187 Wis. 101 | Wis. | 1925
The counsel for appellants claim that our statute, conclusively presuming that gifts made within six years of the testator’s death are made in contemplation of death, is unconstitutional; but they frankly state they do not desire to offer any argument on the questions that were settled in the cases of Estate of Ebeling, 169 Wis. 432, 172 N. W. 734, and Estate of Schlesinger, 184 Wis. 1, 199 N. W.
It is further claimed that the legislature had no right to assess upon these gifts a rate of taxation that was not in existence at the time they were made; that the assessing of such a rate was retroactive and beyond the power of the legislature. Their argument is based upon the assumption, apparently, that the right to tax accrues at the time the gift is made and not at the time the donor dies, and therefore the inheritance tax rate in existence at the time the gift is made attaches to the gift and is the rate that should be applied. It is said that the tax is upon the right to take title and not upon the property, and therefore the rate in existence at the time title passes governs and not the rate in existence at the time of the death of the donor. In support of this contention
“The transfer of October, 1908, immediately passed to Jesse S. L. Potter the title to the property as of that date. It is settled law that the tax is levied on the transfer of title or on the exercise of the right to transfer the title, including, of course, the right of the transferee to receive it, and not on the property itself; and that while the provision imposing the tax on prior transfers in contemplation of death or with intent that they take effect in enjoyment at death are but safeguards against attempts to evade the tax, the recipient of a present transfer of that character is bound only for the inheritance tax due upon it under the law in force at the time the title passes, and the legislature has no power to raise the rate or increase the tax on such transfer by a subsequent act.” Citing many California cases.
Further on in the opinion it is stated:
“It is also settled that the right to such tax vests in the state at the date of the taxable transfer and that the legislature cannot by subsequent acts reduce the rate of taxation thereon, since to do so would be to make a gift of the property of the state to the extent of the reduction, contrary to sec. 31, art. IV, of the constitution.”
Whatever may be the construction which the California court has put upon its inheritance tax law, it is settled in. this state that the tax attaches not at the date of the transfer of the gift but at the date of the death of the donor. Estate of Stephenson, 171 Wis. 452, 177 N. W. 579; Estate of Schlesinger, 184 Wis. 1, 199 N. W. 951. Under our decisions the gifts that have been made within six years of the donor’s death, together with the amount of the estate left by the donor at the time of his death, constitute his estate and must be administered, so far as inheritance tax proceedings are concerned, as one estate. The tax does not attach and become vested in the state until the death of. the donor. When the gift is made and the donee receives it there is no
By the Court. — The judgment of the county court is affirmed.