38 A.2d 262 | Pa. | 1944
R. Wistar Harvey died October 21, 1939, leaving an estate valued in excess of $2,000,000. His will, dated May 2, 1936, contained: (1) pecuniary legacies aggregating $235,000, each "subject to the payment of the Pennsylvania State Inheritance Tax"; (2) specific legacies in which it was provided the tax thereon was to be paid out of the residue; and (3) a residuary legacy in trust, the income to be divided by the trustees after deducting from gross income, taxes and legal expenses thereon. At the audit the executors requested that a percentage of the pecuniary legacies be retained to permit apportionment of the federal estate taxes.
The questions raised on this appeal are:
(1) Does the Act of July 2, 1937, P. L. 2762, 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 844,1
operate to require apportionment of estate *56
taxes between pecuniary and residuary legatees? The appellants contend that since the pecuniary legacies are expressly made "subject to the payment of the Pennsylvania State Inheritance Tax" they are impliedly relieved of all other tax. The Act of 1937, supra, provides that estate taxes in all cases shall be apportioned among the parties interested in the gross taxable estate according to the amounts of their interest "except in acase where a testator otherwise directs in his will." In § 11 of the Wills Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 223, there is a provision that a general devise of a testator's estate "shall be construed to include any real estate . . . which he may have power to appoint in any manner he may think proper, and shall operate as an execution of such power unless acontrary intention shall appear by the will." (Italics supplied.) We stated in Provident Trust Company ofPhiladelphia, Trustee, v. Scott et al.,
(2) The appellants contend that the statute should not apply to pecuniary legacies, for if it does it is unconstitutional. Under Article IX, Section 1, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, requiring uniformity of taxation, the statute in question lacks no uniformity in its application to all the legacies. The variance is due to the graduated federal tax as applied under the rule laid down in the statute. All beneficiaries are affected alike by its application. It was pointed out in Riggs v. Del Drago,
(3) The appellants further contend that in the apportionment of state taxes an aliquot share should be allocated to residuary gifts to charitable beneficiaries. Section 812 of the Internal Revenue Code, already in effect October 21, 1939, provides that the net estate shall be determined by deducting from the value of the gross estate: (a) an exemption of $100,000; (b) expenses, *58
losses, indebtedness and taxes; (c) property previously taxed; (d) transfers for public, charitable and religious uses. The estate tax, unlike the normal state inheritance tax, is a tax upon the property of the decedent: Mellon Estate,
The decree affirmed; costs to be paid by the appellants.