147 S.E. 876 | W. Va. | 1929
This appeal is prosecuted by the State Tax Commissioner from an order of the circuit court of Marion county setting aside an inheritance tax assessment.
The only asset of the estate involved in this proceeding is the sum of $6,640.00, the commuted value of a war risk insurance policy for $10,000.00, issued to Patrick V. Talbott, who died in November, 1918, intestate, unmarried and without *203 issue, leaving surviving him a mother, three sisters and five brothers. Under the terms of the policy, the sum of $57.50 per month was paid to the mother until her death, March 4, 1927. After that date the government paid over the then present value of the remaining installments, amounting to $6,640.00, to Harry E. Watkins, as administrator of the estate of the deceased soldier.
The insurance contract was a part of the federal government's war policy. It was, by its own terms, and the statute providing therefor, subject to future acts of Congress. By virtue of section 28, added to the act of Congress of 1914, as amended in 1917, effective June 25, 1918, and re-enacted in the World War Veterans' Act, 43 Stats. at L. 607, 613, c. 320, sec. 22, June 7, 1924 (38 USCA Sec. 454), it was provided, in substance, that insurance payable under such contract shall not be assignable, shall not be subject to the claims of creditors, and shall be exempt from all taxation.
At the time of the death of the insured's mother the World War Veterans' Act of 1924, as amended in 1925, provided: "If the designated beneficiary does not survive the insured, or survives the insured and dies prior to receiving all of the two hundred and forty installments or all such as are payable and applicable, there shall be paid to the estate of the insuredthe present value of the monthly installments thereafterpayable, said value to be computed as of the date of last payment made under any existing award. * * * In cases when the estate of an assured would escheat under the laws of the place of his residence the insurance shall not be paid to the estate but shall escheat to the United States and be credited to the military and naval insurance appropriation. This section shall be deemed to be in effect as of October 6, 1927." 43 Stats. at L. 1302, 1310, c. 553, sec. 14, Act March 4, 1925 (38 USCA Sec. 514).
The tax commissioner takes the position that once the amount has been paid to the administrator of the insured it becomes subject to the tax laws of the state, and that the distribution thereof by the administrator to the several distributees constitutes transfer in contemplation of chapter 33, Code; in other words, that the process through which the *204 fund passes from the government to the beneficiaries of the estate constitutes two transfers — one from the government to the administrator and the other from the administrator to the beneficiaries of the estate. On the other hand, the appellees contend that it constitutes but one transfer; that the administrator is merely a conduit through whom the fund passes to the beneficiaries.
In the case of In re Geier,
The Supreme Court of Appeals of Ohio, in the case of TaxCommission of Ohio v. Rife,
It being apparent that the brothers and sisters take as beneficiaries under the contract of insurance, that the intestate laws of this State have been set in motion for the purpose of carrying out certain provisions of a war measure in regard thereto, and that the terms of said war measure expressly exempts from all taxation insurance payable thereunder, the decree of the lower court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.