23 Colo. 492 | Colo. | 1897
The bill attached to the foregoing interrogatory provides for the levy and collection of what is commonly designated an “ inheritance tax.” The right to impose such tax is based upon the power of the state in its sovereign capacity to regulate and control the transmission of property by inheritance. Although designated as a tax, it is not such a tax upon property as is contemplated by section 3 of article X. of the state constitution. It is, rather, a contribution which the state levies for itself as a condition upon which the title to property shall pass upon the death of its owner; hence, the interrogatory propounded must be answered in the negative. Dos Passos on Inheritance Tax Law (2d ed.), sec. 8; State v. Hamlin, 86 Me. 495, s. c. 25 L. R. A. 632; Minot v. Winthrop, 162 Mass. 113, s. c. 26 L. R. A. 259; State v. Alston, 94 Tenn. 674; United States v. Perkins, 163 U. S. 625.
Although an inheritance tax law of some kind is in force in very many states of the Union, the statute of the state of
This author gives, in the appendix to his work, the statutes of several states upon this subject, to which we call special attention, as we think that if this state is now to enact an inheritance tax law, it should have a statute which has been approved in preference to one open to serious objection.