State v. Dalrymple

70 Md. 294 | Md. | 1889

McSherry, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William H. Dalrymple, a resident of California, died there on the twenty-second of November, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, leaving a last will and testament executed according to the laws of that State. By his will he bequeathed all his personal property to one Marie E. Hatch, now Marie E. Gamble, also of California. She was not the mother, the wife, the child nor lineal descendant of the testator. The will was duly admitted to probate in the Probate Court of the decedent’s domicile, and letters of administration were there granted with the Avill annexed to Peter Alferitz. Subsequently a certified transcript of said will and probate was admitted by the Register of Wills of Baltimore City to record and was recorded in his office. Thereafter letters of administration with the will annexed, Avere issued by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City to the appellees. When William H. Dalrymple died he was entitled to a one-fourth undivided part of the personal estate of his brother, Edwin A. Dalrymple, a resident of the State of Maryland, who died in the City of Baltimore in October eighteen hundred and eighty-one, some three Aveeks prior to the decease of William. Upon the settlement of Edwin’s estate the appellees received, as administrators of William’s estate, sundry certificates of National Bank stock and Baltimore City stock, several Missouri State bonds and cash, aggregating, at the appraised value of the securities, the sum of $27,387.87; Avhich was diminished by the payment of costs and expenses to the sum of $21,449.21; but the accretions from dividends and interest have since increased this latter amount to the sum of $27,320.77, which the appellees noAv hold ready for delivery to the said Mrs. Gamble — the legatee named in William’s Avill. Upon this sum the State of Maryland claims that the appellees owe to the State the collateral inheritance *298tax of two and one-half per cent, imposed hy sec. 102, of Art. 81 of the Code of 1888. Suit was brought by the State against the appellees for the recovery of this tax. To the declaration, which sets forth in detail the facts we have just outlined, the appellees demurred, and the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore sustained the demurrer and entered judgment thereon against the State. From that judgment this appeal has "been taken.

The statute imposing this tax is in these words: “All estates, real, personal and mixed, money, public and private securities for money of every kind passing from any person who may die seized and possessed thereof, being in this State, ****** to any person or persons, bodies politic or corporate, in trust or otherwise, other than to or for the use of the father, mother, husband, wife, children and lineal descendants of the grantor * * * shall he subject to a tax of two and a half per centum on every hundred dollars of the clear value of such estate, money or securities I*C > >

It has been settled by this Court in Tyson, et al. vs. State, 28 Md., 577, that such a tax is free from any constitutional objection. There can he no doubt that the Legislature has the power to impose it, not only where it affects citizens of the State, but ajso where non-residents or aliens claim by inheritance or by will property located here. Every State in the Ljnion, in the absence of a constitutional prohibition, has the authority to regulate by law the devolution a^nd the distribution of an intestate’s property situated within the jurisdiction of that State, and personal property situated elsewhere but owned by a resident, and ¡to prescribe who. shall and who shall not be capable of ¡taking it. It seems scarcely necessary to cite authorities in support of these indisputable pro}3ositions, but wfe refer *299to Mager vs. Grima, 8 How., 490, and Eyre vs. Jacob, 14 Gratt., 422. We may add that our statutes abolishing primogeniture and directing the descent of real estate, and those regulating the distribution of personal property, and respectively designating who shall inherit the one and who shall take the other, and former enactments now repealed, prohibiting aliens from acquiring property in this State, except upon compliance with the conditions imposed,,are instances of the exercise of the same power.

Possessing, then, the plenary power indicated, it necessarily follows that the State in allowing property actually located here, or personal property situated elsewhere but owned by a resident, to be disposed of by will, and in designating who shall take such property where there is no will, may prescribe such conditions, not in conflict with or forbidden by the organic law, as the Legislature may deem expedient. These conditions, subject to the limitation named, are, conseqirently, wholly within the discretion of the General Assembly. The Act we are now considering plainly intended to require that a person taking the benefit of a civil right secured to him under our laws should pay a certain premium for its enjoyment. In other words, one of the conditions upon which strangers and collateral kindred may acquire a decedent’s property, which is subject to the dominion of our laws, is, that there shall be jtaid out of such property a tax of two and a half per cent, into the treasury of the State. This, therefore, is not a tax upon the property itself, but is merely the price exacted by the State for the privilege accorded in permitting property so situated, to be transmitted by will or by descent or distribution.

That this is so, is abundantly clear from the language of the statute and its several provisions. The whole contention of the appellees is, that the words *300used in the Act of Assembly, viz., “being in this State” refer to the decedent and not to the property. If it be true that they do refer to the person, the tax is not collectible because William H. Dalrymple was a citizen of California, was domiciled there and died there. If, on the other hand, they apply to the property, the tax is collectible because the property is actually within this State, and was so at the time of William H. Dalrymple’s death. A careful examination of the several sections of Art. 81 of the Code, relating to this subject, has brought us to the conclusion that the tax is payable out of the estate of a deceased non-resident when property own'ed by him is actually within this State; and that it is payable out of the estate of a deceased resident when his property is actually, or in legal contemplation, situated here; provided, of course, in both instances the property passes to a person other than the father, mother, husband, wife, children or lineal descendants of the decedent. We have already quoted from sec. 102. Sec. 103, makes it the duty of an executor or administrator before be pays any legacy or distributes the shares of an estate liable to the tax, to pay this tax to the register of wills of the proper county. By sec. 104 unless he pays this tax within thirteen months from the date of administration his letters are forfeited. Secs. 106 to and including 114, relate to the appraisement of real estate subject to the tax, and provide the manner and appoint the time of collecting and enforcing it. Sec. 120, declares that where any estate, real, personal or mixed shall be subject to the tax and no administration is taken out on the estate of the person who died seized and possessed thereof, within ninety days after the death of such person, the Orphans’ Court of the county where such administration should be granted shall issue a summons to the parties entitled to administer, to show *301cause wherefore they do not administer. 8ec. 121 provides that if the parties entitled to administer do not administer within a reasonable time, or if they be incapable, or being capable, if they decline or refuse to appear on proper summons and notice, administration may be granted to such person as the Court may deem proper.

It is thus quite apparent that the whole scheme of the law looks to and contemplates the collection of the tax through an executor or administrator exercising authority under the laws of this State, and answerable to those laws for the faithful performance of his duties. Ample provision is made for every possible contingency that may arise, whether the decedent be a resident of this State or not, provided the property be located here if he be a non-resident, or be actually or constructively here, if he be a resident. No estate can escape administration if the law be enforced, and when the property passes into the hands of the executor or administrator his obligation to pay the tax is fixed and his bond at once becomes liable therefor.

The tax, we have said, is on the transmission of the property “being in the State,” and no reason has been assigned or can he suggested why the broad language of the statute and the evident design of the Legislature should he so narrowed and restricted as to exempt from this tax the property of a non-resident actually here, notwithstanding that same property may, for other purposes, be treated as constructively elsewhere. If we adopt the view insisted on by the appellees it would result in a discrimination in favor of the non-resident and against our own citizens, a discrimination, too, which the Legislature certainly never intended to make, and for which no warrant whatever can be found in the plain letter of the statute. In permitting property within the State, upon the death of its owner, to *302pass by devise or descent or distribution, the Legisla- • ture has seen fit, where strangers or collateral kindred receive it, to exact, as the condition upon which that privilege is granted, the tax in question. The imposition and collection of the tax cannot, therefore, depend upon the mere accidental residence of the owner.

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in construing a . very similar statute of that State held, that the words “being within this Commonwealth” had reference to the property and not to the person of the decedent. Comomnwealth vs. Smith, 5 Pa. St., 142; In re Short’s Estate, 16 Pa. St., 63. It is true in Smith’s case the Court held the tax to be a tax on the property within the State; and the result of that construction (as stated by Chief Justice Gibson in Short’s case) was, that personal property actually beyond the State, though owned by a resident of the State, would have escaped the tax'had not a subsequent statute expressly made it liable. We cite these cases merely to show that the words “being in this State” have not in a similar statute been considered as referring to the person of the decedent.

The case of Citizens Nat. Bank vs. Sharp, Adm’r, 53 Md. 521, relied on by the learned Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, is distinguishable from the one at bar. The question involved there, as stated by the late C. J. Bartol, who delivered the opinion of this Court, was, “what is the effect of a voluntary payment by a debtor in this State to the executor or administrator of his creditor, appointed in another State in which the creditor had his domicile at the time of his death, where such payment has been made before any administration has been granted in Maryland; and is such payment a bar to the claim of the domestic administrator afterwards appointed?” And it was held that a payment so made was a complete discharge *303of the debt, and that the validity of the payment did not in any manner depend upon the fact of the nonexistence of debts against the deceased in this State. Having thus decided the only question involved in the cause, the opinion proceeded to state that “if the question of the existence of debts in Maryland were important, it does not appear that there are any debts here to pay for which the funds in dispute are liable. * * * * No collateral inheritance tax thereon is payable in this State.” The domestic administrator never received the money and no demand was made upon him by the State for the payment of the tax. The liability’- of the estate of the non-resident testatrix to pay the collateral inheritance tax was therefore not involved in Sharp’s case in any way, and could not, and did not iniluence or control the determination of the only question which was before the Court on that appeal. In the case now before us the property is in the hands of the Maryland administrators under the laws of this State. Those laws have been invoked to enable them to receive it and their bond, under the express terms of the statute, is liable for the payment of the tax. Orcutt’s Appeal, 97 Pa. St., 179, is not analogous to the case before us. There a resident of New Jersey had deposited with a Philadelphia trust company, for safe-keeping, certain United States bonds. He died in New Jersey, where administration on his estate was duly granted. The’trust company declined to surrender these bonds to the New Jersey executor unless ancillary letters should be taken out in Pennsylvania. These letters were accordingly taken out, the bonds were received from the trust company and being over-due were collected; and thereupon the collateral inheritance tax was demanded and the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia directed it to be paid. This order was reversed upon appeal. It is obvious the bonds had no *304situs different from the domicile of their owner. They were “simply evidences of indebtedness, not by any person or corporation within the Commonwealth, hut by the general government * * * *. The testator intrusted the bonds temporarily, for safe-keeping, to the Fidelity Company, hut they were constructively at least, in his possession at the time of his decease.” In the case at bar the property is actually in this State. It belonged to Edwin A. Dalrymple, who was, at the time of his death, a resident of Maryland. Upon his decease his brother William became entitled to it. It is still here in Maryland and the larger portion of it is invested in the very same stocks and securities which Edwin held in his life-time.

We have no difficulty in distinguishing between this and the English cases. In those cases the several Acts of Parliament imposing probate, legacy and succession duties underwent construction. In England the question of probate duty depends upon the situs of the property and not the domicile of the owner. Attorney-General vs. Hope, 1 Cromp., Mes. & Ros., 530. It was for some time held that the legacy duty imposed by 36 Geo. III, ch. 52, and 48 Geo. III, ch. 149, depended upon the same consideration. Attorney-General vs. Cockerill, 1 Price, 165; Same vs. Beatson, 7 Price, 560. But these cases were overruled in Thomson vs. Advocate-General, 12 Clark & Fin., 1; and the principle was settled that the law of the domicile of the owner of personal property determines its liability to legacy duty. The same rule was adopted in respect to the succession duty under 16 & 17 Vic., ch. 51. Wallace vs. Attorney-General, L. R., 1 Ch. App. C., 1. In the case last referred to, Lord Chancellor Cbanwortií said, “ Parliament has, no doubt, the power of taxing the succession of foreigners to their personal property in this country; but I can hardly think we ought to pre*305sume such au intention unless it is clearly stated.” Thus whilst the power of Parliament to impose the tax without reference at all to th^ subject of domicile is distinctly recognized; it was held that the language of the Acts did not furnish any indication of an intention to exercise that power, and that, therefore, the law of the domicile of the owner fixed the liability of his property to pay these taxes. In our opinion, for the reasons we have given, the Maryland statute cannot be so construed.

(Decided 1st March, 1889.)

It results from what we have said, that the tax is payable in this case, and the amount of the tax will depend upon the sum in the hands of the appellees payable to the legatee.

The judgment of the Court of Common Pleas must therefore be reversed, and a new trial will be awarded.

Judgment reversed, and new tried awarded.

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