DocketNumber: No. 195-57
Citation Numbers: 149 Ct. Cl. 735
Judges: Bet, Jones, Laramore, Littleton, Madden, Omef, Whitaker
Filed Date: 5/4/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs are the executors of the estate of Eichard N. Eyan. They overpaid the Federal estate taxes on his estate and, in due course, the overpayment, which amounted to $255,160.94, was refunded to them. Interest was paid them on $93,893.03 of the amount refunded, but no interest was paid on the other $161,267.91 of the refund. The instant suit is for interest on the latter sum.
The Government’s refusal to pay the interest in question was based on section 813(b) of the Internal Eevenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C. (1952 ed.) § 813(b). That section provides for a credit, up to a specified maximum, upon a Federal estate tax, of the amount of inheritance or similar taxes paid to a State. It provides that an estate may obtain a refund based on the credit, if it claims the refund within a specified period. And it says, “Any such refund shall be made without interest.” The Government says that $161,-267.91 of the refund here involved was “based on” the credit which the estate received because it had paid inheritance taxes to the State of New York. The plaintiffs say that all of the refund was based on adjustments not related to section 813 (b).
There was delay in determining the amount of the Federal tax, as well as of the State tax, because of the decedent’s widow’s taking against the will, and because of the effect which such taking had upon the marital deduction, which latter point was important in determining the amount of the Federal tax.
When, in 1957, all problems had been resolved, it was found, as we have seen, that the plaintiffs were entitled to a refund of $255,160.94. The reason they were entitled to a refund in this amount was that the Commissioner of Internal Eevenue, upon review, increased the valuation of the assets of the estate by some $180,000, but increased the amount of the deductions by some $700,000, principally by allowing a marital deduction of $578,281.34. The refund, which was $255,160.94, would have been still larger, by $47,093.60, had it not been for the fact that the plaintiffs, in their return, had taken a credit of $208,361.51 for State inheritance taxes, when as the final computation showed, they were entitled to a credit of only $161,267.91.
On the foregoing facts, the Government says that $161,-267.91 of the $255,160.94 refund .must be without interest
The Government urges that there should be no “earmarking” of items in the computation of estate taxes; that all items go into the computing machine and the answer comes out, either an overpayment or a deficit. It would seem, however, that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue did earmark the items in the computation, and earmarked the State inheritance tax credit item as the one which accounted for most of the refund. We think that section 813(b), making the no-interest rule for refunds “based on” the State inheritance tax credit, requires earmarking, if the words “based on” are to have any meaning. And we think that no part of a refund is “based on” a specified credit when the taxpayer, in his return, has already taken a larger credit than he was entitled to take.
The plaintiffs in their brief say that, under the Government’s view, any refund, up to the amount of the State inheritance tax credit, would be “based on” the credit, and only the excess would be “based on” adjustments in the valuation of the estate, the deductions, and other factors which go into the final computation of the tax. The Government says in its brief, “We do not take exception to this statement.” It goes on to justify its position by saying that that is what section 813 (b) requires. If we thought so, we would of course decide accordingly.
In Fahnestock v. United States, 119 Ct. Cl. 41, and J. P. Morgan and Co. v. United States, 136 Ct. Cl. 748, we considered substantially the same problem, and decided that
The plaintiffs are entitled to recover and judgment will be entered to that effect. The amount of recovery will be determined pursuant to Buie 38(c).
It is so ordered.