Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Department of Taxation

69 N.W.2d 586, 269 Wis. 496, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 538
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 N.W.2d 586 (Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Department of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Department of Taxation, 69 N.W.2d 586, 269 Wis. 496, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 538 (Wis. 1955).

Opinion

Currie, J.

The appellant executor advances the following three contentions on this appeal:

(1) Certain sales of shares of stock of the Wisconsin Box Company conclusively establish the fair market value of the stock in said company owned by the deceased at the time of his death on May 3, 1952, at $100 per share.

(2) If such sales are held not to be conclusive in establishing such market value, the trial court’s determination of a value of $140 per share is excessive as being against the great weight and clear preponderance of the testimony.

(3) The trial court committed prejudicial error in failing to give any weight to the restrictive agreement relating to the sale of testator’s stock as embodied in testator’s will, in valuing said stock.

But one issue is presented by the state’s motion for review and that is whether the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence requires a valuation of this stock at a value of at least $165 per share.

Sec. 72.01, Stats., relating to inheritance taxes, provides in sub. (8) that the tax so imposed shall be upon “the clear market value” of the property; secs. 72.13 and 72.14 require *502 that appraisals be made at the “fair market value;” sec. 72.15 (1), (3) provides that the court shall determine the “cash value” of the property; and sec. 72.15 (5) states that the property shall be appraised at “its clear market value.”

This court in Estate of Ryerson (1941), 239 Wis. 120, 124, 300 N. W. 782, held that the terms “fair market value,” “cash value,” and “clear market value” are for all practical purposes identical. The United States supreme court, in United States v. Miller (1943), 317 U. S. 369, 63 Sup. Ct. 276, 87 L. Ed. 336, in considering whether there was any distinction between “market value” and “fair market value,” stated (p. 374) :

“The term ‘fair1 hardly adds anything to the phrase ‘market value/ which denotes what ‘it fairly may be believed that a purchaser in fair market conditions would have given,’ or, more concisely, ‘market value fairly determined.’ ” (Emphasis supplied.)

In Estate of Ryerson, supra, this court declared (p. 125) :

“ ‘Market value’ is a term frequently used not only in the statutes of this state but in that of many other states. It has been defined by this court as follows: Clear market value is the sum which property would bring on a fair sale when sold by a willing seller not obliged to sell to a willing buyer not obliged to buy. Allen v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. (1911). 145 Wis. 263, 266, 129 N. W. 1094; Rahr Malting Co. v. Manitowoc (1937), 225 Wis. 401, 274 N. W. 291.”

If actual sales of the stock of the Wisconsin Box Company had taken place in close proximity to the date of death of the deceased, which met such stated test of having been made by a willing seller not obliged to sell to a willing buyer not obliged to buy, the sales price of such sales would be controlling and it would have been error for the learned trial court to have disregarded the same and based his determination of the value upon the testimony of expert witnesses basing their conclusions on such items as the average earnings, *503 history of dividend payments, book value, and other factors. However, when sales are made under such circumstances that the fair market value is not obtained, the sales price is not controlling and does not conclusively fix its clear market value. State ex rel. Flambeau Paper Co. v. Windus (1932), 208 Wis. 583, 243 N. W. 216; State ex rel. Collins v. Brown (1937), 225 Wis. 593, 275 N. W. 455; Estate of Nieman (1939), 230 Wis. 23, 283 N. W. 452; Estate of Ryerson, supra, at page 127.

With these principles in mind we will now turn to an examination of the actual sales relied upon by the appellant executor. The two chief sales stressed by the appellant are those made by Mrs. Marie Hagedorn and by the Woodson family.

On February 1, 1949, Wisconsin Box Company purchased 255 shares of its capital stock from Mrs. Hagedorn at a price of $100 per share. She had inherited this stock from her father, who died April 2, 1948, and who, for many years, had been superintendent of the company’s plant and a stockholder. At the time of the sale she was a mature woman fifty years of age residing in Iowa. She had no financial obligations making it necessary for her to sell; in fact, she had inherited $93,000 in assets from her father. She received an offer from the company to sell this stock which she had inherited at the value at which it was appraised in her father’s estate of $100 per share, which was also the par value of the stock. She then consulted Attorney E. P. Gorman of Wau-sau, who had known her for many years and had drawn her father’s will and probated the estate, and requested his advice whether to accept the offer. Attorney Gorman advised her to accept the company’s offer. He testified that he had not gone into the financial statements of the company and in talking with Mrs. Hagedorn did not discuss book value.

Apparently his advice to sell was based on the fact that the company was a closely held corporation.

*504 The Woodson sale took place on August 21, 1953, approximately fifteen months after date of death of testator. Five members of the Woodson family owned an aggregate of 150 shares of stock of the Wisconsin Box Company, and in May, 1953, Mr. A. P. Woodson, one of the five, consulted Mr. Paul J. O’Brien, manager of the Wausau office of the Robert W. Baird & Company, about selling such 150 shares of stock. Mr. O’Brien had been one of the three court-appointed appraisers who had placed a value of $100 per share on the stock, and he told Woodson of such fact, that the taxing authorities were insisting on a higher valuation, and that a hearing was to be held on the issue. Woodson replied that the $100 was “a good price” and that he would sell his stock at such price. O’Brien did not take the matter up with the officers of the Wisconsin Box Company right away but delayed until July. Then such officers did not accept immediately and the sale was not consummated until August 21, 1953. This stock had been owned by the Wood-sons for many years and they were not in any financial position requiring them to sell.

Testimony was also received of sales made much more remote in time to the date of death of testator than the Plagedorn and Woodson sales. In 1942, the deceased and his brother had purchased 100 shares from the F. O. Crocker estate for $3,729.75, or approximately $37.30 per share. On February 12, 1944, one J. D. Mylrea purchased 60 shares at $50 per share from a bank which had held the stock as collateral. In 1943, seven shares had been purchased by Mr. PI. G. Beck, president of the Wisconsin Valley Trust Company, from a trust at $25 per share along with some other “odds and ends.”

Plowever, because of the remoteness in time, of all sales other than those made by Mrs. Hagedorn and the Woodson family, we will confine our consideration to these two sales. Neither Mrs.

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69 N.W.2d 586, 269 Wis. 496, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-valley-trust-co-v-department-of-taxation-wis-1955.