191 A. 155 | Pa. | 1937
Argued January 11, 1937. Adele G. Tack died in 1934; her will was probated at Philadelphia. The Register of Wills appraised her net estate in the sum of $933,166.06, and assessed the collateral inheritance tax at 10% or $93,316.60. Included among the assets were sixty bonds of $1,000 each issued by the Delaware River Bridge Joint Commission (Philadelphia-Camden 4 1/4% Serial Bridge Bonds due September 1, 1951) appraised at $63,375 with accrued interest of $191.25, or a total of $63,566.25. The executors and the residuary legatees appealed from the appraisement so far as it covered these bonds, but the court below sustained the action of the Register of Wills.
The question involved is whether the bonds of the Delaware River Bridge Joint Commission are subject to the inheritance tax imposed by the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, as amended. They were issued under authority of identical acts of the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, the Pennsylvania statute being that of June 12, 1931, P. L. 575, article XI of which provides inter alia: "the bonds or other securities or obligations issued by the commission, their transfer and the income therefrom (including any profits made on the sale thereof), shall, at all times, be free from taxation within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the State of New Jersey."1 The bonds themselves contained a clause that *547 "It is provided by the Statute of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the Statute of the State of New Jersey that this Bond is exempt from taxation."
The Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, is entitled "An Act Providing for the imposition and collection of certain taxes upon the transfer of property passing from a decedent. . . ." Section 1 imposes a tax "upon the transfer of any property, real or personal, or of any interest therein or income therefrom . . ." in the cases specified in subsequent provisions. Section 45 provides that "The word 'transfer,' as used in this act, shall be taken to include the passing of property, or any interest therein, in possession or enjoyment, present or future, by distribution, by statute, descent, devise, bequest, grant, deed, bargain, sale, or gift."
No question is raised as to the constitutional power of the State of Pennsylvania to exempt these bonds from all forms of taxation, but merely whether the Act of 1931, in exempting their transfer, included thereby an exemption from the inheritance tax provided by the Act of 1919. More specifically, therefore, the inquiry resolves itself into the question: Is the tax imposed by the Act of 1919 a tax on the transfer of the bonds?
At first blush this question would probably be answered in the affirmative because of the express use of the word "transfer" in both the title and the body of the act, and because the statute has generally been referred to as the "Transfer Inheritance Tax Act." But in considering whether the tax imposed by the Act of 1919 is a tax upon the transfer of the bonds the problem is not one of nomenclature but of the real nature of an inheritance tax. A study of the origin of such taxation, and of the cases construing our own legislation over a course of many years, makes it readily apparent that the inheritance tax is not one on the transfer of specific property, as such term is ordinarily understood, but is of an entirely different nature. *548
The right to transmit or to receive property by will or through intestacy is not a natural right but a creature of statutory grant. Students of law agree that the State has the right to declare an escheat of all the property of a decedent, and therefore, as the price of allowing a legatee, devisee or heir to inherit, it may appropriate to itself any portion of the property which it chooses to exact. Whether this appropriation be designated an inheritance tax, an estate tax, a succession tax, a death duty, or otherwise howsoever, it is not, in its essence, a tax on the decedent's property or any component part of it, or on the transaction of transferring it as in the case of a transmission of possession or title inter vivos, but an excise on the privilege of inheritance. It is really not a tax at all in the ordinary meaning of the word, but rather a distributive share of the estate which the State retains for itself. Its true nature is not changed by the fact that it is assessed and measured by the value of the property, or that it is paid by legatees and devisees in proportions allocated to their respective inheritances.
The inheritance tax acts of Pennsylvania, beginning with that of April 7, 1826, P. L. 227, have uniformly been construed from this standpoint. Thus it has been held, for example, that a bond of the United States is properly included in the assessed valuation of an estate for collateral inheritance tax purposes, although the State could not, under our Federal system, tax the bond itself in any manner: Strode v. Commonwealth,
In Orcutt's Appeal,
In Commonwealth v. Herman, 16 W.N.C. 210, part of a decedent's estate consisted of a certificate for $10,000 of a Pennsylvania State loan, the certificate stipulating, in accordance with the provisions of the act under which *550 it was issued, that it was "exempt from taxation for all State, municipal, or local purposes whatever in Pennsylvania." Certainly no exemption could be expressed more comprehensively. Nevertheless the court held, in an able opinion by SADLER, President Judge of the Common Pleas of Cumberland County, that the certificate of loan was subject to the collateral inheritance tax, saying that the State "may properly provide that a portion of the estate should escheat to it and the remainder go to the heir; and the portion which the State reserves or compels the administrator or executor to pay to it, is not a tax upon the specific property, of which decedent may die seised, or which the collateral heirs, legatee or devisee may take, but a tax or duty levied upon the estate as such, which may remain after the debts and expenses of administration are provided for; and in construing its character it is proper to remember that it is connected with and is a part of the legislation of the Commonwealth in reference to the administration and transmission of estates of decedents."
In Finnen's Estate,
In Jackson v. Myers,
In Kirkpatrick's Estate,
In Frick's Estate,
In Shugars v. Chamberlain Amusements Enterprises, Inc.,
The cases in the Supreme Court of the United States analyze the nature of inheritance tax legislation in much the same manner as the courts of our own State. Thus it was held inPlummer v. Coler,
It thus clearly appears that even though the Act of 1919 in its title and enacting clauses designates itself as an act imposing a tax on the "transfer" of property, a closer study reveals that the tax imposed by it is not on the "transfer" of securities as one would ordinarily use that term in connection with stocks or bonds, but is a tax on the succession or right of inheritance of a decedent's estate, the tax being measured by the clear value of the estate determined by appraising the assets of which it is composed and deducting the debts and the costs of administration, the nature of the items constituting the estate being wholly immaterial, so that, as we have seen, even securities of the Federal government, which cannot constitutionally be taxed by a State, as well as bonds which are expressly exempted by the legislation authorizing their issue from all forms of taxation whatever, are nevertheless properly included in the appraisement or assessed value of the decedent's estate upon which the amount of the inheritance tax is computed. Therefore, and in view of the well-known principle that exemptions from taxation must be strictly construed, it cannot be held that the legislature, in the Act of 1931, intended by the word "transfer" to give to the Delaware River Bridge bonds an immunity from inheritance taxation under the Act of 1919. Had it intended *554 to grant so unique an exemption, it would no doubt have used less ambiguous language.
The decree of the court below is affirmed; costs to be paid by appellants.