140 Minn. 342 | Minn. | 1918
1. This is a writ of certiorari to the probate court of Lyon county to review its judgment determining inheritance taxes in the estate of James W. Williams, deceased. The relators are the widow and the children, two sons and a daughter, of the deceased and are beneficiaries under his will. The only question is whether certain lands, found to be of the value of $46,750, not inventoried, were a part of the decedent’s estate and therefore subject to an inheritance tax. The probate court found that they were and imposed a tax.
The decedent died on January 31, 1917. On January 15, 1915, he signed and acknowledged a deed of these lands which purported to create a trust for his grandchildren then living or thereafter born. He and his two sons were the grantees and were charged with the carrying out of the trust. The probate court found that this deed was not delivered. If not delivered the lands were a part of the decedent’s e*state and subject to the inheritance tax.
Whether a deed is delivered is a question of intent and usually one of fact, and delivery may be evidenced by words alone or acts alone or by words and acts. Dunnell, Minn. Dig. & 1916 Supp. § 3664, et seq. The evidence upon the question of delivery is meager. The deed was not re
2. The relators contend that the probate court had no jurisdiction to determine the question of title.
The Constitution gives to the probate court "jurisdiction over the estates of deceased persons and persons under guardianship, but no other jurisdiction, except as prescribed by this Constitution.” Const, art. 6, § 7. It has no general equity or common law jurisdiction such as is confided by the Constitution in the district court, but for the purpose of the administration of estates of deceased persons it has complete and exclusive jurisdiction which within the limitations of the Constitution is superior and general. Dunnell, Minn. Dig. & 1916 Supp. §§ 7770-7779; Mousseau v. Mousseau, 40 Minn. 236, 41 N. W. 977; State v. Probate
The attorney general proceeded in the probate court to subject the lands described in the trust deed to an inheritance tax as omitted property pursuant to G. S. 1913, § 2290. That the ascertainment of the inheritance tax is constitutionally committed to the probate court is not open to question. State v. Probate Court of Hennepin County, 112 Minn. 379, 138 N. W. 18. In ascertaining the tax it incidentally finds the ownership of property in the decedent at his death, for without such ownership there can be no tax. Upon principle it is not open to serious question that it has jurisdiction to do so. See Kleeberg v. Schrader, 69 Minn. 136, 72 N. W. 59; State v. Probate Court of Hennepin County, 113 Minn. 279, 128 N. W. 18; Fiske v. Lawton, 124 Minn. 85, 144 N. W. 455. It is of course true that the probate court has no independent jurisdiction of contested claims or title to real property asserted by those claiming by will or descent against strangers to the estate or asserted by such strangers against those claiming by will or descent. Odenbreit v. Utheim, 131 Minn. 56, 154 N. W. 741, L.R.A. 1916D, 421, and cases cited. Such jurisdiction resides in the district court. In the trust deed before us there are those interested who are not so far as appears interested in the probate proceeding and over whom the probate court has no jurisdiction. We are not concerned with them. The rights arising under the trust deed not haring been adjudicated in a court of competent general jurisdiction, there being no judgment binding the estate or those taking through the decedent, and no action pending looking to an ádjudication of them, the probate court, in the exercise of its jurisdiction to determine and impose inheritance taxes, has jurisdiction to make the necessary though incidental determination of ownership.
We are not to be understood as holding that the probate court could with propriety proceed to the determination of the fact of ownership if an appropriate action with proper parties, involving the effect and validity of the deed, were pending in the district court, nor that it could find the fact of ownership contrary to a judgment of the district court, nor that the state, in asserting a tax, would not be bound by such judgment though
Whether the deed, if delivered, created a valid trust is not of present-interest.
Judgment affirmed.