These are petitions brought, under G. L. c. 65, § 30, to determine the validity of succession taxes. The petitioners are trustees under a deed and declaration of trust executed on July 29,1907, by J. Randolph Coolidge and Julia Coolidge and the petitioners. By that deed a large amount of real and personal estate was transferred to the trustees by the settlors voluntarily and not as a bona fide purchase for full consideration in money or in money’s worth. The trustees were given extensive powers of management, investment and reinvestment with the right to determine
When the declaration of trust was executed, no statute was operative under which the trust property could have been subjected to an excise because the succession was to direct descendants of the settlors. Statutes then in force provided for levy of an excise only where the succession was to collateral relatives and to strangers. There had been approved on June 27, St. 1907, c. 563, which took effect on September 1, 1907, about five weeks after the date of the declaration of trust. This is the first relevant statute. Its provisions were: § 1. "All property within the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth . . . which shall pass by . . . deed, grant,
The question for decision is whether the net trust estate passing to the sons on the death of the surviving settlor is subject to excise taxes under these statutes.
The “tax authorized by these statutes is a tax upon 'succession’ which includes the 'privileges enjoyed by the beneficiary of succeeding to the possession and enjoyment of
The settlors by the deed of July, 1907, divested themselves of all power of disposition over the principal of the trust. It then passed irrevocably from their control. After that they possessed only rights to the income. Thus they did not divest themselves of all interest in the property. They stripped themselves of those rights in April, 1917. That is not pertinent to the issues here involved because before that time the statute had been changed as to taxation of successions so as to include the kind of succession established by the deed of July, 1907. Confessedly at the time of the execution of the trust deed there was no statute exacting an excise on the transfer of the property or on succession to it. This, however, in our opinion is not a decisive factor. The present excise under the statute was levied on the succession, not on the transmission, of the trust fund. As already pointed out succession is a quite different thing from transmission. It is manifest from the terms of the declaration of trust that the death of the survivor of the settlors was ex
The assignment of their life interest in the income of the trust by the settlors to their sons in 1917 did not operate to alter the nature of the trust instrument or of the transaction out of which spring the rights of the final beneficiaries. It is obvious that this assignment did not, even in combination with the trust instrument of July, 1907, vest the entire interest in the trust in the five sons. That was recognized by the position of the trustees, settlors and sons in Coolidge v. Coring,
It is not necessary to the validity of the excise on succession that an interest in the property pass directly from the grantor or settlor at the time of his death. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation,
Plainly under the deed of July, 1907, the ultimate beneficiaries could not be determined with certainty until the death of both settlors. However unlikely, it nevertheless was possible that all or any number less than all of the five sons might predecease the survivor of the settlors. Which ones, if any of them, might so predecease could not be known until both settlors had died. No possession, enjoyment or title to the trust would ultimately vest in any son so predeceased or in his estate. The interest of the sons surviving the settlors in the trust fund did not pass to them finally and irrevocably until and because of the death of both settlors. The property conveyed to the trustees by the deed of trust was so limited that it vested in the sons who should survive both settlors in interest, possession and enjoyment only by reason of and upon the death of the survivor of the settlors. This succession falls within the descriptive words of the statute. The five sons of the settlors, who have become the ultimate beneficiaries of the trust, had no power of control individually or collectively over the trust fund while either of the settlors continued to five. They had no possession of it. That was vested exclusively in the trustees. They had no enjoyment of the trust fund, except as a vision of the future. They had no power of disposal of the whole or any part of the corpus of the trust estate. That power was enjoyed by the trustees alone. The extent of their interest
This is the inevitable result of our own decisions. Numerous excerpts from opinions written by judges eminent for learning and wisdom leading to that conclusion are collected in Magee v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 256
The principle that no law is to be construed as operating retroactively unless imperatively required by the words of the statute is recognized. Hanscom y. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co.
The succession, as here defined and made subject to the excise, has been recognized for many years as a commodity which rightly may be made subject to an excise. Minot v. Winthrop,
The validity of the present statute under the Constitution of the United States and of this Commonwealth appears to us to be established by these and the other authorities already cited.
The case at bar is distinguishable from Shwab v. Doyle,
The case at bar is distinguishable from Dexter v. Treasurer & Receiver General,
It follows that each petition for abatement must be denied and decrees are to be entered to that effect.
Ordered accordingly.
