153 Iowa 461 | Iowa | 1911
In December of the year 1907, Melissa Gould was appointed administratrix with will annexed of the estate of Almiron Culver, deceased. The will was probated as a foreign will, and administration here was ancillary. Among other things, the administratrix inventoried “cash on deposit in the State Savings Bank of Council Bluffs, $10,640.48.” Shortly after the probate of the will, the state treasurer filed a claim for an inheritance tax, due the state of Iowa upon the estate, which he valued at the sum of $15,640.48, making the total tax due $780.02. The administratrix filed answer to the claim, denying that the claimant was entitled to any tax, and especially asserting that no tax should be assessed upon twenty-five shares of stock in the State Savings Bank of Council Bluffs, valued at $150 per share. She averred that testator, at the time of his death, was a citizen and resident of Kansas; that principal administration was being had in that state; that the shares of stock referred to were in his possession in the state of Kansas at the time of his death and have since been in the possession of his administratrix in that state; and that the said shares of stock have .never been in this state, and are not a part of the estate in this state.
Upon these issues the case was tried to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, from which we extract the following:
Almiron Culver departed this life at Wichita, in the county of Sedgwick, state of Kansas, August 23, 1908, leaving a will disposing of all his property; that at the time of his death Almiron Culver was a resident of Wichita, Kansas, and had been such resident for many years prior thereto; that his will was probated in the county of Sedgwick, Kansas, and Melissa Gould duly appointed administratrix therein, and is now acting as such; that’ later, said will was duly probated in the district court of Pottawattamie county, Iowa, and Melissa Gould appointed as administratrix, and is now acting as such; that among other property left by the said Almiron Culver at the time of
Upon this record, the trial court found that the $10,000 on deposit in the State Savings Bank was subject to the collateral inheritance tax, but that the bank stock was not subject to said tax. Accordingly, judgment was rendered for the amount of the tax on the deposit in the bank, to wit, $532.02. Both parties excepted. This ruling was had on August 26, 1908. The state treasurer alone appealed to this court, and upon the appeal here it was found that the bank stock was subject to the inheritance tax. The administratrix did not appeal, and the time for her appeal expired on February 26, 1909. The case was heard in this court on the state treasurer’s appeal, and an opinion filed on December 15, 1909, reported in 145 Iowa, 1.
On August 11, 1909, and after the time for appeal had passed, the parties filed a stipulation in the district court, from which we extract the following:
Comes now W. W. Morrow, state treasurer, by II. W. Byers, attorney-general of the state of Iowa, and Melissa Gould, administratrix of the estate of Almiron Culver, de
Pursuant to said stipulation, an order was entered in the trial court, reading in this wise:
The court does order that that part of the judgment rendered on August 26, 1908, by this court, allowing an inheritance tax upon the money on deposit in the Council Bluffs Bank in the sum of $532.02, be and the same is hereby vacated and set aside, and that the matter of such tax and the amount thereof shall remain in abeyance, to be determined by the court when and after the Supreme Court of the state of Iowa shall have passed upon the question involved in the appeal by W. W. Morrow, state treasurer, from that part of the judgment disallowing an inheritance tax upon certain bank stock; this order to be without prejudice in all respects to the rights of the parties hereto in and on account of such appeal now pending in the Supreme Court of the state of Iowa by the court.
After the reversal here, and on the 8th day of May, 1910, the state treasurer, through his dttorney, made a motion for judgment in the 'district court in conformity with the opinion here, and the record shows the following proceedings with reference thereto:
Mr. Hess for the plaintiff, W. W. Morrow, state treas- ■ urer, offered and read in evidence all the files in the matter
Thereafter the court below entered an order, reciting the facts hitherto set forth with reference to the previous order, the results of the appeal to this court, and further made these findings:
That thereafter the said administratrix filed an application to modify the judgment of the court, of the date of August 26, 1908, on the ground that the same was excessive in the sum of one hundred and fourteen ($114) dollars, for the reason that Nettie J. Dickinson, Frank L. Jones, and Earl Jones, children of Fayette Jones, a stepchild of the decedent, were legatees under the will, and that the portion coming to said named children wTas not subject to the collateral inheritance tax'under the laws of the state of
The order of the trial court then proceeds:
That this court finds that it was the intention of the. judge, in the order 'just set out, to set aside and annul only such portion of the judgment of August 26, 1908, as was claimed to be excessive, and that it was the intention in said order to vacate the same only to such extent as the judgment of August 26, 1908, was excessive, by reason of a portion of the property upon which the tax was claimed descending to heirs who were not collateral under the laws of the state of Iowa, and therefore exempt from the collateral inheritance tax. And the court now finds that there should be paid by said administratrix to the said W. W. Morrow, state treasurer, the sum of four hundred eighteen and 2-100 dollars as tax upon moneys, together with interest thereon as provided by law, and the further sum of one hundred ninety-six and 45-100 dollars, together with interest thereon as provided by law, as collateral inheritance tax upon said bank stock. Be it. therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the motion of W. W. Morrow, state treasurer*, herein be granted, and that Melissa Gould, administratrix of the estate of Almiron Culver, deceased, be and she is hereby ordered and directed to pay from the moneys now in her hands as such administratrix the sum of six hundred fourteen and 41-100 dollars, together with interest as by law provided as a collateral inheritance tax upon the estate of the said decedent.
It should be stated that Judge Wheeler made all of the orders above referred to, and was fully cognizant of all the proceedings. No exception was taken to any of the orders so made, or to the final order, but on the 12th day of December the administratrix appealed from the final order.
The rule does not apply to final decrees in equity eases, or perhaps to any case which is triable de novo in this court. But even here, if anything more is involved than the question of which party is entitled to recover upon the facts and issues joined, exceptions must be taken. Code, sections 3749-3751; Dicken v. Morgan, 59 Iowa, 157; Gately v. Kniss, 64 Iowa, 537; Powers v. O’Brien Co., 54 Iowa, 501; Hodgin v. Toler, 70 Iowa, 21; Fink v. Mohn,
Going to the record, it will be observed that the trial court refused to consider the question as to whether or not the money on deposit in the bank was subject to the collateral inheritance tax, but did take into account the claim, made by the administratrix, that the tax was excessive to the extent of $114, and upheld this claim, thus reducing the amount of the, tax previously assessed from $532.02 to $418.02. It was held that this was the only question intended to be reserved by the stipulation for the vacation order and the order entered pursuant to said stipulation. The question as to whether or not the money was taxable in this state was not decided by the trial court, because of the fact that the administratrix did not appeal from the original judgment. The , vacation order was held not to apply to anything, save the claim that the tax assessed was excessive; and the court recites that it was entered because of the claim, made by the administratrix after the original judgment was entered, that the tax was excessive. It is apparent that the trial court did not consider the question as to whether or not the money on deposit was, as an original proposition, subject to the collateral inheritance tax. The error, if any, of the trial court, was in its refusing to adjudicate that question, and in refusing to consider the vacation order as conclusive. No testimony was adduced with reference thereto, save as heretofore indicated; and it ' is apparent, we think, that to secure a review of the final order in this case an exception was necessary. There seems to be some foundation for the court’s refusing to consider the vacation order, except in so far as it left the matter open as to the amount of the tax, in the stipulation for the order which we have hitherto set out. It is true that the state treasurer made no motion to rescind the same, and that the court acted upon its own knowledge of the matter, the judge being the same one who granted the vacation
However, counsel for appellant does not seem to have entertained that opinion when the original order and judgment was entered, for he did not appeal therefrom; nor did he rely on the stipulation filed for vacation, for when that
For the reasons pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, affirmed.