Judges: Feitz
Filed Date: 10/10/1940
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In the administration of the estate of Mary E. Marshall, deceased, the court entered an order determining the inheritance tax payable on the estate, including the tax on legacies to Rosa Jenkins. An appeal from this order was taken by the executor of Mary E. Marshall's will. On this appeal the executor's contentions relate solely to an inheritance tax of $23,316.41, which the court held was payable on the legacy to Rosa Jenkins under the residuary clause in the will of Mary E. Marshall, who died on January 23, 1939. The will was filed on January 28, 1939, but objections were filed thereto and it was not admitted to probate until March 20, 1939. Meanwhile Rosa Jenkins died on February 10, 1939, eighteen days after the testatrix's death and thirty-eight days prior to the admission of the will to probate. Rosa Jenkins was survived by two children, R. D. Jenkins and Mary J. Wiley. The residuary clause reads:
"All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate and all lapsed bequests, I give, devise and bequeath to my sister-in-law, Rosa Jenkins, and should she be dead at the time of my death I give, devise and bequeath such residue and remainder to the heirs of my brother, Sam Jenkins, and my sister-in-law, Rosa Jenkins." *Page 134
Appellant contends that because she died prior to the admission of the will to probate and without having come into actual possession or enjoyment of her legacy, no inheritance tax can be imposed under secs.
These statutes, so far as here material, read:
Sec.
"(1) When the transfer is by will or by the intestate laws of this state from any person dying possessed of the property while a resident of this state."
Sec.
Appellant claims that, in order to have sufficient basis for imposing the tax under these statutory provisions, there must have been a "transfer" of property by the will to Rosa Jenkins "in possession or enjoyment, present or future;" that these words mean that the transferee must have an actual possession or enjoyment, and the word "present" cannot mean coexistent with the death of the testatrix because the delivery of possession must wait upon the fulfilment of the conditions imposed by law for the admission of the will to probate and the administration of the estate; and that, although Rosa Jenkins was living at the time of the death of the testatrix, and thus satisfied the condition of the bequest and would have been entitled to claim the residuum had she lived, nevertheless, by reason of her death before the will was admitted to probate, she possessed, — as far as the will was concerned, — only a naked claim to the residuary estate if the will was admitted to probate. Appellant claims that the residuary legatee had nothing more under these circumstances; no particular piece of property, or sum of money; and that she *Page 135 died not only without realizing her legacy, but without the right to possession of the residuum, or even judicial recognition that she had any right to call herself the residuary legatee.
These contentions cannot be sustained. At the time of the death of the testatrix there then passed under and by virtue of the will to Rosa Jenkins, who was then living, such an interest in the residuum "in possession and enjoyment, present and future" as to constitute such passing thereof a "transfer" within the definition of the latter word in sec.
"`It recognizes and vests the title in the devisee from that moment. It would otherwise happen, that if he should die before the probate, having accepted of the devise, no title could vest in him; but the bounty of the testator would be defeated. Such a construction of the section would be productive of the grossest mischiefs; and there is not a word in the section which authorizes or even countenances it. The section only provides, that no will shall be effectual to pass real estate, unless it shall have been duly proved; not, until *Page 136 it shall have been duly proved. When proved, it is to all intents and purposes a will; and it is to operate upon the interests of the testator when he intended, that is, from the time of his death.'"
As was stated in In re Estate of Deschamps,
"The title of the devisees does not originate either in the probate of the will or in the decree of distribution that may be or that has been entered, but title comes from the deceased through the will the instant of his death."
Consequently, as the will, upon being admitted to probate, took effect, by way of relation back, as of the death of the testatrix, and as Rosa Jenkins was then living, the legal operation of the will was to then pass and transfer to her a present property interest in the residuum; and that interest then vested in her unconditionally and continued to be so vested at the time of her death eighteen days after the testatrix died. By reason of Rosa Jenkins' survival, no interest in the residuum passed to her children or heirs from the testatrix by virtue of her will. The occasion of the transfer, upon which the tax in question became imposed by sec.
The rather unusual consequences that, by reason of Rosa Jenkins' survival and the passing of the residuum to her upon the testatrix's death, so that this transfer then became subject to the tax in question, and that, on the other hand, upon Rosa Jenkins' death shortly thereafter the property again passed from her to her heirs so that, in the administration of her estate, the second transfer also became subject to an inheritance tax on the interest which then passed from her to her heirs, does not result in double taxation, because there are, in fact, two separate independent transfers, each of which is subject to the tax imposed by sec.
By the Court. — Order affirmed. *Page 138