94 N.J.L. 438 | N.J. | 1920
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question in this case is somewhat-narrower than those dealt with by the learned Vice-Ordinary and ably discussed by counsel. No question arises as to priority of the lien for taxes between the federal inheritance tax and the state transfer tax. The question is'simply the proper construction of the New Jersey statute as amended in 1914. Pamiph. L., p. 267. The state contends that the clear market value on which the rate is to be calculated is the clear market value of ■ the whole estate; the executors that it is the clear market value of what passes to the beneficiaries, subject to the statutory exemptions. It must be conceded that if the contention of the state is correct, the beneficiaries are compelled to pay as tax the statutory percentage on the value, of assets that are subject to the lien of the federal government which is paramount to any claim of the beneficiaries. In other words, as argued by counsel, the state tax to that extent is a tax upon a
In this, as in all other cases of statutory construction, we start with the fundamental assumption that the legislature means to be just. It needs no argument to prove the injustice of double taxation. The legislature certainly had no such result in mind when the act of 1909, or the amendment of 1914, was passed. At those times there was no federal inheritance tax. It is true, therefore, that the injustice, if there he injustice, is due lo the subsequent enactment of the act of congress and equally true that the act of congress is the act of a distinct sovereignty. As to the national government, the state tax is no tax at all; as, to the state government, the federal tax is no tax at all. Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U. S. 189. The injustice of the double taxation would result from the double allegiance due from citizens to the two different governments under which we live. This double allegiance was as well known to the members of the legislature as it was to other citizens, and the possibility of a federal inheritance tax must have been within their contemplation. Such taxes had only ten years prior to the present act been imposed by congress to meet tlié expenses of the Spanish war. TYe must assume that the legislature not only desired to enact a just statute, which should he just for the time being, but also a statute which could not be made an aid to injustice to citizens of Mew Jersey at the will of another sovereign, though that sovereign were the Ended States. Examining the act with these considerations in mind, we have no difficulty in holding that the legislature used language to secure a just result. If we stopped with the first paragraph of section 1, we should,
This view makes the act of 1909 operate the same in all cases. We are not met by the difficulty put by counsel; that to deduct tlie federal tax is to put the taxing power of the sovereign state at the mercy of the federal government, which can decrease the state’s revenues by increasing its own tax. The decrease in the state’s revenue comes from the desire of its legislature to be just and not tax transfers, above the value. That value is, of course, at the mercy of the federal government, as the value of all property is, but. we must assume that the latter is as anxious as the state government, to be just. It will be time enough to deal with the limitations on the taxing power when the federal government attempts to use that power to cripple or destroy the state governments. That-time is not yet.
Our view'is supported also by the method of ascertaining the amount of the tax. That amount, and in the present case even the percentage at which, it- shall be calculated, depends on the amount received by each beneficiary and the nearness of his relation to the deceased. By the terms of the amendment of 1914 the percentage is calculated in some cases on the property “passing” and in other cases on the property “trans
It is of little value to cite authorities dealing with different statutes. It is enough to. refer to some of the cases for the light they throw on the general attitude of the courts. The weight of authority is in favor of our view. Hooper et al. v. Shaw, Treasurer,0 176 Mass. 190; 57 N. E. Rep. 361; In re Knights Estate, 104 Atl. Rep. 765; Corbin v. Townsend, 103 Id. 647; Kingsbury v. Bazeley, 75 N. H. 13; 70 Atl. Rep. 916; People v. Pasfield, 284 Ill. 450; 120 N. E. Rep. 286; Smith v. Probate Court, 166 N. W. Rep. 125; In re Week’s Estate (Wis.), 172 Id. 732; In re Sherman’s Estate, 166 N. Y. Supp. 19; 222 N. Y. 540; Matter of Penfold, 216 N. Y. 171; 110 N. E. Rep. 499; People v. Palmer’s Estate, 25 Col. App. 450; 139 Pac. Rep. 554.
The Wisconsin case can hardly be regarded as authoritative, since the court took pains to- question its own logic.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). To the reasons stated in the principal opinion in favor of affirmance, I desire to add another which appears to -me to be controlling. In making the appraisement of the clear market value of the Roebling estate the comptroller allowed no deduction for federal taxes levied against the net estate. The precise question to be decided is, Should the amount of the tax imposed by federal authority be
Such tax would, apparently, under the federal statute, and the Leéerer case, supra, be deducted in fixing the net estate made subject to federal taxation, if the New Jersey statute made its transfer tax a charge against the estate payable out of the. residue of the estate, but that is not the present situation.
The judgment should be affirmed.
For affirmance on, opinion of Mr. Justice Swayze—The Chief ■ Justice, Swayze, Parker, Kaliscii, Heppeni-ieimer, Williams, JJ. 6.. .
For affirmance on opinion of Mr. Justice Bergen alone— Black, J. 1.
For affirmance on both opinions — Bergen, Minturn, White,. Taylor, Ackerson, JJ. 5.
For reversal—None.