Judges: Pkentice, Prentice, Thayer, Rorabace, Beach, Bennett
Filed Date: 3/5/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In the absence of provision to the contrary in the testatrix's will, it would be the duty of the executors to deduct from the amount of the several legacies the amount of the inheritance tax properly *Page 193 chargeable to each legacy respectively, and pay over to each legatee the balance.
Our Act "does not provide for the taxation of any property left by a decedent, nor of any person interested in his estate." Hopkins' Appeal,
It is, however, competent for a testator to make a gift which shall not be subject to diminution by reason of a succession tax payment. The controlling consideration here, as everywhere, in the construction of wills, is the expressed intent of the testator. As the practical effect of a provision making a legacy or devise free of tax is to increase the gift, and to shift the burden which the legacy or devise would ordinarily bear on to the shoulders of the residuary beneficiaries, the intent of the testator to make such a gift will not be drawn from vague or uncertain language. It must clearly appear.In re Horter's Estate, 1 Pearson (Pa.) 424, 426; Dos Passos on Inheritance Tax Law (2d Ed.) § 61.
That portion of Mrs. Sherman's will which is chiefly relied upon as indicative of an intent on her part that the legacies in question should be paid free of tax is *Page 194 the twenty-third paragraph. We find it impossible to gather from its language, whether read by itself or in the light of surrounding circumstances, the conviction that she had any thought in mind of succession taxes, or intent to make the legacies free of them. If the purpose of the paragraph was to provide for their payment out of the residue, a few simple words would have sufficed, and it is inconceivable that an experienced draftsman, such as manifestly prepared the instrument, would have resorted to the language employed. If its purpose was to secure that and priority of gift, a few additional words would have made that purpose clear, and their omission is difficult to explain. The language used points unmistakably to a purpose to give to the preceding legacies a priority of standing over those that followed, so that the former should, in any event, be paid without diminution by reason of the existence of the latter. This purpose is emphasized at each step of the provision. The former legacies were to be paid before any of the latter, and "to the exclusion of those hereinafter made if my estate should not be sufficient to pay all of the devises, legacies and bequests aforesaid in full." Priority is here the prevailing idea, and the reference to the possibility of an insufficiency of an estate to satisfy all the testatrix's benefactions is too significant to be ignored. The reasons actuating the testatrix to desire this priority are sufficiently apparent from the different relations which the favored legatees bore to her from those borne by the beneficiaries later named.
It is said that the volume of her estate was such that there was no occasion for her provision for such insufficiency, so that she must have had some other purpose in mind than the security of full payment of the first class of legacies in precedence over the second, but the palpable fact remains that she did provide for that *Page 195 contingency, and the paragraph must be read in the light of that fact.
She provided for payment "in full" of the preceding legacies, and it is urged that this imports a payment free of tax. It is evident from the context, as we have analyzed it, that what she had in mind and intended was payment without diminution by reason of subsequent gifts. It was her manner of expressing the desired priority, further elaborated and defined by the immediately following words. Beyond this the imposition of the tax would not operate to reduce the legacies. It would only reduce the amount received in hand by the legatees. Turner v. Mullineux, 1 Johns. Hem. 334, 335. The legacies would be paid in full in so far as the estate was concerned even if the State did impose its burdens upon them, and exact its toll before passing them over to the beneficiaries. Matterof Estate of Swift,
A provision in the residuary clause of the first codicil, whereby the estate given to the residuary legatees is described as that which remains "after the payment of all charges, debts and the particular bequests in my said will and this codicil thereto," is pointed out as indicating that by the use of the word "charges" it was intended that the inheritance taxes in question were to be paid from the estate as such. This argument would seem to include those levied upon the legacies contained in the twenty-fourth paragraph, as well as upon those in paragraphs preceding the twenty-third, thus bringing all the specific legacies upon a common ground in this respect. But that matter aside, it is manifest that by "charges" was meant only those against the estate, such as funeral expenses and expenses of settlement, or in other words, all those charges which, in addition to debts, would be deducted from the gross *Page 196 assets in the determination of the amount for distribution to beneficiaries, upon which alone inheritance taxes are laid.
The Superior Court is advised that the executors should pay the cash legacies in question, after deducting from each the amount of inheritance tax chargeable to it under the laws of the State, and that such amounts are not payable out of the residuary estate.
No costs in this court will be taxed in favor of any of the parties.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.