271 Mo. 359 | Mo. | 1917
Lead Opinion
I. The controversy in this case is over the construction to he given to certain clauses in the will of Charles T. Eemme, who died on August 25, 1911. Said clauses are as follows:
‘ ‘ Fifth. After the payment of my debts and after the payment of the above mentioned incumbrances, if any, and of the foregoing legacies, I hereby give, devise and bequeath to James H. Maguire, of the city of St. Louis, State of Missouri to him in trust, all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate of every nature and kind, and wherever situated, to him said James H. Maguire, in trust for the following uses and purposes herein declared and set forth and none other, that is to say:
“In trust that he, the said James H. Maguire, in trust shall hold, manage, use and control, rent, lease, sell and convey, invest and re-invest- my entire estate so held in trust as to the said trustee shall seem best, wise and prudent, and with the full authority and power vested in said*362 trustee, to do any and all tilings that to him may seem best to further the objects of the trust estate herein created.
“Said trustee shall hold, use, manage and control my residuary estate given and devised to him in trust, by this will, for the benefit, use and enjoyment of my beloved wife, Maud M. Remme, for and during her natural life, and shall pay and turn over to her, the said Maud M. Remme, for her maintenance, support, benefit, use and enjoyment, the entire interest, rents, dividends and income of every nature of and from my said residuary estate given and devised in trust as aforesaid. Said payments shall begin immediately upon my death and shall be made at regular periods, from time to time,- in installments, and, if possible, on the first day of each month, for and during the natural life of her, the said Maud M. Remme.
“Should said trustee sell any of the real estate held by him in trust under the provisions of this will, then I direct that he shall immediately, thereupon reinvest or put out in some profitable manner and from (form) the entire proceeds of and from any such sale or sales.
“Sixth. Upon the death of the said Maud M. Remme the trust hereby created shall cease and all property of every kind, character and description then on hand belonging to said trust, and all evidences thereof, and including, also, all money held from the interest, rents and income and not theretofore paid over to the said Maud M. Remme, shall be paid and turned over to Frank Cummings, Edward Cummings and Stella Cummings, of the city of St.,Louis and State of Missouri, children of my 'sister, Kate Cummings, or to their heirs at law per stirpes, share and share alike, absolutely and forever.”
The will was duly probated and during the administration of the estate the collector of the revenue of the city of St. Louis applied to the probate court for the appointment of an appraiser to examine and fix the amount of collateral inheritance tax which should be assessed against the estate. The appointment and appraisal were duly made and the court, after examination of the report submitted and filed, found the cash value of the shares of
II. The wisdom and policy of inheritance taxation have been illustrated for more than two thousand years. It first took root in the Roman law in the form of a five-per-cent tax on certain collaterals at the suggestion of Augustus Caesar (1 Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of Roman Empire [Milman’s Ed.] pp. 191, 192.) and has spread over Europe and the United States of America. [Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41; Snyder v. Bettman, 190 U. S. 249; State ex rel. v. Henderson, 160 Mo. 190; Knox v. Emerson, 123 Tenn. l. c. 417; State ex rel. v. Bazille, 97 Minn. l. c. 14; State v. Pabst, 139 Wis. 561; Vanderbilt v. Eidman, 196 U. S. 480; U. S. v. Fidelity Tr. Co., 222 U. S. 158; People v. Byrd, 253 Ill. 221; State ex rel. v. Probate Court, 112 Minn. 279; Wingert v. State, 98 Atl. 224; Stengel v. Edwards, 98 Atl. 424; Matter of Vanderbilt, 172 N. Y. 69; Bell v. Bank, 188 Mo. App. l. c. 389; Ross, Inheritance Taxation, p. 17, sec. 9.] The constitutional principle upon which this excise or duty rests is that it is not a tax' upon property, but only on the transmission of property, either by operation of law,
Under the terms of the sixth clause of the will of Charles Remme, the residue of his estate in the hands of the trustee after the expiration of the express life estate created in his wife, was devised in fee to Prank Cummings, Edward Cummings and Stella Cummings, nephews and niece of the testator, or their heirs at law per stirpes. This language created vested remainders in the three persons named and a contingent remainder in the heirs of such of them as might die before the expiration of the life estate. [Estate of Kingman, 220 Ill. 563.] These remainders attached to whatever form and quality the estate had assumed during the trusteeship and the exercise thereunder of the power of the trustee to sell and reinvest. They did not attach to specific property which went into the hands of the trustee at the death of the testator, for other clauses of the will gave the trustee full power to change the form of the trust estate by selling the real estate and reinvesting it in other property. These terms of the will dispose of the argument of the learned counsel for appellant that the application of Section 314 of the Revised Statutes, providing that the property, subject to the tax thereon laid, should be affected with a lien from the time of the death of the testator, would disable the trustee from exercising the ppwer to sell given him in the instrument of trust. No such consequence can logically follow from the language of the statute, for the statute did not intend to fix a lien except upon the definite property existing when the future limitation over should vest in the remaindermen. Pull effect is given to thé statute if its terms are held applicable in all cases where the property subject to remainder exists in an immutable form. So in this case, if the'trustee had not been given power to sell the land, the lien would have attached upon the death of the testator, but since that power.was given to the trustee, the purpose of the statute and its fair legal intendment are that the lien shall not attach until the property in trust has assumed its final form at the closure of the trust.
‘ ‘ Coming to us from the civil law, it is proper, therefore, as was done in the Swanson case (Swanson v. Swanson, 2 Swan, 446), to look to that law in order to ascertain the meaning attached by it to the word ‘ inheritance;’ and in doing so it is found, as is stated in that opinion, to be ‘the succession to all the rights of-the deceased. It is of two kinds — that which arises by testament, when the testator gives his succession to a particular person; and .that which arises by operation of law, which is called “succession ab intesto.” ’ [Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, p. 1037.]
“Such has been the meaning attached to the word ‘inheritance,’ when used in our legislation with regard to
Having reached the conclusion that Section 314 does not charge the assets of the estate of the testator with a specific lien at the time of his death but only fixes a lien on the corpus of the estate in the form in which It shall exist at the time of distribution it necessarily follows, from this shifting of the statutory lien, that the trustee can, prior to the end of the life estate, in the exercise of the power given to him as such sell and convey the lands devised to him free from any lien against the purchasers.
III. What has been said disposes of all the contentions of appellant except the claim that no assessment for the transfer of these remainders can be made prior to the time of the vesting of possession in the remaindermen.
With reference to this contention the statute makes answer in the following terms:
“Provided further, that the person or persons, or body politic or corporate beneficially interested- in. the property as aforesaid shall make a full, verified return of said property to the probate judge of the proper county and file the same in his office within one year from the death of the decedent, and within that period give a bond in form and to the effect prescribed in section 310 of this article, conditioned for the payment of said tax at such time or period as the right of possession shall accrue to the owner or the representatives of said owner as aforesaid, and in case of failure so to do, the tax shall be immediately payable and collectible on the clear market value of the estate to be determined as hereinafter provided;, further, that the owner shall have the right to' pay the tax at any time prior to his or her coming into possession, and in such cases, the tax shall be assessed in the manner hereinafter provided on the value of the estate at the time*367 of the payment of the tax, after deducting the value of the life estate or estate for years.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 314.]
It is objected by the learned counsel for appellant that if this portion of the statute is valid, then it -would result in the imposition of a tax on property and not on the succession and hence would be unconstitutional. This is a misconception of the ground upon which the right exists in the State to require these payments. Both the cases heretofore cited in this opinion and correct reasoning deduce the existence of this right in a sovereignty, from the fact that the power of succession in such cases depends upon statutes affording that privilege to the claimant, and this being in the full discretion of the enacting body is subject to any terms which it sees fit to impose. Having the plenary power to regulate the devolution of property, whether by the act of parties or by the act of law, the State is at liberty to affix any conditions to its transmission not prohibited by the Constitution. In the portion of the statute now under review, the Legislature has imposed as a condition to the heritable or testamentary rights of remaindermen, reversioners and other claimants of estates in expectancy, that the transfer taxes thereon shall be “immediately payable and collectible on the clear market value of the estate, ’ ’ unless the beneficiary shall, within a year, give a prpper bond for the payment of said tax when the right of possession shall accrue, in-which event the payment need not be made until actual possession of the estate accrues. The act further provides in case of anticipatory payment of the tax the specific method for ascertaining such payment ‘ ‘ after deducting the value of the life estate or estates for years. ’ ’ In the case at bar the futur,e estates of the remaindermen fall within this provision of the statute, because they are preceded by a life estate in the wife of the testator. The ascertainment of the value of that life estate is within the competency of any qualified appraiser or actuary computing the same according to the rules prescribed by statute, as is also the ascertainment of the resulting remainders. [Matter of Tracy, 179 N. Y. 501.]
In the case at bar there is no omission on the part of the Legislature to provide a method of computation of the remainder estates, as was found in the MS. opinion of Division No. 2 in the matter of assessment of collateral inheritance tax in the estate of Charles Clark, deceased, Grace Clark, appellant. [In re Clark’s Estate, 194 S. W. 54.] In that case a wholly uncertain and indefinite bequest was made to the daughterTin-law of the testator, whose trustee was authorized, in its discretion, to make payments until the beneficiary should marry or die. Tbe elements of incertitude were the volition of the trustee and the duration of the interest of the beneficiary. It was impossible to make any computation as to her prospective remarriage or as to the extent to which discretion of the trustee would be moved. The point in judgment in that case has, therefore, no relevancy to the facts shown in the present case where no such barriers exist to a computation of the value of the life estate specifically provided by statute.
We hold the statute under review is valid and enforceable according to its terms and the judgment in conformity therewith is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) — I concur in the result in this case. We have held our collateral inheritance tax law valid, and that is the law under construction in this case. It will he time enough to give approval to a general inheritance tax law, if we conclude so to do, when such issue is a live question in a live case. The first part of paragraph two of my learned Brother’s opinion is very broad and covers both collateral and general inheritance taxation. On the latter I do not wish to express an opinion at this time, and as I see it, I would be so expressing, an opinion by a full concurrence in the present opinion. Let the question remain for a real case. £ £ Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.”