200 S.W.2d 484 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Reversing.
On December 19, 1924, William B. Allen executed three trust agreements to the Fidelity Columbia Trust *281 Company as trustee for his three daughters by which he directed that the income from the corpus of the property impressed with the trusts was to accumulate until his daughters reached 25 years of age, after which time they would receive the income for life and each was given the power of appointment at her death. In the event the power was not exercised, the trust agreements provided that each daughter's share should pass to her issue, and if none, to her surviving sisters or their heirs.
On September 19, 1935, Mr. Allen executed a similar trust agreement to the same trustee for the benefit of his granddaughter who was born September 15, 1935, which contained practically the same terms as the agreements made in favor of his daughters, the granddaughter having use of the trust fund for life with power of appointment; and in the event she failed to appoint, the property passed to her descendants, and if none, then to her heirs.
Mr. Allen died on January 26, 1941, and the Fidelity Columbia Trust Company qualified as his executor. Subsequently, that company became the Citizens Fidelity Bank Trust Company, which administered the estate as well as the four trusts. In filing its inheritance tax return with the Department of Revenue, the executor did not include the remainder interests set out in the four trusts, but the Department assessed an inheritance tax of $8,604.71 against such remainder interests and the Tax Commission upheld the Department's ruling that this tax should be paid out of Mr. Allen's estate. Thereupon, the executor filed its petition in the Franklin Circuit Court against the Commissioner of Revenue and the Tax Commission which set out the terms of the agreements and averred that the remainder interests were not subject to an inheritance tax. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, the executor refused to plead further and when his petition was dismissed he appealed.
It is admitted in briefs that the trust agreements are irrevocable and as they were not made by Mr. Allen in contemplation of death, the life estates they created are not subject to an inheritance tax. The sole question before us is whether the remainder interests are subject to such a tax. *282
The inheritance tax statute in effect at the time the trusts were created was chapter 111, page 329 of the Acts of 1924, which became sec. 4281a-1 et seq. of Carroll's 1930 statute. Section 4281a-1 was amended in 1936 and became sec. 4281a-12 of that year's statute and now appears as KRS
Subsection 3 of sec. 1, chapter 111, page 331, Acts of 1924, became sec. 4281a-1(3) of Carroll's 1930 Statutes and this section was amended in 1936 by having this provision added thereto: "Provided that in the case of such power of appointment, the transfer shall be deemed to take place, for the purpose of taxation, at the time of the death of the donor and the assessment be made at that time against the life interest of the donee and the remainder against the corpus and collection therefor shall be made pursuant to sec. 8, subsection 5."
It then became sec. 4281a-14 in Carroll's 1936 Statutes. This section was amended again in 1942 by adding two sentences relative to exemptions and is now KRS
The executor insists that these trusts were completed gifts inter vivos in which the donor retained no interest or control and as it is admitted they were not made in contemplation of death and as no property passed by deed made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the donor, the remainder interests are not subject to the inheritance tax levied under KRS
It is the Commonwealth's contention that the activity taxed was begun during the life of the donor and was completed at the death of the first beneficiaries and *284 that the donor for the privilege of projecting his control over the trust funds after his death through the device of a power of appointment is liable for the tax at the time of his death. It further contends that neither sec. 2 of our Constitution nor the 14th amendment of the Federal Constitution is violated because the Inheritance Tax Act levying, assessing and collecting taxes on transfers passing under power of appointment was in effect when these trusts were created.
It is elementary that an inheritance tax is based on the passing of title by reason of death from the decedent to the beneficiary. Martin v. Storrs,
In Shukert v. Allen,
So here, the four trusts and the remainders they created were immediate gifts unaffected by the donor's death.
In Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co.,
The argument of the Commonwealth is that the donor retained control over the remainders created in the trusts after his death through the device of a power of appointment which could not be completed until after the deaths of the first beneficiaries, and for this reason the donor's estate must pay the taxes on the remainder interests. But the facts in this instance do not support such an argument. The donor retained no control over these trusts after his death but parted immediately and absolutely with all the trust property, present and remainder, upon the execution of the trust deeds. He in no way limited the power of appointment and his death did not affect the title of the beneficiaries or their right to dispose of the property by will. It is true that should the beneficiaries fail to exercise the power of appointment the trust deeds provided where it will go, and under KRS
The Shubert and Reinecke cases support our views that the four trusts before us were unaffected by the death of testator, Mr. Allen, therefore the remainder interests thereby created did not fall within KRS
It is insisted by the Commonwealth that the judgment *286
of the chancellor must stand or else the opinion in Reeves v. Fidelity Columbia Trust Co.,
Section
It will be noticed that KRS
The judgment is reversed with directions that one be entered to the effect that Mr. Allen's estate is not liable for an inheritance tax on the remainder interests created in the four trust deeds he executed.
Judge Dawson not sitting.