154 A. 503 | Pa. | 1930
Lead Opinion
Henry S. Paul, a resident of Pennsylvania, died seized of real estate situate in the states of New Jersey and Missouri. In his lifetime, he had entered into written contracts for its sale and had been paid various amounts on account of the purchase price. At the time of his death there remained due to him the sum of $42,387.25. He left his entire estate to collaterals, and the Commonwealth claimed a transfer inheritance tax of ten per cent on an appraised value of the contracts, which was less than the amount remaining due thereunder. The balance owing his estate was subsequently paid by the vendees under the articles of agreement, and deeds to them for the lands were made by his executrix. The court below, one of the judges thereof dissenting, decided that the Commonwealth is not entitled to the tax and it brings to us this appeal. *334
The question for determination is, whether the unpaid purchase money of real estate situate in other states, evidenced by articles of agreement executed by a decedent in his lifetime, is subject to a transfer inheritance tax under the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, where the vendor died seized of the lands, and deeds therefor, following payment of the entire purchase money, were not made until after his death by his personal representative.
There can be no question but that no tax could be collected on the lands as lands: Frick v. Pennsylvania,
The Commonwealth contends that the contracts of sale themselves are property, but they are, if property at all, only such because they stand for the lands. If the vendor had granted the lands in his lifetime, and had received a mortgage or a note, or other evidence of indebtedness for the part of the purchase money unpaid, the situation would be different, then the writing itself would be property, the only property growing out of the transaction which the vendor possessed, and his estate would have to respond with a tax upon it. But that is not the situation. We are asked to disregard the fact of the testator still holding title to and possession of the lands, and to indulge in the make-believe that the land had been transmuted into something else. We are not prepared to do so. The agreements of sale are not the vital factor. "They are representative and not the thing itself": Blodgett v. Silberman,
The whole modern tendency is to limit the levying of inheritance taxes to the sovereignty which is the situs of the actual property. This is the doctrine of Frick's Est., Farmers' Loan Trust Co. v. Minnesota, Robinson's Est. and many other cases which could be cited. A clear illustration of the thought of the Supreme Court of the United States along this line is to be found in Safe Deposit Trust Company of Baltimore v. Virginia,
It is impossible to resist the conclusion that the situation here appearing was not contemplated by the legislature in passing the Act of 1919. It provides for taxing the estate of a decedent "whether the property is situated within the Commonwealth or elsewhere." This language echoes the then general belief that the *338 whole value of tangibles, wherever existing and by whatever document of title represented, furnished a basis for taxation at the domicile of the owner, and hence it was unnecessary to consider the case of an agreement of sale of such foreign tangibles, as distinguished from the value of the tangibles themselves. In Frick v. Pennsylvania, the foreign tangibles were not taxed, but their value was taken into account in determining the amount of tax to be paid as a condition of the taking of such assets located in Pennsylvania. It was wisely held that this was not permissible. That case and those which followed it, announce the better doctrine that the value of foreign tangibles cannot be considered in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, in determining the amount of tax to be paid at the domicile of the owner. Being of opinion that our statute, properly construed, does not attempt to do this, the Commonwealth's claim in the instant case must necessarily fail.
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellant.
Dissenting Opinion
It has never before been questioned that Pennsylvania has the right to impose a transfer tax on the balance due on contracts for the sale of land anywhere, which contracts have been bequeathed to another by a decedent who at the time of his death was a resident of Pennsylvania. A balance due from a financially responsible debtor, as in this case, on a contract for the sale of land, is property — a solvent credit which is everywhere recognized as a subject of taxation. It is not property because it "stands for the land," as is suggested; it is property because it contractually creates and evidences certain rights of pecuniary value which the law recognizes and will enforce, to wit, the right of the vendor to demand from the vendee a sum *339 of money stipulated to be paid. If Paul had agreed to sell to his solvent debtor, and the latter to buy, a tract of land, say, in Florida, in 1925 for $100,000, retaining the naked title as security, and a year later that land had become worthless, Paul's property in that contract would still be worth $100,000 and would be listed as such among his assets, even though the land itself had become worthless. The contract in that case would not have "stood for," i. e., have been a substitute for, the land; the contract would derive its value from the ability of the vendee to pay. If a bank loans money and accepts a note as evidence of the debt due, the note does not stand for the property the debtor may own, any more than a municipal bond "stands for" the property a municipality may own. The note is a contract to pay the debt and is evidence of its existence, and the bank looks first to the debtor to pay it, and if he fails to do so then it looks to any property the debtor may own and on which execution may issue. When a man sells property, real or personal, on a contract, retaining the title in himself, the retained title is only a pawn. The other's debt to him is his credit and is correctly listed among his assets as property, regardless of the pawn. When a motor company sells on a contract an automobile to a customer, retaining naked title in itself, the motor company has a property in that contract. The value of the automobile may substantially decline, but the company's property in the contract remains unimpaired until the debt is paid. The contract does not "stand for" the automobile, but evidences and creates a credit in the seller which is a property distinct and apart from the automobile whose title the seller has retained merely as security. "Moneys due or owing upon articles of agreement for the sale of real estate" is expressly recognized as a subject of taxation in the Pennsylvania Revenue Act of June 7, 1879, P. L. 112, section 17, and in subsequent acts. That a balance due on a contract for the sale of land *340 is personal property within the letter and meaning of the Transfer Tax Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, is so clear as to require no argument.
It is settled law that where a vendor sells land on a contract as the decedent did, "the vendor's interest ceases to be real estate. It becomes a chose in action, a personal demand for the consideration money, which, in case of death, goes to his personal representatives, and the legal title is held only as a security for the payment of the debt. The vendee becomes, in substance, the owner of the estate": Longwell v. Bentley,
That the vendor is only a trustee of the land sold under contract is apparent when we consider what such a contractual vendor has left which he could alienate by will or deed. All the vendor could legally sell to another in respect to the land already sold would be the contract of indebtedness, with the security therefor, but only as a security or pawn, and not the land itself. Williams v. Board of Commissioners, (Kansas)
Since rights arising from land contracts are property rights distinctive from the land itself, since the rights adhering to the decedent under the land contracts in question were intangible personal property or choses in action, and since his domicile, Pennsylvania, was their situs for the purposes of taxation, how can it be held that Pennsylvania, in imposing a tax on the transfer of these choses in action adhering to the decedent at his situs here, has denied to the legatee that due process of law guaranteed by the *344 federal Constitution? As nothing in the decisions of the courts of Pennsylvania sustains such a contention, it must find its support, if any it has, in the construction put upon the Fourteenth Amendment by the Supreme Court of the United States.
We find nothing in any decision of the Supreme Court of the United States which offers the slightest impediment to Pennsylvania imposing the transfer tax in question. There is nothing in the case of Frick v. Pennsylvania,
We interpret the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Blodgett v. Silberman,
In the instant case, even if Missouri and New Jersey had levied an inheritance tax on Paul's property right in the naked title to lands in those states that would not be double taxation, as the legal interest taxed by New *350 Jersey and Missouri on the one hand and Pennsylvania on the other are totally different, as we point out later in this opinion. Mr. Justice HOLMES in his dissenting opinion in the Safe Deposit and Trust Case (supra), said: "I do not think that it matters that the owners, residing in Virginia, have only an equitable title. To be sure the trustee having the legal title and possession of the bonds in Maryland may be taxed there. But that does not affect the right of Virginia by reason of anything that I know of in the Constitution of the United States."
Farmers Loan Trust Co. v. Minnesota,
My conclusion is that all species of tangible or intangible property having a situs in Pennsylvania are legitimate subjects of taxation by Pennsylvania; that solvent credits in possession of a decedent at the time of his death and arising from the contractual sale of land in other states, are clearly among the legitimate subjects of taxation; that to tax such credits does not result in "double taxation"; that if it did it would constitute no injustice to the taxpayer, as the taxpayer owed an economic allegiance not only to Pennsylvania, but also to Missouri and New Jersey. Seligman, in his Essays on Taxation, 10th edition, page 113, says: "There is, however, one final principle, toward which all modern governments are tending. . . . . . This is the principle of economic interest or economic allegiance, as against the antiquated doctrine of political allegiance. Every man may be taxed by competing authorities according to his economic interests under each authority."
For the courts of Pennsylvania to construe the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, in such a way as to exempt credits possessed by Pennsylvania decedents and resulting from the sale of land in other states, from the operation of that act, would constitute not only an act of legislation but an act of unwise legislation. Such legislation would deny our own State tax gatherers access to legitimate and fertile fields of needed revenue. *355
If it should be held that Pennsylvania cannot levy an inheritance tax on the unpaid balance which was due the decedent in the case before us, at the time of his death, in the future we may expect that residents of Pennsylvania who deal in real estate and who own lands in other states, will sell these lands on land contracts instead of conveying them and taking mortgages, because by this practice, to which the door will have been judicially opened, they will save themselves millions of dollars in taxation, at the expense of the public treasury of Pennsylvania.
If the delusive cry of "double taxation" moves this court to interpose between the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the intangible personalty she is now justly seeking to tax, the same specious cry can with equal plausibility be raised when this Commonwealth is about to tax other forms of local intangible personalty which have economic relationships with land or corporations in other states or countries.
In my opinion, the restrictive decision of the court below has neither federal nor state constitutional justification.
Dissenting Opinion
As to the right of the Commonwealth to exact the inheritance tax here sought to be collected, I concur in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice MAXEY in his dissenting opinion. The tax imposed by the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, falls upon inheritance of personal property owned by a resident of Pennsylvania at the time of his death. The transfer of land upon articles of agreement to sell and purchase, entered into by vendor and vendee, creates an executory contract (Driesbach v. Serfass,
I would reverse the court below and enter judgment for the Commonwealth. *357