Valentine v. . Gill, Comr. of Revenue

27 S.E.2d 2, 223 N.C. 396, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 29, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 2 (Valentine v. . Gill, Comr. of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valentine v. . Gill, Comr. of Revenue, 27 S.E.2d 2, 223 N.C. 396, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 284 (N.C. 1943).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

Section 1 (Article 1) of the Bevenue Act — chapter 158, Public Laws of 1939 — imposes an inheritance tax upon transfers of *398 property at a scheduled rate, applicable to the classes named, as set out in sections 3, 4, and 5, respectively, designated as Classes A, B, and C. We are more immediately concerned with sections 3 and 4, certain provisions of which are by reference incorporated in section 12. The latter section exempts from recurring taxes within two years under the conditions therein named. It is as follows:

“Sec. 12. BectjReing Taxes. — Where property transferred has been taxed under the provisions of this article, such property shall not be assessed and/or taxed on account of any other transfer of like kind pceurring within two years from the date of the death of the former decedent: Provided, that this section shall apply only to the transferees designated in Sections three and four of this article.”

By the proviso in this section the exemption is limited to transferees designated in sections 3 and 4 of the statute, and to this we must look for their definition. Section 3 designates certain Class A beneficiaries, who are defined as lineal issue or lineal ancestor, or husband or wife of the person who died possessed of such property, or stepchild of such person, or child adopted by the decedent according to applicable law. The transferees designated in section 4 as Class B beneficiaries are defined as follows: The brother or sister, or descendant of either, or the uncle or aunt by blood of the person who died possessed. There is a further class, C, consisting of strangers to the blood, which is mentioned here only in connection with what we may further have to say as to the policy of the law.

Carrie A. Marsh, the residuary beneficiary under the will of Trask, is the sister of Kathleen M. Trask, from whom the property was derived through the succession of Trask under the intestate laws during the two-year period, but is a stranger to Trask, from whom she received the property, with respect to any relationship mentioned in sections 3 and 4 as conditions necessary to the exemption. The taxability of the transfer under the will, therefore, depends on whether she must rely for the exemption on a relationship to Trask, the decedent from whom she received the property, or may be permitted to establish such relationship with. Kathleen M. Trask, from whom the property ivas mediately derived. This resolves itself substantially into the question: What decedent does the statute intend to designate as “the person who died possessed” of the property, as used in sections 3 and 4? Does it mean any person who may have died possessed during the two-year period, or does it refer only to the decedent concerned with the transfer sought to be taxed?

If the statute under consideration were doubtful or equivocal in its significance, there might be more need to rely upon the rules of construction presented to us by the contending parties. In terms the *399 Revenue Act gives to tbe Commissioner of Revenue tbe power to construe tbe law — section 933 — and sucb construction will be given due consideration by tbe courts, although it is not controlling. Reade v. Durham, 173 N. C., 668, 92 S. E., 712; Commissioners v. Board of Education, 163 N. C., 404, 408, 79 S. E., 886. It is pointed out by the defendant Commissioner that it has been so construed as to make tbe tax applicable under tbe facts of this case; that this construction has bad tbe approval of tbe Attorney-General in an advisory opinion, controlling upon tbe Department until reversed or modified by court action; and that it has been uniformly followed in tbe administration of tbe law and presumably acquiesced in by tbe Legislature, which has not seen fit to make any modifying amendment. Robertson v. Downing, 127 U. S., 607, 32 L. Ed., 269; Helvering v. Winmill, 305 U. S., 79, 82 L. Ed., 52; Powell v. Maxwell, 210 N. C., 211, 186 S. E., 326; Cannon v. Maxwell, 205 N. C., 420, 171 S. E., 624; Hannah v. Board of Commissioners, 176 N. C., 395, 97 S. E., 160; Commissioners v. Board of Education, swpra; Gill v. Commissioners, 160 N. C., 176, 76 S. E., 203. The defendant further points out that tbe exemption sought under section 12 is in tbe nature of an exception to tbe general taxing provisions of tbe statute — section 1 of this article — and that the burden rests upon tbe plaintiff to show that tbe beneficiary of tbe estate be represents is qualified for tbe exemption by bringing her within these exceptive provisions of tbe law, strictly construed. Odd Fellows v. Swain, 217 N. C., 632, 9 S. E. (2d), 365; McCanless Motor Co. v. Maxwell, 210 N. C., 725, 188 S. E., 389; Stedman v. Winston-Salem, 204 N. C., 203, 205, 167 S. E., 813. All of which must be conceded. On tbe other band, tbe plaintiff urges upon us that tbe incidence of tbe law upon tbe party and property taxed, and tbe consequences of its enforcement, must be considered in construing it; and if we should conceive tbe Act as having two possible meanings with reasonable doubt as to which was intended, this, too, is within recognized rules of interpretation. Trust Co. v. Young, 172 N. C., 470, 90 S. E., 568; S. v. Johnson, 170 N. C., 685, 86 S. E., 788; Tax Commission v. Harrington, 126 Md., 157, 94 A., 537. Thus, tbe plaintiff contends that tbe construction placed upon tbe law by tbe Commissioner has resulted in bringing about a recurrent taxation within tbe two-year period on tbe transfer of property actually derived, although mediately, from a sister of tbe beneficiary, which it is contended is against tbe spirit of tbe law, contrary to its policy, and an event which section 12 of tbe Revenue Act, properly construed, was intended to prevent.

We think, however, that we need hardly go much further than tbe grammatical construction and syntax of tbe law to find its meaning.

*400 Tbe categories of relationship named in sections 3 and 4 are stated with that precision which is necessary to a taxing measure, and are both inclusive and exclusive, and are controlling in applying the exemption. To qualify for the exemption there must, of course, be an identity of the property which is the subject of the transfer and claimed to be recurrently taxed. However, the tax is not on the property, but on the transfer; and the exemption is to the transferee. Trust Co. v. Maxwell, 221 N. C., 528, 20 S. E. (2d), 840; Ilagood v. Doughton, 195 N. C., 811, 143 S. E., 841.

When there have been successive transfers of the property during the two-year period, we think there is sound reason for holding that the law intends to limit and define the exemption to the circumstances attending the immediate transfer sought to be taxed, and to limit the transferee claiming the exemption to the relationship existing between such transferee and the decedent from whom the estate is received — such transferee must be a Glass A or Class B beneficiary of such decedent.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 2, 223 N.C. 396, 1943 N.C. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valentine-v-gill-comr-of-revenue-nc-1943.