63 Md. 465 | Md. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two appeals, embraced in one record and tried together, were taken by the appellant as executor of the will of Mrs. Elizabeth Patterson, late of Baltimore City, deceased, from judgments recovered against him in suits respectively by the State of Maryland and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, for taxes on the personal property of said Elizabeth Patterson, consisting of stocks, bonds and other intangible property not permanently located in that city, assessed in her life-time, and for taxes on the same property while in the hands of said executor pending the settlement of the estate.
It appears that letters testamentary were granted to the appellant, by the Orphans' Court of Baltimore City, on the ninth of April, 1819; that on the thirteenth of September following, said Court, in accordance with his petition, in which he states that he had paid all the debts of said testatrix which had come to his knowledge, and was content to assume any others that might be demanded,
Hone of the tax bills were presented to the Orphans’ Court for their approval and passage ; hut were presented to the executor both before and after the settlement of his final account, who denied their correctness; and because of his refusal to pay them these suits were instituted December 31st, 1880, about fifteen months after his said final distribution. The failure to have these claims for taxes passed by the Orphans’ Court, and to bring suit upon them within nine months from" his refusal to pay them, are among the grounds upon which the appellant resists their recovery.
In support of this position, the appellant relies upon the following sections of the Code: section 109, Art. 93, which provides that, “ Where all the assets have been paid away, delivered or distributed, as herein directed, and a claim shall afterwards be exhibited, of which the administrator hath not notice by the exhibition of the claim legally authenticated, as herein required, he shall not be •answerable for the same.” Section 117 of the same Article' which declares: “ Ho administrator shall be bound to take notice of any claim against his decedent, unless the same shall be exhibited to such administrator legally authenticated; or unless such claim shall have been passed by the Orphans’ Court, and entered by the register upon his docket, or unless a suit shall be pending against such administrator for such claim; ” section 98, which provides that “ no administrator shall he allowed in his account, for any claim discharged by him, unless he produce the claim passed by the Orphans’ Court, or proven as herein directed;” and also sec. 83, the first of the series
The question thus arises, whether taxes constitute such claims as are within the contemplation of these sections. If they are of such nature as not to require authentication by the Orphans’ Court, or institution of suit to affect executors and administrators with notice of their existence, and create their liability to discharge them, these sections-cannot avail the appellant in the present suits.
These sections of the Code are under the general caption of “Debts.” Are taxes properly comprehended in the use of that term ? The word “ debts ” in its common signification, which is that in which we think the Code employs it, imports the moneyed obligation of a person incurred in his private capacity, or from his individual acts and not such obligations as are imposed upon him by law in his public relations, or in common with all other citizens. As defined by this Court in the case of Mayor, &c. of Baltimore vs. Greenmount Cemetery, 7 Md., 517, the word “tax” means “a burden, charge or imposition put or set upon a person or property for public uses.” And in Cooley on Taxation, p. 13, the distinction between taxes and debts is thus stated: “Taxes are not debts in the ordinary sense of that term, and their collection will in general depend on the remedies which are given by statute for their enforcement. Where no remedy is specially provided, a remedy by suit may be fairly implied, but where one is given which does not embrace an action at law, a tax cannot in general be recovered in a common law action as a debt. Taxes are not demands against which a set-off is admissible; their assessment does not-
The scrutiny and approval of the Orphans’ Court provided for by the Code as to claims made against estates of deceased persons, are safeguards applicable and appropriate to claims essentially of a private nature, arising from individual transactions, and of which an administrator cannot be presumed to have knowledge. The merits or validity of private demands may well be inquirable into by the Orphans’ Court, and its sanction of their amount be given or withheld as seems proper; but the exercise of such a supervision over claims for taxes, which are established by officers specially authorized to impose and collect them, would constitute the Orphans’ Court á tribunal to review the action of those conducting the Revenue Department of the State. The acts of such officers cannot depend upon the approval of the Orphans’ Court for their validity, but derive their force as proceedings of functionaries clothed with public authority and responsibility for the discharge of their special duties. To devolve on the Orphans’ Court the allowance and rejection of such claims would open for their determination the liability of the property assessed, the correctness of the rate and amount of taxation, and all kindred questions.
The liability for taxes is an incident to property, and essential to the support of the government; every possessor of property therefore is put upon inquiry as to what his liability is; and the tax books being public records, are open and accessible sources of information to all citizens. It may further be remarked, that while various evidences of debts are enumerated in the sections of the Code providing for the mode of authenticating claims
M to the counts in the narr. for the taxes upon the bonds and stocks of the testatrix in the hands of appellant as executor, he takes the further defence, that being a resident of Baltimore County, he was taxable there and no where else, by reason of the legal title to this intangible property being in him. That he held such legal title is true ; but he held it in the special character of an officer of the law for the specific and temporary purpose of the administration of the property under the supervision and direction of the Court from which he received letters testamentary. The domicile of a testator when living determines the situs of his personal property of an intangible nature not permanently located elsewhere, for purposes of taxation, and his place of domicile at the time of his death determines the place of administering his estate. The situs of the personal property, generally speaking, and the residence of the administrator, for the purposes of administration, place them in legal contemplation in the city or county of the Court exercising jurisdiction. The personal property, therefore, of an intangible nature not perma
But while an executor is to be assessed in the city or county where administration is had with the personal property there situate, and that of an intangible nature not located permanently elsewhere; it is provided by sec.
The defendant in his second prayer, which was denied, seeks to release from liability certain stocks of the City of Philadelphia, part of the public debt of that city, which were exempted from taxation of every kind by the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, authorizing said debt to be so contracted by said municipal corporation.
As the laws of Pennsylvania are not of binding force upon the taxing power of other States, the warrant for such exemption, as appellant claims, must be found, if at all, within the terms of the statutes of Maryland defining what property shall be taxable, and what property not. The terms of our statute do not sustain such a claim. By the Act of 1878, chap. 413, sec. 2, “All shares of stock, or shares in any bank other than a national bank, or in any company or corporation, incorporated by or located in, and doing business in any other State, or in any territory or country, owned by residents of this State ; all bonds made by any State, which were not exempted from taxation by the law of said State authorizing the issue of such bonds; all bonds issued by any territory or by any corporation shall be liable to be valued to the respective owners thereof, and to be assessed.”
It is a settled rule, in regard to taxation, that exemptions are strictly construed, and the only exemption clearly provided by the expressed terms of the Act just cited, applies exclusively to the bonds of a State, which, by the law authorizing their issue, are exempted from taxation. The comity and other reasons underlying the policy dictating this exemption,, are not strictly applicable tu
The remaining point to be considered is the motion of the defendant in arrest of judgment, because of an alleged fatal misjoinder of counts in the declarations. The misjoinder is said to consist in uniting a count for taxes due from the testatrix with a count for taxes due from the appellant on the same property while in his hands as executor pending the settlement of the estate. The appellant contends that different judgments are applicable to these counts. The assumpsits declared on, however, are not upon express contracts made respectively by the testatrix, and the executor in his personal capacity; but are in each case assumpsits implied by law from a legal obligation relating directly to the property itself.
In suits against executors or administrators, as such, a count upon an indebtedness or promise arising in their representative capacity, may be joined with one upon the indebtedness or promise of the decedent, provided the consideration of the demand spring from or is connected with the estate itself. Instances of such joinder are supported in Malin, et al., Ex'rs vs. Bull, 13 Serg. & Rawle, 441; Howard’s Adm’rs vs. Powers, 6 Ohio, 92 ; Carter vs. Phelps’ Adm’rs, 8 Johnson, 343; Hapgood vs. Houghton, Ex’r, 10 Pickering, 154, and in many.other cases. The counts against the executor in these suits were not for a devastavit, or an express undertaking in his individual character, but for the discharge of a legal obligation, pertaining to the estate, in his representative capacity. We find no error, therefore, in the judgments entered.
Being clearly of opinion that' the Court of Common Pleas was correct in its various rulings, and in the
Judgments affirmed.