DocketNumber: No. 33,958.
Judges: YOUNGDAHL, JUSTICE.
Filed Date: 3/29/1945
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/15/2017
The facts were stipulated and may be thus summarized: John Fiske Raynolds died November 3, 1941, leaving an estate in personal property inventoried at $92,235.48. Valeria B. Raynolds, surviving spouse, is the sole legatee. Raynolds' mother, Virginia Adelia Raynolds, died on February 1, 1939. There was transferred to him from the estate of his mother personal property in the form of cash and securities of the appraised value of $87,639.60. In the mother's estate, an inheritance tax was paid upon the assets here involved of inventoried value of $39,866.88. The stipulation provides that these assets are traceable to the estate of the mother. "Traceable" is defined in the stipulation as follows:
"* * * 'traceable,' as used in the foregoing sentence, means that said assets were acquired (a) with cash distributed from the Mother's estate or (b) with proceeds realized upon the disposition by Decedent of non-cash assets of the Mother's estate, distributed to Decedent, or (c) with proceeds realized upon the disposition of other such 'traceable' assets:" *Page 451
A number of specific items of personal property which were assets in the mother's estate were transferred to the decedent by decree of distribution. They were taxed in the mother's estate and were clearly exempt, but assets totaling $39,866.88 appeared in the decedent's estate and not in the mother's estate. They were acquired by decedent either with cash distributed from the mother's estate or with proceeds realized from other assets which could be traced back to the mother's estate. The issue of law presented to the court below was whether the property, to be exempt, had to be identified as the specific property coming from the prior estate, or whether the exemption included property which, as in the instant case, could be traced to the prior estate. The court determined that the legislature intended to exempt property if it could be traced to the prior estate, and the correctness of that interpretation is challenged upon this appeal.
That part of §
"Where property is transferred to any person described in section
A child and wife are both within the class of persons described in clause (1) of §
By this statute, the legislature intended to exempt from inheritance tax transfers between members of the class designated, in which a beneficiary of a decedent's estate died within five years from the date of the first transfer, provided the property is properly identified as having been transferred from the prior decedent. The burden is on the exemption claimant to bring himself within the statute. Annotation, 114 A.L.R. 1306. To justify the exemption, *Page 452 three things must be established: (1) The property must be transferred within five years prior to the death of decedent to the person within the class; (2) the inheritance tax must be paid in behalf of the prior decedent; (3) property must be identified as having been received from the prior decedent. In the instant case, the parties are in agreement that the first two requirements have been met. Decedent died within five years of his mother; property of the first estate passed from the mother to the son, and property of the second estate passed from the husband to the wife, and an inheritance tax was paid in the mother's estate. The parties also agree that certain assets having an aggregate appraised value of $39,866.88 are traceable to the mother's estate and are the product of proceeds realized from that estate. We are confronted, therefore, with the narrow issue whether the statute permits tracing of property to the prior estate or requires identification of the exact property distributed therein.
This statute was enacted in 1939 as a part of L. 1939, c. 338. Although identical language is not used, the state law was apparently patterned after the federal statute, Internal Revenue Code, § 812(c), which came into being in 1918 as § 403(a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1918,
"* * * Realizing that, unless avoided by legislative provision, the same or substantially the same estate would be twice taxed *Page 453 when two deaths occur successively within a short time, the Congress enacted the provisions in question with the general purpose or intention to avoid the hardship and inequity of double taxation."
It has been held by the federal courts that the right to a deduction is not restricted to the first transaction wherein there is a substitution of property for the precise property first received. The number of exchanges has been held immaterial as long as the property can be clearly identified as acquired by means of prior taxed property. Rodenbough v. United States (3 Cir.)
Appellant argues that, because the federal statute specifically provides that the exemption shall apply to exchanges of property and the state law is silent on the subject, it indicates an intent of the legislature to restrict the exemption to specific property which can be identified. He contends further that, in order to justify tracing, it is necessary to read into the act language which the legislature purposely omitted, and that, applying the rule of strict construction which is required before an exemption is permitted, the exemption is not authorized under the statute. Appellant presents a strong and persuasive argument in support of this contention, and the issue has not been easy of solution. It is true that courts cannot make exceptions and limitations which the statute does not warrant. Sandwich Mfg. Co. v. Zellmer,
"* * * 'canons of construction are not the masters of the courts, but merely their servants, to aid them in ascertaining the legislative intent'; and when it is ascertained the statute must be so construed as to give effect to such intention, even if it seem contrary to such rules and the strict letter of the statute." Winters v. City of Duluth,
A literal construction is not to be adopted contrary to the general policy and object of the statute. United States v. American Trucking Assn.
It is obvious that the purpose of enacting the state law was identical with that of the federal statute; namely, to prevent double taxation on property passing to spouse and children within five years. In order to effectuate this intention of the legislature, the statute must be given a construction as broad as the intention itself. If we were to adopt appellant's construction, it seems to us the purpose of the legislation would be circumvented. The exemption would be narrowly limited so that it would apply only to specific property transferred from prior decedent. After property is transferred to heirs under a decree of distribution, it often becomes necessary to change the form of investments in order to safeguard the interests of the legatee. If this were done, the exemption would not apply under appellant's interpretation of the statute. We do not believe the legislature intended such a result.
The statute speaks of property "which can be identified as having been transferred to the decedent" from the prior estate. Appellant relies upon the definition of the word "identify" in Funk Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary, 1931, meaning: "To assert, verify, or prove to be absolutely the same," and contends that it is intended by the use of that word that the property must be proved to be exactly the same. We have often stated that it is an unsafe way of construing a statute to divide it by a process of etymological *Page 455
dissection into separate words, then apply to each thus separated from its context some particular definition given by lexicographers, and then reconstruct the instrument upon the basis of these definitions. International Trust Co. v. American L. T. Co.
"There is, of course, no more persuasive evidence of the purpose of a statute than the words by which the legislature undertook to give expression to its wishes. Often these words are sufficient in and of themselves to determine the purpose of the legislation. In such cases we have followed their plain meaning. When that meaning has led to absurd or futile results, however, this Court has looked beyond the words to the purpose of the act. Frequently, however, even when the plain meaning did not produce absurd results but merely an unreasonable one 'plainly at variance with the policy of the legislation as a whole' this Court has followed that purpose, rather than the literal words."
We do not find anything in the meaning of the word "identify" inconsistent with the conclusion we reach as to what the legislature intended. In Webster's New International Dictionary 2d 1934, "identify" is defined as: "To make to be the same; to unite or combine, so as to make one; to treat as being one or having the same purpose or effect; to consider as the samein any relation." (Italics supplied.) The word "identify," therefore, connotes the proving of the property to be the samein any relation. Thus, if the assets are sold or changed in form, it becomes a matter of proving that the proceeds were derived from the identical property in the prior estate. The legislature made the identification of the first decedent's property, whether in original or transmuted form, *Page 456 a prerequisite to the exemption. By requiring identification before exemption is allowed, it protected the state from loss of revenue. The legislature could have plainly said that the exemption reached only items of specific property in the estate of the second decedent which could be identified as having been transferred to decedent from the prior estate, but it did not choose to restrict the exemption in that manner. It chose, rather, to provide an exemption if the taxpayer was able to prove the identity of the assets in transmuted form by tracing back to the specific property in the prior estate. When that identification is accomplished by competent proof, the intention of the legislature is fulfilled.
Many states have provided for a similar exemption with varying differences in the language of their statutes. Some states have virtually the same provisions as are contained in the federal statute, with specific references to exchanges of property. Other states (California, Oregon, and Texas) have statutes similar to ours providing for exemptions with no specific mention of exchanges or change of form of the property. The Oregon statute uses the word "identify" as in our statute. 3 CCH (7 ed.) Inheritance Estate and Gift Tax Service, p. 49,001. Although we do not have the benefit of any court decisions in these states, there have been administrative interpretations of the statute. The attorneys general of Oregon and Texas have construed the statute as authorizing the tracing of property, 3 CCH (7 ed.) (Or.) Id. p. 49,213-2, § 1772; CCH (Current) (7 ed.) (Tex.) p. 85,128, § 1772; while the comptroller of California has issued regulations authorizing such tracing. 1 CCH (7 ed.) (Cal.) pp. 15,001, 15,252, Rule 293. This interpretation was made despite the rule of strict construction as to exemptions which prevail in those states. Cypress Lawn Cemetery Assn. v. City and County of San Francisco (1931)
"Laws uniform with those of other states shall be interpreted and construed to effect their general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact them."
The minority opinion cites a portion of §
"The object of all interpretation and construction of laws is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the legislature."
The case of Knauss v. Knauss,
Although appellant has advanced a plausible argument in support of his contention, we reach the conclusion, when we view the statute as a whole and in the light of its obvious purpose, that the intent of the legislature is to allow the exemption if the property in decedent's estate can be traced to the property transferred in the prior estate.
Affirmed.
United States v. American Trucking Associations ( 1940 )
In Re Estate of Abbott ( 1942 )
State Ex Rel. Verbon v. County of St. Louis ( 1943 )
State Ex Rel. Hansen v. Walsh ( 1933 )
Rodenbough v. United States ( 1928 )
Cypress Lawn Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San ... ( 1931 )
American Tower, L.P. v. City of Grant ( 2000 )
Ingebritson v. TJERNLUND MANUFACTURING COMPANY ( 1971 )
Geo. A. Hormel & Co. v. Asper ( 1988 )
Mankato Citizens Telephone Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation ( 1966 )
ILHC OF EAGAN, LLC v. County of Dakota ( 2005 )