96 Vt. 308 | Vt. | 1923
The probate court for the district of Windsor disallowed the claim of the State for a transfer tax on certain property formerly owned by Yolney S. Fulham, late of Ludlow. The commissioner of taxes, in behalf of the State, appealed to the county court, wherein a trial by court was had on an agreed statement of facts, and judgment was rendered for the defendant estate. The State alleges error. Briefly stated, the' essential facts are as follows: At different times, Fulham, being the owner of certain railroad stocks, indorsed the seven certificates representing the same and delivered them to .the Trustees of Tufts College, a Massachusetts corporation, in trust. He made deposits in certain savings institutions in this State, taking the pass books in the name of the “Trustees of Tufts College, trustee of the estate of Yolney Sewall Fulham,” and delivering them to the college. On October 2,1915, he made a will giving the residue of his estate to the Trustees of Tufts College, in trust for educational purposes.
On September 27, 1917, he executed a writing wherein he recited the fact that he had made a will by which he had bequeathed to the college the residue of his estate, including, as the writing states, “stock in the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company and stock in the New York Central Railroad Company that I had before assigned and delivered to said Trustee, in trust, all to be transferred to said Trustee on the books of said corporation after my death, so that I might receive the dividends thereon during my life * # # and said
The stocks and deposits constituted practically all of the property owned by Fulham. The certificates and pass books have remained in the possession of the college from the time of their deliveries, but the former have never been transferred on the books of the corporations. The college has never collected the dividends on the stocks, but these were paid to Fulham as long as he lived, and then to his executor. The interest on the deposits has been allowed to accumulate, and none of it has been withdrawn.
Gf. L. 1093 reads as follows: “Every person in a class liable to a tax under the second and third preceding sections, who acquires title to real estate within this State or any interest therein by deed, grant or gift, except in case of a Iona fide purchase for a full consideration in money or money’s worth, made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment upon or after the death of the- grantor or donor, and every such person who thus acquires title to personal estate or any interest therein from a deceased person who at the date of his death was an inhabitant of this State and then owned such property, shall pay to the State the same tax that he would have been required to pay had such estate or interest passed to him from such deceased person by will, the laws of descent or decree of a court in this State. Such tax shall be a first lien on the real or personal estate thus conveyed, until paid in full. ’ ’
The college is such a person as is referred to; the transaction was not such a purchase as is described; and Fulham was, at the time of his death, an inhabitant of this State. Thus far, there is no controversy.
The legislative history of the statute before us is both interesting and instructive. G. L. 1093 originated in section 2, No. 30, Acts of 1904, which, so far as need be quoted, reads as follows : ‘ ‘ Every person # * * who shall acquire title to real estate or any interst therein by voluntary conveyance or deed of gift made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment upon or after the death of the grantor or who shall by voluntary conveyance or by gift acquire title to personal estate or any interest therein made or intended to take effect and (in) possession or enjoyment upon or after the death of the grantor or donor, ’ ’ etc. This became P. S. 823, where it reads, “Every person * * * who acquires title to real or personal estate or any interest therein by voluntary conveyance or gift made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment upon or after the death of the grantor or donor.” etc. So far, then, the statute treated real and personal estate transfers alike, and made their taxability depend on when they were to take effect in possession and enjoyment. Then came No. 60, Acts of 1912, section 2 of which amended P. S. 823 so as to read (in the respect here important) just as G. L. 1093 does.
The effect of this construction upon the standing of the arrangement of September 27 between Fulham and the college is not difficult to discover. While the latter held, thereunder, the legal title to the property prior to the former’s decease, it did not have and was not entitled to its “enjoyment” until that event. As long as he lived, Fulham retained a very real and complete control over the trust fund. He could, at pleasure, recall any part of it, which means, of course, all of it. It is only when the owner relinquishes all power of control over the property and confers upon another the right to dispose of it and receive and use its avails, without subsequent restriction or control by the donor, that the transfer escapes the tax. The property, together with all the attributes of ownership, must pass from the donor, to take effect independently of his death. State Street Trust Co. v. Stevens, 209 Mass. 373, 95 N. E. 851; In re Brandreth’s Estate, 169 N. Y. 437, 62 N. E. 563, 58 L. R. A. 148; In re Todd’s Estate, 237 Pa. 466, 85 Atl. 845, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 869; People v. Moir, 207 Ill. 180, 69 N. E. 905, 99 A. S. R. 205; Carter v. Bugbee, 91 N. J. Law, 438, 103 Atl. 818; Nickel v. State, 43 Nev. 12, 177 Pac. 409, 185 Pac. 565.
It remains to consider the meaning and effect of the words “and then owned such property” introduced into the statute by No. 60, Acts of 1912, already referred to.
To accomplish the change desired, it was first necessary to separate the two classes of property. So section 1 of Act No. 60 amended P. S. 822 to accomplish this separation. And inasmuch as the latter only dealt with inheritances, the words “and then owned such personal property” were appropriately used in the amendatory act. It then became necessary to amend P. S. 823, so as to make it harmonize with 822 as amended. Section 2 of Act No. 60 was intended to accomplish this. Having made use of the above quoted words in section 1, it is quite probable that they were inadvertently carried into section 2 of that Act, without appreciation of their effect. At any rate, when we consider the purpose of the act and the effect of giving these words their usual meaning, it is apparent that the true meaning of the whole provision is no more and no less than it would have been if the Legislature had said, ‘ ‘ who thus acquires title to personal estate * * * from an owner who, at his decease, was an inhabitant of this state. ’!
There is another interpretation of this statute that is equally fatal to the claim of the estate. It is a familiar and well settled rule of construction, that the true meaning of the Legis
Applying this rule, it is simply unbelievable that the word “owned” was here intended in its usual and full proprietary sense. To give it that meaning would, in a large measure, destroy the act and defeat the very purpose of its passage. For, if the recipient “acquired” the personal property or an interest therein, the donor ceased to own, in the full sense of the term, that property or interest. Evasion of the tax would be absurdly simple. For all the owner would have to do would to be to transfer the legal title. He could retain a firm hold on the property by way of control, benefit, and revocation; and yet it would, at his decease, pass to the recipient tax-free. Such an absurd result should be avoided (Morse v. Tracey, 91 Vt. 476, 100 Atl. 923), if possible by reasonable construction.
The law recognizes that there may be two “owners” in respect of the same property: One, the nominal owner; the other, the beneficial owner. The former is the legal owner; the latter, the equitable owner. 2 Repal. & Law 916. Thus, a trustee and the cestui qui trust are both owners. Schott v. Harvey, 105 Pa. 222, 51 A. R. 201. We applied this doctrine in St. Albans v. Avery, 95 Vt. 249, 114 Atl. 31, where we held that the Old Colony Trust Company was the legal owner of the property there in question, and the settlors of the trust, the beneficial owners of it. So, too, in Payne v. Sheets, 75 Vt. 335, 55 Atl. 656, in construing V. S. 4626 (Gr. L. 6443), we recognized the fact that the word ‘1 owner ’1 is used in different senses, saying that it did not always import an absolute owner, and that “its meaning is often varied according to' the connection in which it is used, and is to be understood according to the subject-matter to which it relates.” The very same thing was held in McFeters v. Pierson, 15 Col. 201, 24 Pac. 1076, 22 A. S. R. 388.
The very most that reasonably could be claimed is that the owner referred to in this statute is the equitable owner, — the beneficial owner, — and not the person who holds the legal title. Fulham parted with the title, but as long as he lived he was the
We are not here concerned with the validity of this gift as between the donor and the donee. We are only called upon to pass upon the taxability of the transfer, assuming its validity. Nor are we at all embarrassed by the fact that this property had passed out of the State and was in the possession of the college in the State of Massachusetts at the time of Fulham ’s decease. As we have seen, the tax is not on the property, but its transfer. So its actual location is not important. In re Keeney’s Estate, 222 U. S. 525, 32 Sup. Ct. 105, 56 L. ed. 299, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1139, affirming the decision of the Court of Appeals of New York as shown in 194 N. Y. 281, 87 N. E. 428. Then, too, as we have seen, it was the intention of the conference that Vermont, and not Massachusetts, should tax the transfer of property so situated.
The property having passed to the college by the transfer referred to and not by the will, its valuation as a basis of the transfer tax should be made as of November 12, 1917, the date of Fulham’s death. G-. L. 1109. The amount thus ascertained is agreed to be $20,031.50. The tax is 5% of this sum (G-. L. 1090), and was payable within three months after Fulham’s death (G. L. 1134), and draws interest thereafter (G. L. 1137)..
Judgment reversed and judgment that the claimant recover from the estate the sum of $1,001.57, with simple interest thereon from February 12, 1918. Let the result be certified to the probate court.