316 Mass. 73 | Mass. | 1944
This is a petition for abatement of legacy and succession taxes brought in the Probate Court under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 27. The petitioners are, respectively, the executors of the will of Elizabeth Putnam, late of Boston, who died June 5, 1935, and whose will was allowed July 11, 1935, the sole trustee under an indenture of trust executed by said Elizabeth Putnam on June 9, 1888, the trustees under the will of Augustus Lowell, late of Brookline, who died June 22, 1900, and whose will, giving to said Elizabeth Putnam a power of appointment, was allowed July 18, 1900, and the four children of said Elizabeth Putnam — • George Putnam, Katharine L. Bundy, Roger L. Putnam and Augustus L. Putnam • — who were beneficiaries under each of these instruments, as individuals. The respondent is the commissioner of corporations and taxation, herein referred to as the commissioner. The case was heard for final determination in the Probate Court upon the petition, the answer of the commissioner, and a statement of agreed facts, and under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 13, without decision, it was reported for the consideration of the full court.
The property and interests therein to which the individual petitioners succeeded, upon successions on which the legacy and succession taxes here in question were certified and paid, came from three sources: (a) Elizabeth Putnam left substantial individual property. By her will she gave the residue of her estate in equal shares to her four children, the individual petitioners, (b) By the indenture of trust executed by said Elizabeth Putnam on June 9, 1888, she transferred property to trustees in trust to pay the income thereof to her for her life, and from and after her death “to pay over, transfer and convey all the principal or capital of the trust property unto such person or persons, and to such uses as she the said Elizabeth, may direct or appoint by any last will or instrument in the nature thereof, executed and attested as a last will; full power being hereby reserved and given unto her the said Elizabeth, so to direct or appoint at all times during her natural life, and the same at pleasure to alter or revoke, notwithstanding coverture and without the assent of any husband or other person,” and “in default of
The commissioner determined the value of the individual
The petitioners seek abatements of the entire amount of the legacy and succession taxes certified and paid upon successions to the property and interests therein passing to the individual petitioners under the will of Augustus Lowell in default of appointment by said Elizabeth Putnam, and abatements of so much of the legacy and succession taxes imposed upon successions to property passing to the individual petitioners, by the indenture of trust dated June 9, 1888, in default of appointment, and so much of the legacy and succession taxes imposed upon successions to the individual property of said Elizabeth Putnam passing to the individual petitioners, as was assessed without authority of law. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 27.
1. The additional legacy and succession taxes of ten per cent purporting to be certified and paid under the provisions of St. 1935, c. 480, require no independent consideration. These taxes stand or fall with the taxes, respectively, to which they were additional.
2. All the legacy and succession taxes certified and paid upon successions to the property and interests therein of the trust created by the will of Augustus Lowell and passing to the individual petitioners in default of appointment by their mother, Elizabeth Putnam, were assessed without authority of law for reasons more fully stated in Dexter v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, ante, 31. The commissioner contends that these legacy and succession taxes should be sustained under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 1, as amended — considered apart from § 2 of that chapter — relying upon the provision of § 36 of that chapter that this “chapter shall apply only to property or interests therein passing or accruing upon the death of persons dying on or after May fourth, nineteen hundred and twenty.” But, as was held in the Dexter case, this provision refers to “the death of persons” who were the former owners of the “property or interests therein,” that is, in the case of successions
Said § 36 provided also that “as to all property and inter-, ests therein passing or accruing upon the death of persons who have died prior to said date [May 4, 1920] the laws theretofore applicable shall remain in fprce.” The “laws theretofore applicable” were St. 1907, c. 563, as codified and amended, providing for direct legacy and succession taxes, and R. L. c. 15, as amended, providing for collateral legacy and succession taxes. As was pointed out in the Dexter case, St. 1907, c. 563, as codified and amended, did not impose legacy and succession taxes upon successions by wills of testators who died before September 1, 1907, the effective date of said St. 1907, c. '563. Since the testator, Augustus Lowell, died before that date, St. 1907, c. 563, as codified and amended — considered apart from St. 1909, c. 527, § 8, now embodied in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 2 — imposed no legacy and succession taxes upon successions by his will to the individual petitioners. Said Augustus Lowell died after the effective date of the original legacy and succession tax law. St. 1891, c. 425, codified in R. L. c. 15. But, since that law imposed no legacy and succession taxes upon successions to the lineal descendants of a testator, it imposed no such taxes upon the successions by the will of Augustus Lowell to the individual petitioners, his grandchildren.
The legacy and succession taxes certified and paid upon successions to the property and interests therein passing in default of the exercise of the power of appointment created by the will of Augustus Lowell cannot be sustained under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 2, for reasons more fully stated in the Dexter case. That section purported to impose legacy and succession taxes, in accordance with the provisions of § 1 of this chapter, upon successions resulting from the exercise or nonexercise by the donee of a power of appoint
3. The petitioners do not contend that successions under the indenture of trust executed June 9, 1888, or under the will of Elizabeth Putnam to the individual petitioners, respectively, were not subject to legacy and succession taxes under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 65, § 1, as amended, or that for the purpose of determining the taxes upon these successions the property and interests therein passing to each of the individual petitioners could not be united as a single interest. The petitioners, however, contend that the legacy and succession taxes certified and' paid upon these successions were too high, because for the purpose of determining the legacy and succession taxes thereon the property and interests passing by these successions were united with the property and interests passing to the individual petitioners, respectively, under the will of Augustus Lowell by reason of the nonexercise of the power of appointment thereby created by the donee thereof, Elizabeth Putnam. This contention is sound. The legacy and succession taxes certified and paid upon these successions under the indenture of trust and under the will of Elizabeth Putnam were assessed without authority of law to the extent that they were determined by uniting the property and interests therein so passing with the property and interests therein passing under the will of Augustus Lowell by reason of the nonexercise of the power of appointment thereby created.
4. The petitioners have not argued the point that the legacy in the will of Elizabeth Putnam for the scholarship fund is not subject to a legacy and succession tax. This point must be taken as waived.
It follows that all the legacy and succession taxes certified and paid upon successions to the individual petitioners, respectively, under the will of Augustus Lowell must be abated, and also so much of the legacy and succession taxes certified
The case is remanded to the Probate Court for the entry of an appropriate decree granting abatements in conformity with the principles here stated.
Ordered accordingly.