33 Haw. 594 | Haw. | 1935
This cause comes before us by submission on an agreed statement of facts entered into between Edith Thomson and Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, trustees, and William C. McGonagle, treasurer of the Territory of Hawaii, who is also collector of inheritance taxes in the Territory. The facts, over which there is no controversy, may be summarized as follows: James Buchanan Thomson, a resident and citizen of the Territory of Hawaii, died at Honolulu on September 23, 1932, and left surviving him his widow Edith Thomson, one of the trustees above named, and two adult children, namely, Douglas Buchanan Thomson and Edith Thomson, all of whom were also residents and citizens of Hawaii. The estate of James Buchanan Thomson, deceased, was at the time of his death insolvent, the indebtedness, including expenses of administration, exceeding the value of the assets by approximately $30,000. Prior to May 19, 1930, Mr. Thomson had taken out a number of policies of insurance on his life, the same being payable in event of death to Edith Thomson, his wife. On the last-named date he executed a life insurance trust agreement naming his wife and the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, as trustees and at the same time caused the beneficiary of some of his life insurance policies to be changed so that in the event of his death they would be payable to the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, as corporate trustee under the life insurance trust agreement. By the provisions of the trust agreement the corporate trustee was required to collect the proceeds payable on the policies following the death of insured and the trustees were directed to invest and reinvest the proceeds and to use the income and principal for the benefit of the widow and children of the insured. The insured reserved the right during his lifetime to change the beneficiary of the policies which were made payable to the corporate trustee. He also reserved the right to terminate the trust and revoke the transfer of the policies. *596 The insured paid all premiums due under the policies prior to his death.
Concurrently with the execution of the trust agreement the deceased also executed his last will and testament disposing of the property of his estate in the same manner provided for in the trust instrument. This fact is of slight, if any, importance because the entire estate devised was required to meet the estate obligations, hence the sole property, subject to an inheritance tax, if any, is the net estate received by the trustee.
After the death of Mr. Thomson the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, as corporate trustee realized from the policies so held by it in its trust capacity as aforesaid the sum of $67,456.73, which amount thus became the original corpus of the trust property, but because of certain proper deductions the net amount of the estate, if any, subject to territorial inheritance tax, is the sum of $51,438.68 and the amount of the inheritance tax thereon would be $586.78. The sole question, therefore, presented by the submission is: Are the proceeds of the policies on the life of Mr. Thomson, which after his death were paid to the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, as trustee under said life insurance trust agreement, properly included in the estate of Thomson for inheritance tax purposes and subject to inheritance tax under the laws of Hawaii? Section 2060, R.L. 1935, provides in part as follows: "All property which shall pass by will or by the intestate laws of the Territory, from any person who may die seized or possessed of the same while a resident of the Territory, or which, being within the Territory, shall pass, whether by the laws of the Territory or otherwise, from any person who may so die while not a resident of the Territory, or which or any interest in or income from which, shall be transferred by deed, grant, sale or gift, made in contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor, or bargainer, *597 or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment after such death, to any person or persons, * * * shall be and is subject to a tax, * * * and such tax shall be and remain a lien upon the property passed or transferred until paid, and all administrators, executors, and trustees of every estate so transferred and the person to whom the property passes or is transferred or passed shall be liable for any and all such taxes until the same shall have been paid as hereinafter directed."
We deem it unnecessary to decide whether or not the transfer in question was made in contemplation of death. The one question is: Did the deceased, having the power to do so, transfer the property in question by deed, grant, sale or gift intending that the possession or enjoyment thereof by the grantees should take effect after his death, or in other words, was the sum of $51,438.68 transferred by Thomson to his widow and children through the medium of a trustee with intent that they should possess or enjoy the property subsequently to his demise? The answer will be determinative of the issues of law involved here.
Counsel for the trustees argue that in making the policies payable to a trustee under the trust agreement the insured did not transfer the proceeds of the policies which ultimately were realized from the policies because at the date of the trust instrument he did not own the fund and possessed no right thereto which he could transfer within the purview of the inheritance tax statute.
The decisions of the state courts on the subject are in hopeless disagreement. Were we to adopt the doctrine announced by the courts of New York in In re Haedrich's Estate, 236 N.Y.S. 395, and In re Voorhees' Estate, 193 N.Y.S. 168, we would necessarily sustain the position of the trustees. If, on the other hand, we follow the rule laid down by the supreme court of New Jersey in Fagan v. *598 Bugbee,
The Supreme Court of the United States in Chase National Bank
v. United States,
It is conceded by both parties that where the proceeds of a life insurance policy are made payable to a beneficiary designated in the policy of insurance and the beneficiary takes under the terms of the contract of insurance the fund is not subject to inheritance tax under the local statute. It is likewise conceded that where the policy is made payable to decedent's estate, executors, administrators or legal representatives and passes under the provisions of his last will and testament or under the intestate laws of the Territory the inheritance is taxable. It must also be admitted that an inheritance tax is likewise payable under section 2060, R.L. 1935, on all property which shall be transferred to any person or persons in trust or otherwise by deed, grant, sale or gift intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment after the death of the donor. The transfer in the present case was consummated through the medium of an inter vivos agreement. It is immaterial that by the terms of the grant the trustee acquired the legal title to the property. It is clear that the equitable title and the beneficial use passed, upon the death of the donor, to his widow and children and they immediately became entitled to the enjoyment thereof.
Our attention has been directed to the recent decision of the supreme court of the State of Washington in In Re Killien'sEstate,
We therefore conclude that the property in question is subject to an inheritance tax under the provisions of the Hawaii statute. Judgment will be entered accordingly.