265 Mass. 585 | Mass. | 1929
These three complaints are brought under the provisions of G. L. c. 62, § 47, as amended, for an abatement of income taxes assessed to the complainant upon income received by her during the years 1924, 1925 and 1926. The same question of law is involved in each complaint. It was agreed that the pleadings in one case only should be printed.
The complainant during the years in question was, and she still is, a resident of Brookline. In these years she received payments of income from the executors of the will of her late husband, formerly a resident of Michigan where his will was probated. None of his executors was a resident of this Commonwealth. One third of the residue of her husband's estate was bequeathed to the complainant. He died May 28, 1922, and his estate during the whole period here in question was in process of settlement, the executors carrying on certain business enterprises of the testator.
G. L. c. 62, § 11, provides: “If an inhabitant of the Commonwealth receives income from one or more trustees, none of whom is an inhabitant of the Commonwealth or has derived his appointment from a court of the Commonwealth, such income shall be subject to the taxes imposed by this chapter, according to the nature of the income received by the trustees.” By § 13 of this chapter, §§ 10 to 12, inclusive, so far as apt, apply to executors, “to the income received by them and to their beneficiaries; except that clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of section ten authorizing certain deductions, shall apply only to trustees and guardians.” The complainant’s contention is that G. L. c. 62, particularly §§ 10 to 13, does not purport to tax income received by a Massachusetts resident from a foreign executor. The defendant commissioner, who dismissed the applications for abatement, contends that § 11 of G. L. c. 62 by § 13 is made applicable to beneficiaries receiving income from foreign executors, since § 13 expressly makes §§ 10 to 12 inclusive, so far as apt, apply “to executors ... to the income received by them and to their beneficiaries.”
St. 1916, c. 269, § 9, enacted, so far as material to this decision, that taxes were to be assessed on income received by an inhabitant of this Commonwealth from a foreign executor as well as from a foreign trustee “according to the nature of the income received by the executors ... or trustees.” See St. 1918, c. 207. The change in the language of the statute which causes the present controversy resulted from the codification and revision of the laws in 1920. In
There is nothing in Brewster v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 251 Mass. 49, in conflict with what is here decided. There it was held that Massachusetts residents acting as executors under a Rhode Island appointment could not be taxed on income received from the sale of intangible property. Here the person taxed is a resident of Massachusetts who has received income from a foreign executor. The person whose income is taxed is a beneficiary; she would be taxed if this income were received from a
In each case the complaint is to be dismissed.
So ordered.