144 Ga. 605 | Ga. | 1916
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Without attempting to make any calculation of the amount of taxes due upon the life-estate and the remainder estate under the provisions of the inheritance-tax act, we are of the opinion that the amounts found to be due are erroneous; the calculations as to the
Conceding that under these terms of the will the amount which the remainderman will receive is, as claimed by the plaintiff, uncertain and contingent, and that it is impossible to determine just what the remainder estate would consist of, or what the value of it would be upon the termination of the life-estate, we do not think that the estate was for that reason exempt from the inheritance tax; but we do agree with the contention that the tax should have been imposed only on the excess of the value of the remainder estate and of the life-estate above $5,000; in. other words, that where there is a life-estate and a remainder interest created, as in the present case, the amount of $5,000 should be deducted from each of the two estates, and not merely the single sum of $5,000 from the entire estate left by the decedent. The courts of other jurisdictions have not been uniform in construing provisions in their inheritance-tax laws similar to that contained in the part of subsection 1 quoted above; but we think that the reasoning of those courts giving to such provision in the inheritance-tax laws the construction which we are placing upon it is the sounder. The purpose of the act, or that part of it now immediately under consideration, was to impose a tax upon every transfer of property taxable under the act, or any beneficial interest therein, to any person falling within the classes enumerated therein, where it was of a value that exceeded the amount of $5,000; or, in other words, that $5,000 was to be deducted from the amount of the value of the property transferred and taxable under the act, and that the tax should be at the rate of one per cent, on the amount in excess of $5,000. Now, since under this will the estate of the decedent was carved into two estates, the life-estate and the remainder estate, the transfer taxable under the act, so far as relates to the life-tenant, was the value of the life-estate in excess of $5,000; and the same is true as to the remainder estate. The court, therefore,
And where, as in the present case, the right of disposition of the entire estate is given to the tenant for life, so that she may consume and dispose of a part or all of the estate left by the decedent, and it can not be determined how much of it will be consumed or whether any of it will be consumed, then we are of the opinion that for the purposes of taxation under this act, in determining the value of the remainder estate, it should be found that the entire estate will pass to the remainder and that none of it will be consumed or disposed of by the life-tenant. This will work no hardship or inequality on the remainderman, because she will be benefited by the failure of the life-tenant to consume or dispose of any part of the corpus of the estate. Any other ruling would enable the testator, however large and valuable the estate which he might transfer by will, to defeat the purposes of tax measures of this character by introducing the element of uncertainty into the value of the estates which he might create in the property devised.
Judgment reversed.