This appeal is from an assessment of inheritance tax under the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521,
The tax was levied on the transfer of trust property held, pursuant to the terms of a deed of trust, by the Wayne Title
Trust Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania, engaged in business at Wayne, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and hereafter called the trustee. *Page 195
The deed1 was made in Wayne on August 23, 1928, by Richards H. Johnson, describing himself in the deed as "of the City of Cardenas, Republic of Cuba, formerly of Wayne, Pennsylvania. . . ." The deed provided for the payment of income to the settlor for life and, on his death, for the transfer and payment of principal and undistributed income to his three daughters, two of them residing in Wayne, Pennsylvania, and the third in Massachusetts. The trust has been administered in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. The account shows that the deed of trust was prepared by The Wayne Title Trust Company. The property assigned for the purposes of the trust was a certain bond and mortgage on real estate located in Wayne. The account also shows that the Trustee not only prepared the deed of trust but also prepared the assignment of the mortgage to itself as trustee and made a charge for doing so and for recording the assignment. If foreclosure were required it would take place in Delaware County. The seat of the trust was therefore in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, a conclusion required by the circumstances, particularly by the facts that the settlor selected the trustee whose principal place of business was there, that the obligation and the property securing its payment were there and that resort to the local law was required to perfect the assignment of the mortgage, and, if necessary, its foreclosure. See Dorrance's Estate,
The settlor died June 8, 1937. The trustee then filed what it entitled "First and Final Account of The Wayne Title and Trust Company, Trustee," containing principal and income accounts of administration covering the entire trust period. It may be noted that among the items of credit claimed were the payments of state and county personal property taxes. The trust property is now composed of the balance of the amount due on the bond and mortgage originally assigned, mortgage trust fund certificates of the Wayne Title Trust Company, a United States bond, and cash.
The gifts to the settlor's daughters were "intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after" his death. The tax is payable on the transfer of the interest: Hostetter'sEstate,
The title of the Act,3 (to be considered in getting at *Page 197
the legislative intention: Matis v. Schaeffer,
The legislature obviously intended to deal with all the property of a nonresident whose transfer5 could be made *Page 198
the subject of tax in this state. It dealt with real property, with goods, wares, and merchandise within this Commonwealth, with shares of stock of Pennsylvania6 corporations and of national banks engaged in business in the state. Obviously, therefore, the legislature intended, by using the words "goods, wares, and merchandise," to include all of a nonresident's Pennsylvania property except real estate and shares of stock of the character described. The fact the settlor was a resident of Cuba will not exempt the transfer from taxation here: cf.Burnet v. Brooks,
Appellant contends that in accord with the maxim mobiliasequuntur personam the power to tax was at the settlor's domicile at the time of his death and not in this Commonwealth. The cases cited negative the contention.
What has been said of the deed and of the administration of the trust sufficiently distinguishes cases like Noailles'Estate,
We should perhaps add that the Act of May 6, 1887, P. L. 79, referred to in the opinion of the learned court *Page 199 below was expressly repealed by section 47 of the Act of 1919, supra, P. L. 532. The court had jurisdiction of the trust property and of the trustee. The Act of June 26, 1931, P. L. 1384, 20 PS section 2253a, supplementing the Orphans' Court Act of 1917, expressly confers jurisdiction of the "control, removal, discharge, and settlement of accounts of trustees of trusts inter vivos. . . ." The parties, as we have stated, fixed the seat of the trust in Delaware County within which the court exercised jurisdiction.
The decree appealed from is affirmed, costs to be paid out of the trust property.