Wear v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

65 F.2d 665, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 852, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3117, 1933 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9341, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 26, 1933
Docket5046
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 665 (Wear v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wear v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 F.2d 665, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 852, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3117, 1933 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9341, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 852 (3d Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

William Potter, the decedent, was donee of a general power of appointment under the will of his father. He exercised the power in his own will by giving the property to his two daughters who, had he omitted to exercise it, would have taken the property under the will of their grandfather, the donor, and the decedent’s estate would to that extent have escaped a federal tax. As the decedent did, as a matter of fact, exercise the power, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue imposed upon his estate a tax measured by the value of the property passing under *666 the power, on authority of section 302 of the Revenue Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 9 (26 USCA § 1094). This provision, in laying down a basis for a taxable net estate, prescribed that the gross estate should be determined by including the value, at the time of the decedent’s death, of real and personal property “* * * (f) To the extent of any property passing under a general power of appointment exercised by the decedent (1) by will. * * * ” On appeal to the United States Board of Tax Appeals that tribunal held the value of the property was properly included in computing gross estate and the additional estate tax was lawfully determined. The executors of the decedent have filed this petition for review.

The petitioners admit the power in question was a general power of appointment. They deny, however, that the donee ever “exercised” it. They take this stand not against the admitted fact that the donee did actually and expressly exercise the power but on the ground that it was legally an abortive act in that it neither produced a new effect nor changed the legal status of the appointees in respect to the property from what-it was before. To this contention we briefly answer that the donee exercised the power. Whether it was without legal effect, In Matter of Lansing, 182 N. Y. 238, 74 N. E. 882, and therefore lifted the estate out of the taxing act and left it under Pennsylvania law, turns on another question whieh the petitioners state as follows:

“Did the property over whieh the decedent had a general power of appointment pass under the general power of appointment?”

That question is predicated on the law of Pennsylvania that, “If the donee of the power exercise it in such a manner that the property passes exactly as it would have passed if the power had not been exercised, the property will be treated as passing under the will of the donor.” 26 R. C. L. 189; Freeman’s Estate, No. 1, 35 Pa. Super. Ct. 185; Crolius v. Kramer, 279 Pa. 275, 123 A. 808; Potter’s Estate, 13 Pa. Dist. R. 667. If the question as framed by the peti tioners states the whole point of the case there is nothing to discuss, for it is indubitably settled in Pennsylvania law as a matter of title that where there is identity of the donee’s appointee and the donor’s contingent beneficiary title passes from the donor of the power.

The real question, as we venture to put it, is whether the exercise of a general power of appointment is a lawful subject of federal taxation, to be measured by the value of property whieh under state law passes, as in this ease, not from the decedent donee of the power but from the donor.

The answer depends very much on how the question is approached. If we were dealing with a state rule of property, this federal court would, of course, be bound by it. But we are dealing with a right of the federal government to levy a tax on a particular subject — the exercise of a power of appointment. Matters of federal taxation, though controlled exclusively by federal legislation, Burnet v. Harmel, 287 U. S. 103, 110, 53 S. Ct. 74, 77 L. Ed. 199, are sometimes perplexing because of the difficulty in applying provisions of a federal taxing act to a subject whieh states under their own laws regard differently. To laws of the states the Congress can yield, and in some instances, such as in allowing deductions, has yielded. Except when expressly and voluntarily giving way to state laws, the Congress, not permitting its hand to be stayed, may, within the constitution, reach out and levy federal taxes on such subjects as it may select, Lang v. Commissioner, 53 S. Ct. 534, 77 L. Ed.-, however they may be regarded at home.

The subject of the tax in this ease is the exercise of a general power of appointment. The tax is not on the property of the power but is on the exercise of the power itself. In many states a general power of appointment, following the English rifle, is regarded as an estate equivalent to out-and-out ownership of the property, or an ownership at least to the extent of subjecting it to liability for the donee’s debts, and of course subjecting it to taxation, Chanler v. Kelsey, 205 U. S. 466, 27 S. Ct. 550, 51 L. Ed. 882; Lederer v. Pearce (C. C. A.) 266 F. 497, 18 A. L. R. 1446; Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. McCaughn (C. C. A.) 34 F.(2d) 600, 602; Rosenberger v. McCaughn (C. C. A.) 25 F.(2d) 699, 700; Id., 278 U. S. 604, 49 S. Ct. 10, 73 L. Ed. 532. In Pennsylvania and in some other American jurisdictions, the rule is just the opposite. Such being the diversity of rules, we are not concerned with a question whether one is right and the other wrong, but with an altogether different question, whether a federal taxing act is to be put into effect in one jurisdiction and not in another according to the different ways in whieh the subject of the tax is looked upon.

We do not believe the Congress intended, by the quoted provision of the act, that the estate tax in respect to the exercise of a *667 general power of appointment should be imposed and collected at the will of the states or upon the accident of the citizenship of the taxpayer. Rather do we think it intended the tax should be laid, not on property and therefore not to be bound by a state rule of property, but on an event arising upon the death of the donee, that is, the exercise of a power of appointment effective on his death. The estate tax being a death tax, rests “upon the principle that death is the ‘generating source’ from which the authority to impose such taxes takes its being and ‘it is the power to transmit or the transmission or receipt of property by death which is the subject levied upon by all death duties.’ Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, 56, 57, 20 S. Ct. 747, 754, 44 L. Ed. 969.” Tyler v. United States, 281 U. S. 497, 502, 503, 50 S. Ct. 356, 358, 74 L. Ed. 991, 69 A. L. R. 758.

“The question here, then, is, not whether there has been, in the strict sense of that word, a ‘transfer’ [or a ‘passing’] of the property by the death of the decedent, or a receipt of it by right of succession [or by a contingent right under the donor’s will], but whether the death has brought into being or ripened for the survivor, property rights of such character as to make appropriate the imposition of a tax upon that result (which Congress may call a transfer tax, a death duty or anything else it sees fit), to be measured, in whole or in part, hy the value of such rights.” Tyler v. United States, 281 U. S. 497, 502, 503, 50 S. Ct. 356, 359, 74 L. Ed. 991, 69 A. L. R. 758; U. S. v. Provident Trust Co. (C. C.

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65 F.2d 665, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 852, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3117, 1933 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9341, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wear-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca3-1933.