60 A.2d 50 | Pa. | 1948
The question here is the right of the state to impose a transfer inheritance tax on the full cash value of bonds issued in the name of appellant as co-owner with her brother.
Appellant's brother, Alfred T. Myers, died on December 27, 1946, as a result of injuries sustained in a motor accident on December 25, 1946. In a safe deposit box rented from the Peoples Bank, Hanover, Pa., in his name and that of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Myers, were found United States Savings Bonds aggregating a total cash surrender value of $20,250. These bonds, issued in December 1945 and purchased with funds of the decedent, were registered in the names of "Alfred T. Myers or Mrs. Hazel L. Wallick", the latter being the appellant. The bonds consisted of a $5,000 Series E bond having a cash surrender value of $3750 and a Series G bond with a cash surrender value of $16,500. The appraisement for Pennsylvania Transfer Inheritance Tax, filed in the Register's Office of York County, Pennsylvania, on June 16, 1947, included the bonds in question and a transfer inheritance tax was assessed thereon. An appeal taken from this assessment by Mrs. Wallick to the Orphans' Court of York County was dismissed.
Appellant contends that the purchase of the bonds by Alfred T. Myers and their registration in his as well as her name as co-tenants constituted a valid gift inter vivos to her of a joint tenant's interest therein. Appellant says that the "regulations promulgated in Treasury Department Circular No. 530, Sixth Revision, pursuant to which these bonds were issued, constitute a part of *579
the contract between the United States and the holders thereof to the same extent as though the same were set forth at length in the body of the bond. According to those regulations (Sub-part L, Section 315.45)1 the bonds here in question were payable to either co-owner upon his separate request, or to the survivor upon the death of one co-owner. Therefore, insofar as these bonds are concerned, the phrase 'Alfred T. Myers or Mrs. Hazel L. Wallick' is equivalent to the phrase 'Alfred T. Myers or Mrs. Hazel L. Wallick, either or the survivor of them'. This interpolated language clearly creates a joint tenancy with right or survivorship." Appellant also alleges that by virtue of the following provision in the Act of July 14, 1936, P. L. 44,
The Commonwealth contends that the transfer of the bonds to appellant upon her brother's death is a taxable transfer under Section 1(c) of the Transfer Inheritance Tax Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, as amended,
The general rules governing gifts, inter vivos, are set forth in Fitzpatrick v. Fitzpatrick,
The decedent here retained complete custody of the bonds and exercised exclusive dominion over them. No intent to transfer possession or control on Myers' part had been established by the appellant. Possession and enjoyment, therefore, did not vest until his death. In Leach's Estate,
In this record we find no proof of an interest taking immediate effect in the donee. In determining whether, for inheritance tax purposes, a transfer is to be regarded as effective immediately, or as not effective in possession or enjoyment until at or after the death of the donor, the criterion is not whether the beneficiaries are to acquire actual possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the donor but whether the latter has irrevocably parted with all his interest, title, possession and enjoyment in his lifetime. See Glosser Trust,
Among the cases in other jurisdictions treating this subject aree Hallett v. Bailey,
Both appellant's possession and enjoyment of the bonds in question were postponed until the donor's death since no previous access to them was made available to her. To permit a transfer inheritance tax exemption on all government bonds issued in the co-ownership form without examining the circumstances of each case, would encourage the practice of investing one's estate in such bonds and registering them in joint names for the purpose of circumventing the payment of a legitimate exaction. The court below properly decreed that the full appraised value of the bonds which devolved to appellant are subject to a transfer inheritance tax.
The decree is affirmed at appellant's cost.