190 Iowa 1376 | Iowa | 1920
We have gone through this record with much care, and are constrained to a different conclusion from that reached by the trial court. The burden of showing an oral modification of the written contract was upon the plaintiff. In view of the direct conflict between the two principal witnesses, the circumstances surrounding the parties become of great importance in their corroboration of one or the other. Hendrick testified that he called upon Mrs. Short and advised her that he could not get more than $1,200; also, that he told her that his son would give $1,200, and that that was the best he could get; also, that “she authorized the sale for $1,200, if I could not get any more. ’ ’ The son, the grantee of the deed, corroborated this evidence, to the effect that he himself had had a conversation with Mrs. Short, wherein she agreed to the sale. The denial by Mrs. Short was unequivocal, and has the support of much corroboration in the circumstances. She denied that she had any acquaintance with the son or that she had ever talked with him or had ever known him by sight. The evidence is undisputed that the property was worth more than $2,000. Hendrick never made any effort to sell the property to any person except his son. His own testimony describes the consent of Mrs. Short as qualified: “If I couldn’t get any more.” Admittedly, he did not try to get any
The note in suit being a part of the property which had a situs here, and the same having passed to the plaintiff under the will of the testatrix, -she was chargeable with the succession tax thereon, and the note itself was charged with a lien therefor. The note was also chargeable with a lien for any other succession tax due from the plaintiff as a beneficiary of the same will. This much the plaintiff conceded. She therefore paid the full amount of tax due from her on the property received by her from the Hannah Adams estate. Her legacy was charged with certain life uses in favor of her father and mother, who were likewise chargeable for some amount of succession tax. The plaintiff conceded this also, and paid the full amount of tax due from her father and mother as beneficiaries of such estate. The state treasurer, however, insists upon a lien for the full amount of the collateral inheritance tax upon the total sum of $45,000, regardless of the severalty of the beneficiaries who received the respective successions. The theory thus presented is that the state has an indivisible lien upon the entire estate for the sum total of the inheritance taxes chargeable against the respective beneficiaries, and that it may, if it must, appropriate a single legacy to the payment of the respective succession taxes against all. This contention is resisted by the plaintiff. Her position is that she is chargeable with her own tax, and with nothing more. The trial court sustained this position. We sustain it.
The basic error in the contention of the state is that it assumes the collateral inheritance tax to be a tax upon the estate of the decedent, and upon the property thereof. It is not. This has been held repeatedly and with emphasis in our previous decisions. Though the language of the statute might be thus construed if there were not a constitutional impediment, we have construed it otherwise to save its constitutionality. We have held expressly that it is not a tax upon the property, but a tax only upon each right of succession. The tax against each beneficiary
“A different tax may not be exacted from one person than from another, unless differently situated; nor from a designated group .of persons than from another, unless difference in condition or relation or situation suggest and justify such difference. Nor may different burdens be imposed on property of the same kind in like situation. Otherwise, the rule of uniformity exacted by the Constitution would be destroyed. ‘The rule means that all individuals and all classes must contribute uniformly with like individuals and like classes to the burden of taxation.’ Warren v. Henly, 31 Iowa 31. To levy a tax on property, not the succession thereto, because acquired by collateral inheritance not imposed on other property, would be a clear violation of this section of the Constitution; for the mere manner of obtaining property would not seem to afford a reasonable basis for a classification resulting in discrimination in its taxation.”
In the Stone case, 132 Iowa 136, 140, we said:
‘ ‘ The collateral inheritance tax is on the right to succession to property, and not on the property itself, and it is collectible out of each specific share or interest, not out of the general property of the estate.”
In Morrow v. Durant, 140 Iowa 437, we said:
“It must be conceded that the language of this section will bear such construction; but, if we were to place such construction upon it, it would destroy Section 1467 and render it unconstitutional. It has heretofore been held by this court that the constitutionality of our collateral inheritance tax law can be sustained only on the ground that it is not a tax on the property itself, but upon the right to succession to property, and that a
In Wietung v. Morrow, 151 Iowa 590, we said:
‘ ‘ In its final analysis, the argument of appellant is that, as to foreign estates, the collateral inheritance tax due the state of Iowa should be construed as a tax upon the property located in Iowa, and not a tax upon the succession to property to be collected from the beneficiaries. "We have held heretofore that the constitutionality of our collateral inheritance tax statute can be sustained only on the ground that it is not a tax on the property itself, but upon the right to succession to property.”
It will be seen from the foregoing that the question of the nature of the tax under consideration is not an open one.
Some claim is made in argument that the later amendments of the statute make the tax a lien upon the' entire estate. Granting that such amendments may be thus construed (which we doubt), it does not remove the constitutional limitations of legislation on the subject. To charge the property of the estate for the tax due from one or several beneficiaries is to tax the property. It would also render the statute inconsistent, in that it would charge the property of a beneficiary exempt from a tax, with a tax, nevertheless, of another nonexempt beneficiary. It is strenuously argued that this construction of the statute is necessary, to render it effective and to enable the interveners to collect at all the tax due to the state of Iowa from the several successions appearing in the Adams 'estate. It is said that the executors and beneficiaries of the estate fraudulently colluded to avoid administration in Iowa and to intermingle the Iowa property with the body of the estate, and thereby to prevent the collection of any collateral inheritance by this state. If any of the beneficiaries or of the executors violated our statute in removing the property, the state has a sufficiently drastic remedy. If they did not violate the statute, we see no basis in the facts alleged for the charge of fraud. The place of domicile was the proper place for administering the entire personal estate. Caruth v. Caruth, 128 Iowa 121; In re Estate of Titterington, 130 Iowa 356. Such fact did not defeat the right of the state of Iowa to a collateral inheritance tax upon the succession to property hav
“It is the transfer of the property that is taxed. The lien of the tax attaches to the property so transferred immediately upon the death of the decedent. In ascertaining the amount of the tax, the aggregate of the value of all the items transferred is the basis for computation, and the tax is not segregated and an aliquot part thereof collectible out of each item, but it becomes payable and is a lien upon all of the property transferred to the particular individual.”
It will be readily seen that this is not a holding that a lien attaches for one tax upon all the property of the estate. It is a holding that the lien is indivisible as to the particular beneficiary who may receive several items of property. The sum total of tax due from him for each item received by him is chargeable against each and all. This is in accord with previous decisions of the same court. We borrowed our statute from hbe New York statute, and the construction put upon such statute by the New York court properly commands consideration. In re Estate of Adams, 167 Iowa 382.
“It has been steadily maintained that the tax, while in a general sense a tax on property of a decedent, is, in its essential nature, under the legislation on the subject, a tax on the right to succession to the property, imposed upon and collectible out of each specific share or interest given by will or derived, under the statutes of descent or distribution, and limited as to each share or interest to its value, with a superadded personal liability for the payment of the tax by the person taking the interest. The tax is computed, not on the aggregate valuation of the whole estate of the decedent, considered as the unit for taxation, but on the value of the separate interests into which it is divided by the will or by the statute laws of the state, and is a charge against each share or interest according to its value, and against the person entitled thereto.”
This conclusion logically and necessarily results from the original holding that the tax in question is a tax upon succession only, and not a tax upon property.
It appears in this record that the plaintiff herein received other property than this note. It was not open to her to say that she would pay the tax chargeable for her succession to this note. The state was entitled, as against her, to collect all the tax due from her from any part of the property to which she succeeded. That, and nothing more, is what is meant by the indivisible lien.
The plaintiff herein having paid in full the tax chargeable to her, and having removed all complication or question as to the liability of the note for the tax due from her father and 'mother by paying such tax in full, she has met her full obligation. Neither she nor her legacy is chargeable for the succession tax upon other legacies to other beneficiaries. The order of the trial court to such effect must, therefore, be affirmed.
The judgment in the main ease on defendant’s appeal will be reversed. The judgment in the case made on intervention on the appeal of Colons and the state treasurer will be affirmed.— Reversed in part; affirmed in pa/rt.