appraised at $20,000.

By reason of the foregoing and other facts, the question arose between the taxing officials of New York and Connecticut whether the domicil of the decedent at the time of his death was New York or Connecticut. On October 1, 1931, the Connecticut board of finance and control adopted a resolution to the effect that “the claim of the State of Connecticut as to the domicile of James A. Trowbridge . . . involving ultimately death taxes in amounts now unascertained, payable to the State of Connecticut . . . be compromised” as follows: If the executors of Trowbridge’s will would assist the state in bringing out before the proper courts all material facts pertaining to the domicil of the decedent at the time of his death, and if the final judicial determination is that his domicil was in Darien, Connecticut, the “State Treasurer is directed to receive from said executors, upon certificate of the Tax Commissioner, in full for all death taxes due the State of Connecticut from said estate (including inheritance, succession, estate and penalty taxes), an amount to be de *339 termined by the sum of the two following (1) the inheritance and succession tax and (2) the estate tax as may be determined according to law.” It was also voted, in a second paragraph, “[t]hat within one calendar year of the receipt thereof the State Treasurer shall remit to the town of Darien the sum of $ in lieu of said town’s share of any penalty tax which might have been assessed.” The discussion which led to the adoption of the resolution indicated that the sense of the meeting was that, although the compromise of the state’s claim for all death taxes by a waiver of the penalty tax might impose a moral obligation to compensate Darien for its loss of a share of that tax, the board was not then ready to determine the amount, if any, of such compensation.

In December, 1931, the tax commissioner of Connecticut entered into an agreement with the executors of Trowbridge’s will in accordance with the resolution of the board of finance and control, as that was supplemented in some details which are not important in the present litigation. Thereafter, the question of the decedent’s domicil was litigated in the courts of New York and finally, on February 26, 1935, the Court of Appeals of that state decided that the decedent’s domicil was in Connecticut. Matter of Trowbridge, 266 N.Y. 283, 194 N.E. 756. The town of Darien was not a party to and did not participate in the litigation. On May 31,1935, the executors paid the treasurer of the state of Connecticut the sum of $942,147.06, and the treasurer issued his receipt for “the sum of $929,993.44 tax, together with the sum of $12,153.62 interest thereon . . . being in full for all death taxes due the State of Connecticut, from the Estate of said James A. Trowbridge, deceased, including inheritance, succession and es *340 tate taxes and in lieu of penalty taxes, said amount being paid and received pursuant to compromise authorized and approved by the Board of Finance and Control of the State of Connecticut by vote passed at a meeting of said Board held October 1, 1931.” The principal amount so received was the exact amount due the state on account of the inheritance, succession and estate taxes. Not until October, 1948, did the town of Darien know this payment had been made.

At a meeting of the board of finance and control on June 5, 1935, the second paragraph of the vote of October 1, 1931, was called to the board’s attention and the question whether the state should pay anything to the town of Darien was considered. The discussion was to the effect that, inasmuch as the payment made by the executors did not include any amount on account of the penalty tax, the town was not entitled to receive any part of the payment. Accordingly, no action was taken with reference to the matter. The state has never paid the town any sum on account of a penalty tax paid or payable on the Trowbridge estate.

In October, 1936, the will of James A. Trowbridge was admitted to probate in the Probate Court for the district of Darien, and thereafter the estate was fully administered in that court. In the course of the administration, the executors inventoried bonds, mortgages and choses in action totaling more than eight and one-half million dollars and made a return to the tax commissioner showing that during the last completed tax period prior to the decedent’s death no tax had been assessed on those intangibles by any town in the state, nor had any tax been paid thereon to the state during the year next preceding the death of the decedent. During the course of the *341 probate, no computation of a penalty tax on the estate was made by the tax commissioner.

In October, 1948, the officials of the town of Darien first learned of the proceedings with reference to the penalty tax on the Trowbridge estate and that the town might have a claim against the state on account thereof. A bill to authorize suit against the state was introduced in the 1949 legislature but failed of passage. A similar bill, however, was passed in 1951 (26 Spec. Laws 173), and this suit was started promptly thereafter.

The questions propounded in the reservation are set forth in the footnote. 1 In the view that we take of *342 the matter, it will be necessary to discuss only question 1 and, incident to that, question 6. In other words, our answer to the question whether the town of Darien is entitled to receive from the state by way of its statutory share of the estate penalty tax any portion of the amount paid by the Trowbridge estate will be an adequate guide to the Superior Court in rendering final judgment in the case.

The statutes controlling the decision of this question are §§ 1402-1409, comprising chapter 78 of the 1930 Revision (as amended, Rev. 1949, e. 103).

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.2d 181, 141 Conn. 336, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-darien-v-state-conn-1954.