5 Or. Tax 600 | Or. T.C. | 1974
Decision on briefs rendered September 11, 1974, for plaintiff.
Plaintiff appealed from the Department of Revenue's Order No. IH 73-14, assessing additional inheritance taxes. The plaintiff contends that the mere possibility of receipt by the decedent's widow of social security benefits at age 60 should not be included, at its "present" (or any) value, in the net estate of the deceased and, therefore, should not be taxed under ORS
The facts were not in dispute and the matter was tried on briefs. Richard L. Sleeter died near Camp Sherman, Oregon, on August 22, 1972, a domiciliary of this state. The decedent was survived by his wife, Isabelle M. Sleeter, then aged 56, and by two children who had attained majority. At the time of his death, the decedent was fully insured under the Federal Insurance Contributions Act. If Isabelle M. Sleeter meets all conditions precedent (e.g., attains the age of 60, remains unmarried, is not entitled to old-age benefits in her own right, and the provisions of the Federal Insurance Contributions Act remain unchanged until that time), she will be entitled to receive widow's benefits of $220 per month under the federal Social Security *602 Act, based upon the "contributions" of the decedent.See 70 Am Jur2d Social Security and Medicare § 63 (1973). The defendant calculated that, as of August 22, 1972, the present value, at 4 percent interest, of the right of a female, aged 56, to receive $220 per month for life, commencing at age 60, was $20,389.30, and the additional tax was calculated on this amount.
The inheritance tax report filed by the personal representative with the Department of Revenue on May 8, 1973, did not contain, as part of the taxable estate, any amount representing the present value of social security benefits which Mrs. Sleeter might receive. The inheritance tax report did include a death benefit in the amount of $22,759.25 from the Oregon Public Employes Retirement System, against which the $20,000 exemption allowed by ORS
A requisite first step is to review Oregon's inheritance tax statutes' key section, ORS
"(1) All property and any interest therein, *603 within the jurisdiction of the state, * * * which passes or vests by survivorship, will or by statutes of inheritance * * * or by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift, * * * or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment after the death of grantor, bargainor or donor * * * or by reason whereof any person or body politic or corporate shall become beneficially entitled, in possession or expectation, to any property or income thereof, is subject to tax at the rate specified in ORS
118.100 , to be paid to the Department of Revenue for the use of the state."
Since the statute purports to deal with "all property and any interest therein," it becomes necessary to examine those aspects of the federal social security statute,
The federal old-age survivors' and disability insurance program (Social Security Act of 1935, ch 531, tit II, 49 Stat 620, as amended) makes provision for a widow to be paid benefits in an amount equal to the primary insurance amount of her deceased husband (
[1.] Social security benefits are not vested in a property sense, in that they are subject to defeasance by act of Congress so long as that action is not arbitrary. Flemming v.Nestor,
"To engraft upon the Social Security system a concept of 'accrued property rights' would deprive it of the flexibility and boldness in adjustment to ever-changing conditions which it demands. See Wollenberg, Vested Right in Social Security Benefits, 37 Ore L Rev 299, 359. It was doubtless out of an awareness of a need for such flexibility that Congress included in the original Act, and has since retained, a clause expressly reserving to it '[t]he right to alter, amend, or repeal any provision' of the Act. § 1104, 49 Stat 648,
42 U.S.C. § 1304 . * * *"
The court also states, at 610:
"* * * It is apparent that the noncontractual interest of an employee covered by the Act cannot be soundly analogized to that of the holder of an annuity, whose right to benefits is bottomed on his contractual premium payments."
The U.S. Treasury Department has consistently followed the rule that benefits under the Social Security Act are not subject to the federal estate tax. Rev Rul 67-277, 1967-2 Cum Bull 322; Rev Rul 55-87, 1955-1 Cum Bull 112; ET 18, 1940-2 Cum Bull 285. The rulings *605 hold that the decedent had no control over the designation of the beneficiary or of the amount of payment, since these are fixed by statute; further, the decedent had no property interest in the fund from which payment is made.
[2.] It must be plain that the benefits do not go to the widow through any act of the State of Oregon or of the wage earner, or through any will and (since there is no vested right) they do not "vest by survivorship." Cf People v.Hollingsworth,
The question as to the inclusion in ORS
Further difficulty as to the legislative intent to include social security benefits considered herein is engendered by a consideration of ORS
[3.] The rule is well established that doubts concerning the scope and meaning of a tax law are to be resolved in favor of the taxpayer. Crook v. Curry County,
[4.] The court holds that, in view of the ambiguity of ORS chapter 118 as to imposition of inheritance taxes upon the possible benefits to plaintiff's widow under the Social Security Act which is the subject matter of this suit, no legislative intent to tax them can be discovered.
The court further finds that if an intent can be found to tax the alleged property rights herein described, they had no value as of the date of decedent's death.
In order for the widow to be taxed upon the benefits at the date of the husband's death, it would be necessary to find that the interest in future benefits conferred upon the widow a presently ascertainable economic benefit. (In re Lowengart'sEstate,
[5.] In the present case, there were conditions precedent, including two beyond the widow's control, which have to be met before she can make any claim upon the survivor's benefits under social security. In the meantime, she has no rights whatsoever in that she cannot borrow upon the future expectation, or assign or transfer it, or in any other way show a possessory interest.
As was stated in Flemming, supra, the interest of the widow covered by the Social Security Act "cannot be soundly analogized to that as a holder of an annuity, whose rights to benefits is bottomed on his contractual premium payment." Yet it is exactly this basis which has been used by the defendant for the imposition of the tax, as if the widow's highly contingent expectation was the equivalent of a contractual annuity underwritten by a leading insurance company. Such a valuation disregards well-known facts; viz., the Social Security Act is not an annuity program; retirement benefits are not necessarily related to contributions made; social security payments do not go into a trust fund ear-marked for an individual's retirement benefits; social security payments are not contributions, they are compulsory taxes.
Defendant has argued that one of the conditions precedent referred to by plaintiff over which the widow had no control (i.e., the possibility of statutory change depriving her of a hoped-for award) should not seriously be considered as a detriment, being improbable. After observing the results of Oregon's adoption of the Personal Income Tax Act of 1969, with its balancing of policy, often to the detriment of the individual income taxpayer, the court is slow to adopt this view. It has been held that even the protection from allegedly "arbitrary" change under
It has been suggested by the plaintiff that a possible temporary solution to the problem herein is given by ORS
"* * * upon any devise, bequest, legacy or gift, limited, conditioned, dependent or determinable upon the happening of any contingency of future event, by reason of which the full and true value thereof cannot be ascertained at or before the time when the taxes become due and payable, [whereupon such taxes] accrue and are due and payable when the person or corporation beneficially entitled thereto comes into actual possession or enjoyment thereof."
It would appear that this relief measure would be applicable only if the court is in error in concluding that the social security benefits contemplated herein do not come within ORS chapter 118.
Defendant has cited, inter alia, Plummer v. Coler,
In oral argument, defendant suggested that the case ofRichardson v. Belcher,
Defendant's Order No. IH 73-14 is set aside as void and held for naught and its notice of inheritance tax deficiency shall be withdrawn or modified as required by this decision. *611