Is property, passing by will of a resident of this State, or by the interstate laws thereof, to foreign religious corporations, liable for inheritance tax?
The exemption clause of the inheritance tax law is found in Public Laws 1925, ch. 101, sub-sec. 3, and is as follows: "Provided, that no tax be imposed or collected under this section on legacies or property passing by will or otherwise, or by the laws of this State to religious, educational or charitable corporations (not conducted for profit) in this State, and this provision shall apply to all such legacies or property passing by will or by the laws of this State since 12 March, 1913.”
The plaintiffs contend that the “religious, educational or charitable corporations (not conducted for profit) in this State” refer to corporations operating in this State irrespective of the domicile of such corporations. “It is a well-established general rule that exemptions from taxation are to be strictly construed, and that no claim of exemption can be sustained, unless within the express letter or necessary scope of the exempting clause.” In re Hickok’s Est., 62 Atlantic, 724. In Hickok’s case, supra, the Vermont statute exempted from its operation *606 property passing “to or for. charitable, educational or religious societies or institutions, the property of which is exempt by law from taxation.” The legacies in that case passed to institutions incorporated in the states of Massachusetts, New York, Virginia and Illinois, and were, therefore, foreign corporations. The tax commissioner of Vermont held that foreign corporations were not within the exemption and the validity of the tax was upheld.
In
Humphreys v. State,
In re Lyon’s Estate, 128 N. Y. St., 1004, a gift was made to the American Baptist Missionary Union (Boston, Mass.). This corporation was a foreign corporation but had domesticated in New York, and the Court held that the legacy was not subject to the tax.
In Alfred University v. Hancock, 46 Atlantic, 178, the Court said: “The overwhelming weight of authority is that where the Legislature grants exemption from such a tax to corporations or organizations, it includes in the exemption only domestic corporations and organizations.”
The reason underlying the authorities is thus stated in
Matter of Estate of Prime,
The courts of California and Kentucky have held that bequests to foreign, educational, or religious corporations are not subject to inheritance tax.
In re Estate of Marie Antoinette Fiske v. Princeton University, there was a legacy to the Princeton University, Cheshire Public Library and Cheshire Cemetery. The Court held that the legacy was not subject to inheritance tax. The California statute, under which the exemption was claimed, is referred to in the opinion. The statute is very broad and comprehensive. Indeed, Wilbur, J., speaking for the Court, says:
*607 “Our attention is not called to any law which, is as broad and comprehensive in its scheme o£ exemption as our statute.”
In case of
Sage’s Executors v. Commonwealth,
In ease of
Bingham's Administrator v. Commonwealth,
The divergence of decision in the courts grows out of the construction of the various statutes applicable to the question. The North Carolina statute provides that no tax shall be imposed or collected on legacies passing to educational or charitable corporations “in-this State.” The words “in this State” must be construed in connection with the words “religious, educational or charitable corporations” in the sense of designating and specifying the institutions that the Legislature had in mind.. In other words, the corporations referred to, falling within the exemption, are the corporations of this State, for the reason that our own institutions were the immediate objects of legislative solicitude in granting exemptions from inheritance tax.
¥e therefore hold that the legacies involved in this controversy are subject to inheritance tax, and the judgment is upheld.
Affirmed.
