Blake v. McCartney

3 F. Cas. 595 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1869

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Succession is defined in general terms by section 126 of the act of June 30, 1S64 [13 Staff 287], to “denote the devolution of title to any real estate,” but section 127 of the same act provides that every part-disposition of real estate, by will, deed, or laws of descent, by reason whereof any person shall become beneficially entitled, in possession or expectancy, to any real estate, or the income thereof, upon the death of any person dying after the passage of that *597act, shall be deemed to confer on the person entitled by reason of any such disposition, a succession, and the term successor shall denote the person so entitled; and the term predecessor shall denote the grantor, testator, ancestor, or other person, from whom the interest of the successor has been or shall be derived. 13 Stat. 277, 278 [287, 288]. Real estate was owned by Sarah Blake, and the agreed statement shows that she devised certain portions of the same to tbe plaintiff, in trust, among other things, to pay all the residue of the rents and profits to her son James Henry, during his natural life, to and for his sole use and benefit; but if he deceased leaving a wife, then in trust in like manner, after his decease, to his wife, during her natural life, to and for her sole use and benefit. Sarah Blake died April 10, 1847, and her son James Henry, having previously married, died August 10, 1807, leaving a widow, Marianne Blake, the cestui que trust of the plaintiff. Formal demand of the plaintiff was made by the assistant assessor on March 25, 1868, for a return of the said life estate of his cestui que trust for the purpose of assessing the income; and on that day the plaintiff appealed to the commissioner from the decision of the assistant assessor, upon the ' ground that the income of the life estate was i not taxable; but the commissioner sustained the views of the assistant assessor. Return was accordingly made by the plaintiff under protest, and the taxes having been duly assessed, he paid the same, and brought an action of assumpsit in the state court to recover back the amount, as having been illegally assessed and exacted.

Federal questions being involved.in the nature oi the claim, the cause was removed into this court, and at the regular session of the present term was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts. Discussion as to the technical meaning of the term succession, as used at'common- law, is unnecessary, as the question before the court depends entirely upon the conditions specified in section 127 of the act under which the taxes were levied. Congress has power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, and having exercised that power in .passing the law under which the taxes in question were assessed, the question of liability depends upon the construction of that law.

The views of the plaintiff are, that a tax can never be regarded as a succession tax, unless it is imposed on the direct transfer of property from the dead to the living, and that it consists, in all cases, in the division of a succession between the state and the heirs or devisees of the property; but the decisive answer to that abstract proposition is, that the question of liability in this case depends upon the construction of an act of congress. Secondly, the plaintiff contends that a tax under that section can never be justified except when it appears:—

1.That the party taxed became beneficially entitled to the real estate by devolution of title.

2. That he became so entitled by means of the death of another.

3. That he became so entitled by means of the death of another, happening after the passage of the tax act.

Based on these postulates, his argument is, that the present tax is not justified by the tax act, because the trust settlement was made long before that act was passed, which shows to a demonstration that he employs the phrase “devolution of title” in the strict common-law sense, and not in the sense in which it is used in the act of congress. If read carefully it will be seen that the act of congress negatives the deduction made by the plaintiff from his second proposition; and when carefully analyzed, it will appear that the tax is justified by the section under consideration, because it is within every one of the conditions therein specified.

Those conditions are as follows, as applied to this case. That there was a part-disposition of real estate by will, deed, or the laws of descent That by reason of such part-disposition of real estate, the person taxed became beneficially entitled, in possession or in expectancy, to the real estate, or the income thereof. That the person taxed became so entitled to such real estate upon the death of the person making such part-disposition of the same. That the person making such part-disposition of such real estate died after the passage of the act under which the tax was imposed, and the provision in the same section is, that where all those described conditions concur, the part-disposition of real estate shall be deemed to confer on the person entitled by reason of any such part-disposition of real estate, a succession within the meaning of that act [June 30,1864], 13 Stat. 288.

Such part-disposition of the real estate must, by the express words of the section, be either in possession, or in expectancy; but the beneficiary is not subject to the payment of any income tax until the expectancy terminates, and he or she comes into the possession and enjoyment of the use of the real estate.

In this case, the cestui que trust of the plaintiff became beneficially entitled to the real estate in expectancy, and not in possession, and in such cases it is immaterial whether the part-disposition of the real estate was made before or after the passage of the tax act, provided it appears that the beneficiary became so entitled upon the death of the predecessor, and that the predecessor who made such part-disposition of the real estate died after the passage of the tax act.

The argument for the plaintiff is. that the tax can only be imposed by virtue of the section in question, where the death of the predecessor is the cause, of the successor’s being entitled to possession of the real estate, and not where it is merely the occasion, as *598in this case; but the proposition finds no support in the language of the provision, and the rule in the exchequer court of England is well settled the other way. Attorney General v. Gell, 3 Hurl. & C. 628; Attorney General v. Middleton, 3 Hurl. & N. 134; Attorney General v. Fitzjohn, 2 Hurl. & N. 465; Wilcox v. Smith, 4 Drew. 40.

Suggestion is made that the second section of the act of 16 & 17 Viet. c. 51, differs from the corresponding provision in the act of congress. under which the tax in this case was assessed, but the differences pointed out do not affect the questions before the court. Attorney General v. Gell, 3 Hurl. & O. 621, note b. Strong support to the construction adopted by the court is also derived from two other sections of the same act, but it is not necessary to pursue the subject. [Act June 30, 1864;] 13 Stat. 288, 289, §§ 128, 137. Pursuant to the agreement of the parties there must be judgment for the defendant.