The stipulation of the parties discloses the following facts: On October 7, 1976, the plaintiff administrator of the estate of James J. Sullivan filed with the state tax department a succession tax return which included a parcel of land located in the city of Bridgeport with a reported fair market value of $164,000 at the time of the decedent's death. In making the valuation, the plaintiff relied upon an appraisal by a licensed real estate agent. An item on the return, unrelated to the valuation in question, was a disputed claim based on a loan which because of its doubtful nature had been assigned a value of "nil." The defendant commissioner of revenue services (commissioner) informed the plaintiff that the tax could not be computed until the disputed claim was resolved. On July 20, 1978, after the resolution of that claim, the plaintiff filed a corrected succession tax return which showed the Bridgeport property as having a fair market value of $84,000. On August 3, 1978, the commissioner filed with the Probate Court an objection to the reduced valuation and, on August 14, 1978, computed the succession tax based on the original valuation of $164,000. The plaintiff thereafter filed an objection to the use of the value of $164,000 in computing the tax.
On September 22, 1978, the Probate Court, after a hearing on the plaintiff's objection, decreed that there was no right to amend the succession tax return after it is accepted by the tax commissioner and that the commissioner's computation was correct. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court which sustained his appeal, finding that the taxability of the transfer should be based upon a fair market value of $84,000. The commissioner appeals1 from that decision, claiming that the valuation in the original tax return should be used. *Page 531
The central issues on appeal are: (1) whether12-359(a), 12-359(b) and 12-367(b) of the General Statutes, in effect on February 7, 1975, the date of the decedent's death, permit the value of the lot to be altered; and (2) whether the Probate Court has the equitable power to grant the plaintiff relief, i.e., after the reported valuation of the property in question.
General Statutes (Rev. to 1975) 12-359(a), which was in effect at the time of the decedent's death, sets forth what must be included on the succession tax return.2 Section 12-359(b) defines the gross taxable estate upon which the computation is based3 and sets forth the procedure by which objections to valuations and concessions of taxability may be raised.4 Section *Page 532 12-367(b) provides for an application for a hearing to challenge the tax commissioner's computation of the succession tax.5
The commissioner argues that this issue was dispositively treated in Heffernan v. Slapin, 182 Conn. 40,438 A.2d 1 (1980). We agree. The sole question in that case was "whether an executor may utilize the hearing described in General Statutes 12-367(D), in effect on February 17, 1973,6 to contest and alter his own appraisal of an asset reported on a duly filed succession tax return after the tax commissioner failed to object to the executor's reported appraisal pursuant to General Statutes 12-359(b)." (Footnote added.) Id., 41-42. The court in Slapin carefully examined12-359(a), 12-359(b) and 12-367(b) and found that a hearing under 12-367(b)is restricted to questions on the tax's computation. It stated that "[n]othing suggests that the fiduciary has an opportunity under12-367(b) to question his own reported valuations." Id., 46.7 *Page 533
The plaintiff acknowledges the outcome in Slapin and contends that he is relying not on 12-367(b), but on12-359(b). That section allows the tax commissioner to file objections to the valuations or concessions of tax-ability in the return within one hundred and twenty days of filing; permits the commissioner, fiduciary or transferee to apply for a hearing before the Probate Court on those items to which the commissioner objects; and authorizes the Probate Court to determine the fair market value of any property of which the value is in dispute. The commissioner, however, never objected to the valuation of $164,000 which appeared on the return the plaintiff duly filed on October 7, 1976. Hence, the initial requirement of 12-359(b) was never met and the hearing provision was never applicable. In any event, no authority, either in the statutes or case law, supports the notion that 12-359(b) was intended to allow a fiduciary to utilize the hearing procedure established therein as a vehicle for the rectification of such errors.
In an appeal from a probate order or decree, the Superior Court does not exercise its general jurisdiction but exercises the powers of the probate court from which the appeal was taken. "The probate court is a court of limited jurisdiction and has only such powers as are given it by statute or are reasonably to be implied in order to carry out its statutory powers." Prince v. Sheffield, 158 Conn. 286, 293-94, 259 A.2d 621 (1969). The trial court, which found that 12-359(b) does allow the plaintiff to alter the valuation gratuitously, enlarged those powers by dispensing with the requirement of an objection by the tax commissioner as a prerequisite to a hearing. This cannot be condoned. *Page 534
II The plaintiff also argues that the lower valuation entered by the trial court must be upheld because the court correctly used its equitable power to grant relief from the consequences of mistake. To the extent that the Probate Court may enforce equitable rights, the Superior Court, on appeal from probate, may also enforce equitable rights. 1 Locke Kohn, Conn. Probate Practice 215. "Equity," however, in the sense of the judge's private impression of justice, is insufficient. Bailey v. Strong, 8 Conn. 278 (1830); 4 Wilhelm Folsom, Conn. Estates Practice 59.
Exceptional circumstances may exist in which the court will consider an equitable attack on a probate order or decree. Reynolds v. Owen, 34 Conn. Super. Ct. 107,114, 380 A.2d 543 (1977). The Superior Court "may, in proper cases, grant relief against decrees of the Probate Court procured by fraud, accident, mistake and the like." (Emphasis added.) Haverin v. Welch,129 Conn. 309, 316, 27 A.2d 791 (1942); Phinney v. Rosgen,162 Conn. 36, 42, 291 A.2d 218 (1971). We do not believe that this is such a case.
Section 12-359(a) of the General Statutes clearly sets forth what must be entered on the succession tax return. Further, the tax return itself contains directions which mirror the mandatory language of the statute. The portion of the return in which "Real Property Not Owned in Survivorship" is reported, has one column in which the asset is to be described, a second column in which the assessed value is to be entered and a third column wherein the party filing the return is to set out the fair market value. As the stipulated facts reveal, the plaintiff relied upon an appraisal by the licensed real estate agent of the value of the property at the time of the decedent's death. This value, *Page 535 $164,000, was properly entered on the return which was duly filed on October 7, 1976, within the nine month filing period prescribed in 12-359(a). It is clear that the plaintiff comprehended what he was doing when he filed the original return. We, therefore, do not find the exceptional circumstances which would support an equitable attack upon the findings of the Probate Court.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to dismiss the plaintiff's appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.