310 Mass. 186 | Mass. | 1941
This is a petition brought in the Probate Court to require the respondents, as trustees under the will of Edmund Dana Barbour, to pay the amount of Federal income taxes that the petitioner paid for several years based upon the payment to her of a $20,000 annuity, and also certain expenses that she paid in connection with her proceeding to recover from the Federal government a refund for overpayment of taxes. The trial judge reserved and reported the matter upon the pleadings and a statement of
In November, 1936, the trustees’ agent informed the petitioner that there was a possibility, as a result of changes in
It is not contended that the trustees, throughout the years in question, that is, 1926 to 1933, inclusive, were not legally obligated to pay the Federal income taxes on the income received by them as trustees and paid by them to the petitioner for her annuity, nor is it contended that the petitioner was, under the law, obliged to pay any income tax upon her annuity. See Burnet v. Whitehouse, 283 U. S. 148; Helvering v. Pardee, 290 U. S. 365, 370, 371; Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 66 Fed. (2d) 179, certiorari denied, 290 U. S. 700.
By § 1101 of the revenue act of 1926 (44 U. S. Sts. at Large, 111; U. S. C. Sup. V, Title 26, § 62) the commissioner of internal revenue, with the approval of the secretory of the treasury, was authorized to prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement of the act. Under this authority, he promulgated art. 341 of regulations 69, which, in part, provided: “Estates and trusts: — In general, the income of a trust for the taxable year which is to be distributed to the beneficiaries must be returned by and will be taxed to the respective beneficiaries, but the income of a trust which is to be accumulated or held for future distribution, whether consisting of ordinary income or gain from the sale of assets included in the corpus of the trust, must be returned by and will be taxed to the trustee . . . .” Regulations by a department of government, addressed to and reasonably adapted to an act of Congress, the adminis
The precise validity and effect of the above quoted regulation do not appear to have been definitely settled until the decisions on December 11, 1933, in the cases of Helver-ing v. Pardee, 290 U. S. 365, and Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 66 Fed. (2d) 179; 290 U. S. 700. In the case of Burnet v. Whitehouse, 283 U. S. 148, decided in 1931, the commissioner of internal revenue had demanded of Mrs. Whitehouse income tax for the year 1921 on annuity payments to her. It was there held that the bequest to her was not one to be paid from income, but was a sum certain, payable at all events during each year so long as she should live, and that the payment was exempt from taxation. See also Everett E. Kent, 26 B. T. A. 482. At all events, the apparent contention of the commissioner, that an annuity was taxable to the beneficiary if it was to be paid in any event, and not solely from income, was finally overruled, and it was held that the trustees should not deduct such annuity payments in their returns as income distributed currently.
The petitioner’s claim is for restitution of the taxes that should have been paid by the trustees, and she proceeds upon the ground of “mutual mistake on the part of persons who were in confidential relations with each other.” She relies upon the cases of Reggio v. Warren, 207 Mass. 525, and De Bearn v. Winans, 111 Md. 434. During the years that the petitioner paid the taxes, for which she now claims restitution, the situation was somewhat unusual. The Federal government, through its regularly constituted representative, in cases where the facts were, in effect, the same as in the case at bar, was demanding payment of taxes, not from the trustees, but from the beneficiary who received an annuity from them. It would seem that the com mis
We are of opinion that the petitioner’s contention cannot be sustained. It seems apparent that the real mistake in the case was made by the commissioner of internal revenue in his construction of the pertinent sections of the revenue act as set forth in his regulation. It is true that the trustees passed on to the petitioner the substance of this regulation which was, so long as it stood, as binding upon them as it was upon her. It is true that pursuant to this statement the petitioner included in her Federal income tax returns the payments that she had received from the trustees, and, as a consequence, paid taxes that ought not to have been required of her. The question of what taxes the petitioner should pay was her personal concern. She was told in the statement of the trustees that the regulations, in effect, required her to include in her individual
In relying upon the case of Reggio v. Warren, 207 Mass. 525, the petitioner makes the point that the trust fund has been unjustly enriched by her payment of the taxes which the trustees should have paid. It is difficult to see how the trust has been unjustly enriched. It seems apparent that the Federal government under no circumstances would have attempted to collect any taxes from the trustees on account of the annuity paid to the petitioner during the years in question. In other words, the trust has no more money in hand today because the petitioner paid the taxes than it would have had if she had not. It is a general rule that an intermeddler, by gratuitously paying the debt of another, does not create a legal obligation between himself and that other, Newell v. Hadley, 206 Mass. 335, 342-343, and cases cited, and the plaintiff in such a case, as a rule, stands no better in equity than at law. Bartholomew v. Stobbs, 280 Mass. 559, 562. In this last case it was said, at page 562: “This court, without excluding the possibility of other grounds for relief (see Newell v. Hadley, 206 Mass. 335, 342), has ordinarily based equitable relief where the plaintiff’s money was paid by him or used for the benefit of a third person on the principle of subrogation of the plaintiff to the rights of the third person against the defendant. This principle, however, is inapplicable where the plaintiff, as here, is merely a volunteer.” One of the “other grounds for relief” is where the “true owner of the money is allowed to trace his property into the benefit enuring to the defendant, on the principle on which an owner can in equity trace his property into any form into which it has been wrongfully converted.” See Newell v. Hadley, supra, at page 342; Taylor v. Jones, 242 Mass. 210; Downey Co. v. 282 Beacon Street Trust, 292 Mass. 175, 180; Hill v. Wiley, 295 Mass. 396, 400, and cases cited. But, as was pointed out in the Bartholomew case, at page 563, equitable
If it be assumed that the petitioner did pay a debt of the trustees when she paid the taxes in question, there was no request on their part that she pay them, and, in fact, under the then state of the law, as interpreted by the commissioner, the trustees were under no obligation to pay any tax, so that it can hardly be said that there was any debt. The petitioner, at the time she paid the taxes, apparently had no idea that she was paying any debt of the trustees or that they should repay her. In the state of the law as then interpreted by the commissioner, placing the tax upon the petitioner, it cannot be said that the parties could even contemplate that the petitioner was paying the debt of the trustees. Accordingly, there could be no express request that she pay, and there are no circumstances upon which an implied request can be based, nor can it be said that the payments were subsequently ratified by the trustees. See Holbrook v. Clapp, 165 Mass. 563, 564; Foote v. Cotting, 195 Mass. 55, 60, 61; Bartholomew v. Stobbs, 280 Mass. 559, at page 561.
We are of opinion that the case at bar does not come within the principle stated in Reggio v. Warren, 207 Mass. 525. In addition to what has already been said, there was no such transaction here between the trustees and the cestui as in that case. Here, even if the petitioner had not paid the taxes, it seems clear that the commissioner would not have proceeded against the trustees. So far as they were concerned, it was immaterial whether she paid the taxes. It turns out that when it was finally decided that the trustees should have paid the taxes, it was then too late to require them to do so, so that even if it could be assumed that the petitioner was not a volunteer and would be subrogated to the rights of the Federal government, she would be without any effective remedy. It is unnecessary to consider other possible grounds upon which the two cases are distinguishable. We are also of the opinion that the case at bar is distinguishable from De Bearn v. Winans, 111 Md. 434. See 2 Scott on Trusts, § 226, Note 2.
Ordered accordingly.