Trust Co. of Norfolk v. Commonwealth

141 S.E. 825, 151 Va. 883, 1928 Va. LEXIS 279
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 141 S.E. 825 (Trust Co. of Norfolk v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trust Co. of Norfolk v. Commonwealth, 141 S.E. 825, 151 Va. 883, 1928 Va. LEXIS 279 (Va. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Crump, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On May 4, 1920, Lucius J. Kellam domiciled in Virginia, and a resident of Aceomac county, executed an instrument in the form of a deed of trust, to the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, Maryland, by which he settled upon his two sons as benefi[890]*890eiaries certain securities valued at approximately $50,-000.00, and listed in a schedule attached to the deed. The securities, consisting of stocks and bonds, were delivered to the trustee, and the deed provided that in so far as they were registered, the trustee was authorized to have them registered in its name, in order to facilitate transfers for reinvestment or in the course of the execution of the trust.

The trustee was directed to collect the income upon the corpus of the property, and after paying to itself five per cent commissions on the gross income and paying such taxes “as may be chargeable” on the property, the trust fund and the income were to be held upon trusts, which may be summarized thus:

(1) The income was to be allowed to accumulate and so become a part of the corpus, until the two sons of the assignor, Lucius J. Kellam, Jr., then eight years of age and Emerson Polk Kellam, then five years old, should respectively attain the age of twenty-five years.

(2) When the older son reached the age of twenty-five years one-half of the entire fund then on hand, original principal and accumulations, was to be delivered to him as his property. As the younger son attained the same age the balance of the entire fund should be delivered to him.

(3) If either of said two sons should die before receiving his share, leaving children living at his death, then his share was to be paid over and delivered to the children; otherwise if the one so dying left no children living at his death, his share of the fund should accrue to the survivor, who would thereupon become entitled to the entire fund when he became twenty-five years of age.

(4) The maker of the deed of trust reserved to him[891]*891self the right to alter, or to cancel and invalidate, the entire trust provision in these further stipulations:

“If as said children arrive at twenty-five years of age, I shall be then living, then and in that event I reserve to myself the right to postpone the delivery to them of their share of said trust funds, principal and income provided I shall, prior to the delivery thereof, notify said trustee to postpone such delivery, and provided also that I shall have the right, and which said right I hereby reserve, to revoke this trust in whole or in part at any time before the delivery of the principal and accumulations to my said children or either of them, and in that event said trustee shall reeonvey to me such part or the whole of the estate hereby conveyed with its accumulations as I may demand, and thereupon the trust hereby created shall cease to the extent of the property so reeonveyed to me; and I reserve to myself also the right to alter and change the trusts hereby created.”

The donor further retains his control of the fund by having the deed provide that “in my lifetime said trustee shall make no change in any of the. investments now turned over to it, without my written approval;” although full power had been conferred upon the trustee to change the investments as their judgment might dictate.

The non-resident trustee signed the deed, accepted the trust, and the securities have been at all times since in its possession in the city of Baltimore.

Mr. Kellam, the grantor in the deed, died at his residence in Accomac county August 9, 1920, three months after the trust was created.

The trustee in Baltimore regularly reported the intangible personal property constituting the trust fund [892]*892to the taxing authorities in Maryland, and paid the State and city taxes there assessed against it.

In the year 1925, the trust fund was assessed for taxation in Virginia by the assessors in Accomac county for the years 1921, 1922, 1923 and 1924 and placed upon the books for 1925, the assessments for these years, with penalties and interest, amounting to $1,054.77.

Ip. April, 1926, the Baltimore trustee applied to the circuit court for a correction of these assessments, and insisted that the fund held by it was not taxable in Virginia. The court held that the fund was taxable in this State and ordered it to be assessed against “The Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, Maryland, trustee for L. J. and E. P. Kellam, and Carrie P. Kellam, guardian of L. J. and E. P. Kellam.” Mrs. Kellam had qualified as guardian of the two children upon the death of her husband. Upon the petition of the trustee and of the guardian a writ of error, was allowed.

Objection is made, on behalf of the Commonwealth, to the consideration by this court of an agreed statement of facts and copies of two deeds found in the record, because they are not identified by the trial judge in a bill of exceptions, or otherwise.

The order of the court refers to the agreed statement of facts and in express terms files it as part of the record. The agreed statement of facts recites as to two deeds of trust “that copies of both of the said trust deeds are filed herewith and made a part hereof;” one of these deeds was the deed of trust in question. The order further recites that the plaintiffs in error duly excepted to the adverse ruling of the court. These papers were necessarily made a part of the record by the order of the court, and no bill of exception was necessary. The function of a bill of exceptions is to put into a record [893]*893something which does hot appear in the court proceedings to have been made part of the record.

The question to be decided is whether the corpus of the trust fund is taxable in Virginia, and if so to whom it should be assessed.

The applicable statute is section 2307 of the Code of Virginia as amended in 1920 (Laws 1920, chapter 376), and in 1922 (Laws 1922, chapter 520, section 1). It is there-provided that if property consists of bonds and stocks in any county or city other than that of the -owner’s residence, or in a State other than Virginia, it shall be listed by and taxed to the owner, thus fixing the situs of such intangible property for the purpose of assessing the tax.

As to whom it should be assessed and taxed,' this statute provides: “If property be owned by a person sui juris, it shall be listed by and taxed to him. If property be owned by a minor, it shall be listed to ■ and taxed by his guardian or trustee, if any he has; if he has no guardian or trustee, it shall be listed by and taxed to his father, if any he has; if he has no guardian nor trustee, father nor mother, it shall be listed by and taxed to the person in possession.” It is then provided that in case of a trust for an adult or a married woman, the property shall be assessed to the trustee if “any they have in this State;” otherwise it shall be listed to the persons themselves. There is no requirement that in a case of a non-resident trustee for a minor, the .property may not be assessed to the trustee.

The proper construction, and the true meaning and ■effect of the deed, presents no great difficulty.

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83 S.E.2d 408 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
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Bluebook (online)
141 S.E. 825, 151 Va. 883, 1928 Va. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trust-co-of-norfolk-v-commonwealth-vactapp-1928.