213 N.W. 938 | Iowa | 1927
Kathrina Homan died testate August 25, 1905. Fred G. Meinert was by her will nominated executor, and on admission of the will to probate, October 11, 1905, was appointed and qualified as executor. Letters of administration were issued to him. He published notice to creditors November 5, 1905, and filed his final report February 3, 1910. The record recites a stipulation:
"That decedent served notice of the time and place fixed by the court upon the devisees named in the will of Kathrina Homan, as ordered, and that, on the 8th day of February, 1910, the court ordered and adjudged the estate of Kathrina Homan settled and closed, and discharged the decedent, as executor, *357 from further duty, and released his bond, and the estate was closed."
By the will, bequests were made to five stepchildren. The record does not show the character of the estate, whether real or personal or both, except that a power of sale, division, and distribution contained in the will would give rise to the inference of the existence of real estate. By the law in force at the time of Mrs. Homan's death (Chapter 28, Laws of the Twenty-sixth General Assembly), bequests to stepchildren were not exempt from collateral inheritance tax. This statute was so amended as to exempt them by Chapter 54, Acts of the Thirty-first General Assembly (1906). The amendment bore no publication clause, and took effect July 4, 1906. The one year for filing claims and closing the estate did not expire until November, 1906, and, as noted, the estate was not closed until February, 1910. Meantime, the Code Supplement, 1907, was published. By its provisions (Section 1467), bequests to stepchildren were not subject to collateral inheritance tax. We make reference to this as a possible explanation of the error or neglect of the court, the executor, and the administrative officers of the state now to be mentioned. It is stipulated that neither the state nor the state treasurer filed any claim for collateral inheritance tax against the estate of Kathrina Homan, and that the collateral inheritance tax has never been paid. No claim upon Fred G. Meinert for the tax was ever made during his lifetime. Fred G. Meinert died March 7, 1925. His will was admitted to probate April 21, 1925. The present claim was filed April 12, 1926. No charge of fraud against Meinert in the settlement of the estate or in procuring his discharge is made.
By Section 1, Chapter 28, Acts of the Twenty-sixth General Assembly:
"All property * * * which shall pass by will * * * other than to or for the use of the father * * * shall be subject to a tax of five per centum of its value, * * * and all administrators, executors, and trustees, * * * shall be respectively liable for all such taxes to be paid by them respectively, except as herein otherwise provided, with lawful interest as hereinafter set forth, until the same shall have been paid. The tax aforesaid shall be and remain a lien on such estate from the death of the decedent until paid." *358
By Section 8:
"Every executor, administrator, or trustee having in charge or trust any property subject to said tax, and which is made payable by him, shall deduct the tax therefrom or shall collect the tax thereon from the legatee or person entitled to said property, and he shall not deliver any specific legacy or property subject to said tax to any person until he has collected the tax thereon."
The tax is not a tax (though it is a lien) on the property itself, or upon the estate, but upon the succession or right to take by succession. Wieting v. Morrow,
The state can operate only through its three departments of government. By Chapter 28, Acts of the Twenty-sixth General Assembly, the court, under the circumstances laid down in Section 4, is required, upon its own motion, to cause the estate to be appraised, and by Section 6, upon its own motion or on the application of the treasurer of state, to fix compensation of executors or trustees. Sections 14 and 15 read as follows:
"Section 14. No final settlement of the account of any executor, administrator, or trustee shall be accepted or allowed unless it shall show, and the court shall find, that all taxes imposed by the provisions of this act upon any property or interest therein belonging to the estate to be paid by such executors, administrators, or trustees, and to be settled by said account, shall have been paid, and the receipt of the treasurer of state for such tax shall be the proper voucher for such payment."
"Section 15. The district court having either principal or *359 ancillary jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate of the decedent shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine all questions in relation to said tax that may arise affecting any devise, legacy, or inheritance, or any grant or gift under this act, subject to appeal as in other cases, and the treasurer of state shall in his name of office represent the interests of the state in any such proceeding."
Chapter 37, Acts of the Twenty-seventh General Assembly (1898), makes it the duty of the county attorney to report to the treasurer of state the death of all persons whose estates are liable to the tax. Though the ultimate source of an executor's appointment is in the will, the will must be probated, and the ultimate appointment of the executor made by the court.
"The executor or administrator is a mere officer of the law."Hatheway v. Weeks,
Administration of decedents' estates is conducted under the authority and supervision of the court.
"The person so appointed is under the control and power of the court * * *. The court having jurisdiction of the estate may do all things necessary for its proper administration and settlement, and, to this end, may appoint such administrators as are authorized by law and necessary to the discharge of its probate powers." Crossan v. McCrary,
The executor or administrator is an officer of the court.Daviess County Bank Tr. Co. v. Wright,
As has been said, the state acts through its departments of government. The state undertakes the administration of the estates of deceased persons through its courts, appoints the executor or administrator, and supervises and instructs him. The state also requires county attorneys to make reports of estates subject to collateral inheritance tax, and requires the treasurer of state to represent it. The court is the department of state that is invested with jurisdiction to determine the question of liability to tax, and that department is required to keep the estate open so long as inheritance taxes are unpaid. The state has a lien on the estate for the tax. The court discharged the executor. The executor releases the funds in his hands which should pay the tax, and distributes or allows them to be distributed in reliance upon the action of the state itself, through its court. The case is apparently one of mere error, in thinking that the bequest to the stepchildren was not subject to the tax. Under the peculiar facts and circumstances of this case, we think the error was occasioned by or was that of the state itself. It is against conscience for the state, under such circumstances, after the long lapse of time and the death of the executor, to demand of the executor's estate the tax or its equivalent in damages. It is said in State v. Executor ofButtles,
"It follows, from these conclusions, that the loan made in this case was wholly unauthorized, and that the state was not, at the time the contract was made, bound by it. Whether she could lawfully make herself a party to it and claim the benefit of its provisions, and whether she has actually done so, are entirely different questions. We agree that she can only do so upon the same terms, and subject to the same restrictions, as a private *362 individual. When she appears as a suitor in her courts, to enforce her rights of property, she comes shorn of her attributes of sovereignty, and as a body politic, capable of contracting, suing, and holding property, is subject to those rules of justice and right which, in her sovereign character, she has prescribed for the government of her people. * * * It would, indeed, be a gross absurdity that the government, through its courts, should aid the subversion of its own policy; assault those principles of virtue and morality it is created to uphold; or itself overthrow the law which it compels others to observe, and which it was made to enforce."
See, further, People v. Canal Board,
The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in Attorney Generalv. Rafferty,
In Montgomery v. Gilbertson,
"The claimed settlement and distribution made by the executors within a few days after their appointment did not deprive *363 the court of jurisdiction over the funds, nor relieve the executors from liability to creditors or others interested in the estate. * * * The probate court had full power over the estate as soon as the will was probated, if not before, and the actions of the executors were subject to its approval and control until their final discharge. No matter what the provisions of the will, the estate was in court for settlement and distribution, and the executors gained their power and authority from the law, and not alone from the provisions of the will. * * * the state was, in a sense, a creditor, and had the right to insist that the estate be settled according to law. In contemplation of law, it was unsettled when the inheritance tax law became enforcible, and this is the end of the case."
In the case before us, the estate was settled and the executor discharged by the act of the state itself, by one of its departments, through which alone the state may act. The case is not one merely of oversight of a state official, nor one involving merely the statute of limitations or laches, by which the state is ordinarily not bound.
The judgment is — Reversed.
EVANS, C.J., and De GRAFF, ALBERT, and KINDIG, JJ., concur.