2 N.W.2d 256 | Wis. | 1942
Petition by the public administrator of Dane county for determination of inheritance tax alleged to be due from Caroline K. Miller who succeeded to the interest of Margaret W. Miller, deceased, in certain intangible property.
Margaret W. Miller, a citizen of the United States living in Italy, dying there on February 20, 1940, and her sister Caroline were the owners of equal undivided interests in some Wisconsin real estate. They sold this real estate taking in payment a note secured by a trust mortgage. The note reads:
"Within sixty (60) days after due notice and proof of the death of the survivor of Caroline K. Miller and Margaret W. Miller, for value received, I hereby promise to pay to the personal representatives or assigns of said survivor, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the sum of one hundred four thousand one hundred eighty-two and 54/100 dollars ($104,182.54) and to pay to said Caroline K. Miller and Margaret W. Miller and the personal representatives or assigns of the survivor, *553 interest hereon quarterly at the rate of five per cent (5%) per annum from the date hereof until the date of payment of the principal. During the lifetime of said Caroline K. Miller and Margaret W. Miller, the interest payable hereunder shall be payable in equal portions to each of them, and after the death of one of them, it shall be payable to the survivor and her personal representatives and assigns. This note is one of a number of notes secured by and subject to the provisions of a certain first mortgage by me executed and delivered to First Wisconsin Trust Company as of the date hereof.
"Any payment of interest or principal under this note may be made, at my option, when or before due, to the trustee under said mortgage, to be disposed of under the terms of said mortgage, by said trustee, as agent or trustee, as the case may be, for any person or persons entitled to such payment.
"Upon payment of the principal of this note to the trustee under said mortgage, said payment shall be held in trust for the person or persons entitled thereto under the terms hereof, and such payment shall discharge me of all liability hereon."
The county court denied the petition, holding that no inheritance tax is due the state of Wisconsin on the transfer of the property referred to in the petition.
The law affecting taxation of intangibles involved in transfers intended to become effective as to "possession or enjoyment" at or after the death of the donor must be considered settled as giving power to the state to impose such tax where the legal interests created are within the control of the state. In Curry v. McCanless (1939),
It is likewise settled in Wisconsin that a transfer by means of a voluntary irrevocable trust whereby the donor retains the income for life and provides for the completion of a transfer of the corpus after death is taxable under sec.
The record discloses that each sister, under a valid contract, united her interest with that of the other and so arranged matters that neither could use any part of the whole so created other than the income from what represented her share before the creation of the trust. Though the total property was bound by the agreement to the survivor, the transfer was so conditioned as to keep in each sister the enjoyment of her share until her death. Each owner gave up the management of her property to the trustee, but not for the sole benefit of the other contributor. There was no immediate transfer of complete economic enjoyment of either share. The present transfer was to the trustee who was to withhold a further transfer until one donor or settlor was a survivor of the other. The transfer of Margaret W. Miller's interest in the trust property to her sister became effective as to "possession or enjoyment at or after such death."
There is a contention on respondent's part that the transfer was based "upon a valuable and adequate consideration" and therefore does not come within the intendment and purpose of *555 the statute. But the character of the transaction excludes the possibility of the existence of a commercial dealing or of an exchange in which a valuable and adequate consideration, as that term is used in testing a transaction of this nature, has passed so as to bar the levying of this tax.
The transaction was essentially an arrangement whereby the two sisters combined their capital in order to facilitate investment and management. The fact that the method involved a transfer in trust has no effect upon the issue of taxability because the statute expressly includes such form of transfer as well as one that is direct. Each retained for her own benefit her proportionate share of the income. The pooling of the separate interests during both lives cannot change the very apparent nature of the transfer of decedent's share to her survivor. The result is the depletion after death of the estate of Margaret W. Miller and for this depletion she did not in her lifetime receive the adequate consideration necessary for an exemption from the succession tax; nor was her estate increased thereby.
The opinion of this court in the case of Will of Koeffler
(1935),
Sec.
If we assume that the Italian law allows a "like exemption," there is still the question as to whether this section with its phraseology limiting the provision to "state, territory or district" extends to tax laws of a foreign country. The reciprocal exemption statute is a means provided for solving the vexing problem of multiple taxation. Farmers Loan Co.v. Minnesota (1930), 280. U.S. 204,
The purpose of the statute and its expressed scope appear in the words of the statute, and as it is drawn it does not include residents of foreign countries. This interpretation is sustained by a comparison of our statute with the terms of statutes in other states. Although the movement toward reciprocity has not been confined alone to the states of the Union, and has been the subject of discussion in international *557
conventions, Burnet v. Brooks (1933),
The argument sought to be advanced by respondent is that: "In imposing this tax on Caroline K. Miller, the state, under the Fourteenth amendment, and its legislature, under the Wisconsin bill of rights, are bound to accord to her the equal protection of the law. Having in mind the dominant purpose of subsection (9) of section
A legislative policy of avoiding double taxation is valid and a classification may be adopted to attain that end.Lawrence v. State Tax Comm. (1932)
"The equal-protection clause does not require the state to maintain a rigid rule of equal taxation, to resort to close distinctions, or to maintain a precise scientific uniformity; and possible differences in tax burdens not shown to be substantial or which are based on discriminations not shown to be arbitrary or capricious do not fall within constitutional prohibitions. [Citations.]"
In Income Tax Cases (1912),
The argument of improper classification rests mainly upon the proposition that the tax is one "upon the right of succession," and that the exemption provision must accordingly be approached from the standpoint of the recipient. The validity a reciprocity provision as applied to a transfer of a trust estate located in Missouri from a resident of Massachusetts was sustained by the supreme court of Missouri in the case ofSt. Louis Union Trust Co. v. State (Mo. 1941),
In the last analysis the tax in question is, in the language the statute, a tax levied upon the transfer, the distinction between a tax levied upon the right to transmit and one upon the right to receive being primarily of importance in measuring the value of the right transferred for the purposes of tax computation. Pinkerton and Millsaps, Inheritance and Estate Taxes (1926), pp. 21, 25, §§ 24, 28; Estate ofBenjamin (1940),
The transfer is subject to the tax and the order of the county court must be reversed.
By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded with direction to enter an order in accordance with this opinion and to determine the amount of the tax.