delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе sole question is whether proceeds of a War Risk Insurance policy payable to a deceased veteran’s widow were properly included in his gross estate undеr a federal estate tax.
The federal estate tax in question 1 included in a decedent’s gross estate the amount in exсess of forty thousand dollars received by “beneficiaries [other than his estate] as insurance under policies taken out by the decedent upon his own life.” This veteran’s totаl life insurance for beneficiaries other than his estate exceeded at death the statutory exemption of forty thousand dollars, if his War Risk Insurance policy payablе to his widow in the sum of ten thousand dollars is included. The Commissioner assessed an estate tax measured by this excess. As decedent’s executor, petitioner claimed that proсeeds of the War Risk Insurance policy could not be included in the estate because of § 22 of the World War Veterans’ Act, 1924, providing that such “insurance . . . shall be exempt from аll taxation.” 2 The Board of Tax Appeals upheld the determination of the Commissioner, and the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 3
But petitioner invokes the provision of the World War Veterans’ Act, 1924, that insurance thereunder “shall be exempt from all taxation.” An amendment to that Act of August 12, 1935
6
provides that “Payments of benefits due or to become due . . . shall be еxempt from taxation . . .” However, this amendment served only to clarify the original provision for exemption, without more.
7
Unless resort is had to enlargement by implication, this exemрtion means only that the proceeds or benefits of a War Risk policy are exеmpt from taxation.
An estate tax is not levied upon the property of which an estate is composed. It is an excise imposed upon the transfer of or shifting in relationshiрs to property at death. 9 The tax here is no less an estate tax because the proceeds of the policy were paid by the Government directly to the benеficiary; the taxing power was nevertheless exercised upon “the transfer of property procured through expenditures by the decedent with the purpose, effected at his death, of having it pass to another.” 10 In an analogous situation, federal bonds еxempt by statute from all taxation have been held subject to a federal inheritanсe tax. 11 And state inheritance taxes can be measured by the value of federal bonds exempted by statute from state taxation in any form. 12 Similarly, the statutory immunity of War Risk Insurance from taxation does not include an immunity from excises upon the occasion of shifts of еconomic interests brought about by the death of an insured.
Petitioner makes the further point that the inclusion of proceeds of the War Risk policy for purposes of an estate tax amounts to'an impairment of the Government’s contract with the insured veteran, in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. But neither the Act of 1924, as amended, nor any of thе provisions of the War Risk Insurance Act purported to exempt War Risk Insurance from dеath duties. Therefore, no statu
Affirmed.
Notes
§ 302 (g) Revenue Act of 1926, as amended.
43 Stat. 607, 613.
See, 44 Stat. 9, 21, 22; 48 Stat. 680, 684, 754.
Treasury Regulation No. 70 (1929 Edition), Articles 25 and 27; Treasury Regulation No. 80, (1934 Edition), Articles 25 and 27.
49 Stat. 607, 609.
Lawrence
v.
Shaw,
Rapid Transit Corp.
v.
New York,
Reinecke
v.
Northern Trust Co.,
Chase National Bank v. United States, supra, 337.
Murdock
v.
Ward,
Plummer
v.
Coler,
