DocketNumber: Docket No. 40034
Judges: Rice
Filed Date: 1/18/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*268
Decedent was the sole legatee and executor of the estate of his brother who died less than 5 years prior to decedent. Decedent's estate contained assets from his brother's estate, having a value in excess of the net value of the brother's estate after deductions of debts, Federal estate, and State inheritance taxes. The brother's estate had earned income during its administration. Petitioners claimed the value of the assets of decedent's brother, actually held by them, as the deduction for previously taxed property allowable to decedent's estate as provided in
*640 OPINION.
This proceeding involves a deficiency in Federal estate taxes of $ 35,758.79 determined against the Estate of Roswell G. Ackley.
The sole issue is the proper amount of a deduction for previously taxed property, as provided in
*270 The parties have stipulated that the petitioners will incur and pay additional administration and litigation expenses, and attorney's fees, not heretofore allowed, in connection with the determination of the decedent's net estate subject to tax, and that the amount thereof will be taken into account under a Rule 50 computation.
All of the facts were stipulated and are adopted as a part of our findings. Only such facts as are necessary to an understanding of the issue will be summarized herein.
Roswell G. Ackley died on November 6, 1947, and the petitioners are the duly appointed executors of his estate. The Federal estate tax return was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of Illinois.
Decedent was the brother and sole legatee of Richard C. Ackley (hereinafter referred to as Richard) who died testate on October 2, 1944, less than 5 years prior to decedent's death. Decedent was also the duly appointed executor of Richard's estate, which consisted of a one-half interest in Ackley Brothers, a partnership owned by the two *641 brothers. The partnership assets were comprised principally of real estate, bank accounts, and Government bonds.
On December*271 18, 1945, the Federal estate tax return for Richard's estate was filed. The return showed a gross estate of $ 942,672.35, and allowable deductions for debts and charges of $ 28,199.93. The estate paid Federal estate taxes of $ 243,444.34; the Illinois inheritance tax paid was $ 55,565.98.
On January 24, 1946, Richard's estate was closed and decedent transferred to himself all of its assets.
Richard's estate, throughout the course of its administration, earned net income of not less than $ 56,996.31 after claimed depreciation of not less than $ 19,784.18.
On decedent's estate tax return, $ 839,275.79 was claimed as the deduction for property previously taxed in Richard's estate. The parties herein have now agreed that the maximum value of such previously taxed property included among the assets of decedent's estate is $ 675,834.96.
The respondent determined, as follows, that the deduction allowable to decedent's estate for property previously taxed in Richard's estate was $ 615,462.10:
Gross estate of Richard C. Ackley | $ 942,672.35 | |
Less: | ||
Debts and charges | $ 28,199.93 | |
Federal estate tax | 243,444.34 | |
Illinois inheritance tax | 55,565.98 | 327,210.25 |
$ 615,462.10 |
*272 The theory on which the respondent has based his determination is that the decedent, as sole legatee of Richard, could not have received more than the net value of Richard's estate after deduction of charges and debts outstanding against it, and taxes.
The petitioners dispute this determination, and claim that the deduction for previously taxed property should be allowed in the amount of $ 675,834.96 -- the value of assets in decedent's estate actually identified as having been included in Richard's estate. They argue (1) that to the extent income of Richard's estate was used to pay claims against it, and taxes, and thus freed assets for distribution to decedent, the value of such assets should be included in determining the property-previously-taxed deduction; (2) that the Illinois inheritance tax is not chargeable against Richard's estate, but against decedent on his right of succession; and (3) that Federal estate taxes should not be taken as a deduction from Richard's gross estate in arriving at its net value here, since such taxes are not a deduction in determining its
*642 The petitioners observe, on brief, that the issue raised here has been before*273 us a number of times, but that the cases are in conflict. In support of their argument, petitioners cite
In the
*275 In the
We accepted that argument and said,
The deduction allowed [by the statute] is the value at which the property was taxed in the estate of the prior decedent, to the extent of its value in the present estate, reduced by the amount of any mortgage or lien thereon allowed as a deduction to the prior estate. There is no provision anywhere in the statute that the deduction allowable to the second decedent's estate must be reduced by any and all obligations of the estate of the prior decedent. * * *
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed 3 and distinguished the
*277 We reaffirmed our holding in the
In the
The taxpayer relies upon the decision of the First Circuit in Commissioner v. Garland, [citation] and it must be owned that in principle it is to the contrary. The wife had there used income from her husband's estate arising after his death to pay charges upon it, yet her executor was allowed to deduct the *644 full value of the identified assets. However, although, as has appeared, we ourselves cannot see what difference it makes from where the money comes, the First Circuit did see a difference, for it expressly reserved decision in a case where the legatee paid the debts with his own money, which so far as the record shows may have been what the wife did here. Moreover, Bahr v. Commissioner [citation] is directly in our favor; * * * We cannot understand how it could have made*279 a difference if Eugene had lived long enough to pay the debts himself. There is no more likely way to misapprehend the meaning of language -- be it in a constitution, a statute, a will or a contract -- than to read the words literally, forgetting the object which the document as a whole is meant to secure. * * *
The rationale of these decisions was followed in
In each of these cases, we and other courts have allowed the statutory deduction for previously taxed property to such extent as we understood Congress intended to grant it. Obviously, there has not been*280 unanimity of opinion in what the courts thought Congress meant.
We have examined carefully the legislative history of
However, despite what we have said in times past, we are now satisfied that all that Congress intended to exempt from tax was so much of a prior decedent's net estate as might be identified in the estate of a subsequent decedent who died within 5 years.
Congress could have spelled out the extent to which the deduction would be allowed in terms so specific that the problem presented here need not have arisen. But, we agree with the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that "Had Congress been aware of" the possibility of extending the deduction beyond the value of the first decedent's estate after claims and taxes against it had been satisfied therefrom, "it can scarcely be doubted that it would have provided against it." 6 Moreover, as the Court of Claims observed in
We do not think that Congress had any intention of discriminating in favor of a well-financed*281 heir, merely because he was so well-financed that he could not only pay out of his own funds the tax on the estate of the first decedent, but would not find it necessary, over a five-year period, to reimburse himself for the money so paid. If it did so intend, it must have been willing to permit a substantial loss of revenue, in cases such as the instant one, without any possible reason based upon either fairness, convenience of administration, or expediency, to justify the loss. We think it would be unfair to the legislature to attribute to it an intention which could only be described as erratic.
*645 Whatever distinction we once thought we saw between the situation presented to us in the
As we mentioned earlier, petitioners argue that even though the deduction for previously taxed property is limited to the net value of Richard's estate, Illinois inheritance taxes and Federal estate taxes are not proper deductions in determining that estate's net value for such purpose.
Illinois inheritance taxes, as petitioners have argued and as its Supreme Court said in
After a careful analysis of the many cases cited and the provisions of the statute involved herein, the rule seems to be settled that the right to receive an Illinois legacy is a creature of the State of Illinois; that the State's right to the amount of the tax vests at the moment of the death of decedent and is equal to that of legatees; that the tax is extracted from the legacy before it passes and therefore the tax as assessed here is not a direct burden upon the [legatee] * * * even though it incidentally reduces the legacy.
It is thus apparent from the nature of the Illinois tax that it is one which, for purposes of the Federal statute, reduces the over-all net value of the first estate and must be deducted in determining the amount of the deduction for property previously taxed under
We do not understand that petitioners expressly claim that State inheritance taxes on Richard's estate were paid by decedent from his own funds. Had this been so, decedent would have been a purchaser of Richard's assets to the extent of such payment.
The only authority which petitioner cites for excluding the Federal estate tax on Richard's*284 estate as a deduction in determining its net value for purposes of the property-previously-taxed deduction here is
*646 We conclude that the respondent correctly determined the deficiency here in issue. Pursuant to the parties' agreement that additional litigation expenses, administration costs, and attorney's fees are to be allowed as deductions in computing decedent's net estate,
1.
For the purpose of the tax the value of the net estate shall be determined, in the case of a citizen or resident of the United States by deducting from the value of the gross estate --
* * * *
(c) Property Previously Taxed. -- An amount equal to the value of any property (1) forming a part of the gross estate situated in the United States of any person who died within five years prior to the death of the decedent, or (2) transferred to the decedent by gift within five years prior to his death, where such property can be identified as having been received by the decedent from the donor by gift, or from such prior decedent by gift, bequest, devise, or inheritance, or which can be identified as having been acquired in exchange for property so received. Property includible in the gross estate of the prior decedent under section 811 (f) and property included in total gifts of the donor under section 1000 (c) received by the decedent described in this subsection shall, for the purposes of this subsection, be considered a bequest of such prior decedent or gift of such donor. This deduction shall be allowed only where a gift tax imposed under Chapter 4, or under Title III of the Revenue Act of 1932, 47 Stat. 245, or an estate tax imposed under this chapter or any prior Act of Congress, was finally determined and paid by or on behalf of such donor, or the estate of such prior decedent, as the case may be, and only in the amount finally determined as the value of such property in determining the value of the gift, or the gross estate of such prior decedent, and only to the extent that the value of such property is included in the decedent's gross estate, and only if in determining the value of the net estate of the prior decedent no deduction was allowable under this subsection, section 861 (a) (2), or the corresponding provisions of any prior Act of Congress, in respect of the property or property given in exchange therefor.
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7. See Rudick, "The Estate Tax Deduction for Property Previously Taxed."