Sanford v. Saunders County

Fawcett, J.,

dissenting.

This case was heard in the court below upon a general demurrer to a pleading filed by the executors, which has been designated by both parties and by the trial court as a “petition.” As they have seen fit to so designate it, I will do likewise.

The petition alleges: That Whitfield Sanford, at the time of his death, was a resident of Cass county, Iowa; that he died August 4, 1905, testate; that the district court for Cass county, Iowa, took jurisdiction to administer said estate; that the administration thereof is still pending and said court.still retains full and exclusive jurisdiction of all matters connected with the settlement of the estate.

That the deceased kept the control and management of his business; that all of his personal property was held in said Cass county; that he had no agent in Nebraska with authority to control or reinvest money; that the will left the bulk of Ms estate to the appellants, his wife and son.

That the county court of Saunders county without authority, upon suggestion of the county attorney, ap*418pointed appraisers for the purpose of levying the inheritance tax; that the appraisers duly filed their report, from which appellants appealed,' first, to the county court, and then to the district court.

That the estate is not liable, for the reason that no valid law gives authority or jurisdiction to the county court of Saunders county, or to any court ifi Nebraska, to levy an inheritance tax.

That, in ascertaining the value of the real estate in Nebraska, the appraisers and the courts below refused to deduct from such 'appraisement the dower interest of the appellant widow; that to the extent of her dower, under the law in existence at the time of'the death of Mr. Sanford, the estate was not subject to tax.

That at tiie time of Mr. Sanford’s decease, and for eleven years prior thereto, the appellant Charles W. Sanford, one of the executors of said will, and a legatee thereunder, was in the employ of deceased as his clerk, under an agreement that Charles should be compensated therefor by tiie deceased; that it was agreed between Charles and the deceased, during the life of the latter, that, in case Charles should not demand or withdraw from the business of the deceased money due him for such services, the amounts due him were to be allowed to draw interest until the final settlement should be made; that after tiie death of Mr. Sanford the widow, who was one of the executors, and Charles had a settlement and adjustment of the claim of Charles against deceased, with tiie result that it was ascertained and agreed that the estate was indebted to Charles, a resident of Nebraska., in tiie sum of $35,524.95, which amount it was agreed Charles should receive from said estate; that by the said agreement it was stipulated and agreed that the claim of Charles should be paid by transferring to him from the estate of deceased real estate in Nebraska in excess of tiie property that Charles should receive from tlit* estate as'one of tiie beneficiaries of the will; that, in determining what portion of the real estate in Nebraska *419Charles should receive, there was set over to Mm certain, real estate of the value of the agreed claim in excess of the amount of property Charles would have been entitled to receive under the law; “this being in full settlement and satisfaction of said claim of Charles W. Sanford, and so accepted by him.”

That the county court wrongfully included in the valuation the said sum of $35,524.95, and levied a tax thereon and included it in the amount found due from the estate.

That the agreement and settlement of the claim of Charles against the estate were made and entered into with the full consent and understanding of the executors of the estate, and were made for the benefit of the estate; that the county court had no authority or jurisdiction to include said amount in ascertaining the amount of inheritance tax to be paid, for the reason that the claim was a just and proper claim against said estate, and was properly paid, settled and satisfied, and the amount thereof should have been deducted from the value of the real estate in Nebraska; said real estate not having been received by Charles “by virtue or reason of any inheritance or bequest or under the intestate laws of the State of Nebraska.”

That at the time of the death of Mr. Sanford, and at all times thereafter until the appraisement of the real estate, the amount of inheritance tax due from the estate was unknown and nnascertainable; that the only method or manner of ascertaining the value of the real estate in Nebraska was through the appraisement so made as ordered by the connty court; that appellants had no knowledge of and no way of ascertaining the amount which could be claimed due as an inheritance tax until such appraisement had been filed; that, in determining the amount to be paid, the county court wrongfully and without authority of law ordered payment of interest from August 4, 1905, until the same should be paid; that said computation of interest was wrongful, without *420authority of law, and that the estate should not be subject to the payment of any interest prior to the time of finally ascertaining and determining the amount or value of the taxable estate in Nebraska.

The prayer of the petition is: (1) That the dower interest of the widow be deducted from the total value of the estate. (2) That the amount of the claim of Charles be deducted. (3) That the amount of the tax due from the estate should not draw interest until the final determination thereof. (4) That the assessment of an inheritance tax against the estate may be decreed as without authority of law, and as null and void, and of no force; and for general relief.

The record before us contains nothing more than the petition above set out, the general demurrer of defendant, and the journal entry of the judgment below. At first blush it might seem that the judgment would have to be affirmed for want of a sufficient transcript; but on more careful consideration it is apparent that both sides thought that the petition presented everything necessary to settle the questions of law involved, and thereby determine the rights of the parties. With that purpose in view, it evidently was not thought necessary to encumber the record with the transcript of the proceedings in the county court. In this I think counsel were right. Yery few of the important facts and figures referred to in the majority opinion appear in the record, as will be observed by the most casual reading of the petition. They were, in my judgment, improperly gleaned from the brief of counsel for appellee. As he has seen fit to rest upon his demurrer to the petition, lie should be held to the admitted facts averred in the latter. Upon the face of the record, therefore, the judgment should be reversed. Passing that, it will be seen that three important questions are presented. They will be considered in the order in which they appear in the petition.

1. Should the value of the widow’s dower have been *421deducted? I think it should. Our inheritance tax law (laws 1901, ch. 54) was first adopted in 1901. It was approved April 1, in that year. The title of the act is, “An Act to tax gifts, legacies and inheritances in certain cases and to provide for the collection of the same.” The right of dower cannot by any reasonable process of construction be held to be a gift, a legacy or an inheritance. Billings v. People, 189 Ill. 472, under an act from which it is asserted ours was copied, holds that dower is subject to the inheritance tax, and it is insisted that, inasmuch as Billings v. People was decided before our act was adopted, we are bound by the holding in that case.

Counsel for the appellee places great stress in his brief upon an assertion that Billings v. People was appealed to the United States supreme court (Billings v. Illinois, 188 U. S. 97) and affirmed in that court. The majority opinion makes the same statement. In justice to the fairness of counsel, I conclude that he has not read that case as it is reported in the United States supreme court reports. I have before me the lawyer’s edition, 47 L. ed. 400. The syllabus (entire) reads: “The equal protection of the laws is not denied by the Illinois inheritance tax law because, under that statute as interpreted and enforced by the state courts, certain life estates may be taxed when the remainder is to lineal descendants of the decedent, but not when the remainder is to collateral heirs or strangers in blood.” In the opinion it is stated: “The widow was an appellant in the supreme court of tiie state, but she is not a party here.” That case was taken to the supreme court of the United States by devisees other than the widow, so that the holding of the supreme court of Illinois upon the question of dower was not presented to, or in any manner considered by, the supreme court of the United States. I regret that it' was not, as I feel very confident that that eminent court would have declined to follow the reasoning and holding of the Illinois court. I might say here that, *422whether our act was copied from the Illinois act or not, that act, as stated by the supreme court of that state in People v. Griffith, 245 Ill. 532, 539, was taken from the statute of New York, of 1887. Would it be unreasonable to say, in the absence of proof as to which statute was followed, that our legislature followed the older statute, which had been in force for 14 years, and many of its provisions construed by the courts of that state? To my mind the rule that, where one state adopts a statute of another state which has received judicial construction, it is presumed that the legislature intended the statute should receive the same construction by the courts of the state adopting the statute, like all other general rules, has its exceptions. That the case at bar should be held an exception to the rule stated is made clear by the fact that Billings v. People made its first appearance in print in 59 N. E. 798, March 29, 1901, and our act under consideration here was approved three days later. The thought that any member of our legislature knew of that decision when the act was passed, or that the governor had ever heard of it when he signed the same, cannot be seriously considered. But, be that as it may, this court has stated how far .it will consent to be bound by the construction of a statute of another state which has been adopted in this state. In Morgan v. State, 51 Neb. 672, 693, in an opinion by Post, C. J., we said that the decision in such a case must “be regarded as a construction of the statute, to be ignored or rejected only for reasons which would require the overruling thereof had the decision been pronounced by this court, and in that light it will now be examined.” I think that is the very extent of the limit to which we should go in holding that we are bound in such a case. In accordance Avith the rule announced by Post, C. J., I am considering Billings v. People as if that decision had been pronounced by this court, and, so considering it, I unhesitatingly assert that the decision is not sound and should not be followed. If we follow Billings v. People, *423we must not only read into the act that which it does not contain, but we must enlarge the title to the act itself. If Mrs. Sanford had declined to take under the will and had elected to take under the statute, so far as the value of her dower is concerned, there is no theory upon which, under our act, the value of that dower could have been taxed. It really needs no citation of authorities to support the statement that a tax of this character cannot be aided by construction.

“(6) The meaning of section 1 of the inheritance tax law as to what property of nonresident decedents shall be subject to the tax is not entirely clear, and the language thereof should not be extended beyond the clear import of the words used, in order to bring property within the provisions of the act and subject It to the tax.” People v. Griffith, 245 Ill. 532. It seems to me that if tiie Illinois court had had that very correct rule in mind at the time it decided Billings v. People, supra, the decision in that case would have been the very opposite of what it was.

In People v. Griffith, it is further said: "(8) where one state adopts a statute of another state which has. received judicial construction, it is presumed that the legislature intended the statute should receive the same construction by the courts of the state adopting the statute, unless su,eh construction is in conflict, toith the spirit and policy of its laws.” (Italics are mine.) Under the rule thus stated, we are not bound by the holding in Billings v. People, as in my judgment that case is squarely in conflict with the -spirit and policy of the laws of this state, which are that statutes levying taxes of any kind, which are special in their nature, will be strictly construed, and will never be aided by construction' so as to extend them beyond the clear import of their terms. While I freely concede that the legislature has the power to pass an act imposing a tax of this character upon a widow’s dower, I assert that it has not done so; and, until the'legislature has expressly *424made dower subject to. such a tax, the courts are powerless to do so. In such a case, where the legislature stops the court should stop. A woman does not obtain a doAver interest in property by the grace of, or as a gratuity from, her husband. It is hers, absolutely, beyond his control. It is an interest which he cannot alienate, which he cannot encumber, which his creditors cannot reach, which she alone, by deed, can alienate. As said by this court in Butler v. Fitzgerald, 43 Neb. 192: “When lawful marriage of a man and woman and the ownership of real estate by the former concur, an inchoate dower right attaches in the nature of a charge or incumbrance upon the real estate of the husband; and Avhen such right has once attached, it remains and continues a charge or encumbrance upon the real estate, unless released by the voluntary act of the wife or be extinguished by operation of law, and is consummate upon the death of the husband.”

In Motley v. Motley, 53 Neb. 375, we held: “The statutes of the state expressly provide Iioav a widow may be huvfully barred of dower in the lands of which her husband died seized, and this bar is made to depend upon her voluntary act.”

In In re Weiler’s Estate, 122 N. Y. Supp. 608 (March, 1910), the syllabus states: “A widow’s dower estate in lands of her deceased husband, which became vested on her marriage and consummate on the death of her husband, independent of the husband’s will, and not by virtue thereof, was not subject to transfer tax.” In the opinion it is stated: “The widoAv’s estate of doAver in the lands of the decedent was property, which became vested as an inchoate estate upon her marriage and consummate upon the death of her husband, independent of the will, and not by virtue thereof. (Citing numerous cases.) It Avas, therefore, not subject to transfer tax, and in assuming it to be so both parties Avere in error when the order fixing tax was made.” In In re Green’s Estate, 124 N. Y. Supp. 863 (May, 1910), the syllabus *425states: “Where a wife, a resident of the state, dies without a will, leaving a husband and no descendants, the husband does not take her property under the intestate laws of the state, and there is no taxable transfer thereof under tax law.” The two cases last above cited were decided in surrogate’s court in New York county and Kings county, respectively. Neither case, so far as I have been able to find, reached the court of appeals. While they are not decisions of the court of last resort, they are decisions of two surrogate’s courts, ■ the judges of which in late years have always been lawyers of high standing.

In Commonwealth’s Appeal, 34 Pa. St. 204, it is held: “A testator devised his whole estate to his executors, in trust for legatees and devisees; the widow refused to take under the will, but subsequently, by an arrangement with the executors, approved by the orphans’ court, accepted the sum of $80,000, which was less than her share of the estate, and relinquished her claim to the residue. Held, That she took this sum under her paramount title as widow, and not as a payment out of the fund bequeathed to the executors in trust; and that it was not, therefore, subject to the collateral inheritance tax.”

In Estate of Kennedy, 157 Cal. 517, it is stated in the syllabus: “A homestead right, or a right to have a homestead, is not a right which vests under the law of succession. It is a right bestowed by the beneficence of the law of this state for the benefit of the family. Setting apart a probate homestead is a part of the proceeding in the probate court, as much so as the family allowance.” There are other matters passed upon in this case. The case is an interesting one, and shows clearly how that court would hold upon the question of the right to tax dower.

I therefore proceed with the further consideration of this point upon the assumption that, upon the death of Mr. Sanford, the dower interest, which Mrs. Sanford had *426theretofore held and owned subject to be defeated only by her own deed or the predecease of her husband, became consummate. It- then ceased to be an inchoate right, and, eo instanti, became a vested interest in all of the lands in Nebraska of which Mr. Sanford died seized; and to the extent of that vested interest she was entitled to a share of his lands without payment of any inheritance tax. If she saw fit to avail herself of an option given her, in the will of her deceased husband or under the statutes, to either take that interest in the land or another and different interest, and that other and different interest exceeded in value her vested interest 'which she was exchanging therefor, she could only be properly charged with the excess value. To my mind it is precisely the same as if she took by statute, as her dower, a certain specific tract, say section one, and the provision in the will was that she might take, in lieu thereof, sections two and three; in such a case she would be entitled to deduct from the value of sections two and three, which she was to receive under that provision, the value of section one, which she was giving up.

In Isenhart v. Brown, 1 Edw. Ch. (N. Y.) *411, it is held: “A bequest in lieu of dower, and the acceptance of the same, amounts to a matter of contract and purchase; and the wife is to be paid the bequest in preference to other legacies and without abatement. But the debts are to be paid first.” In the opinion (p. *413) the vice chancellor says: “It is the price put by the testator himself upon that right, and which she is at liberty to accept. Her relinquishment of doAver forms a valuable consideration for the testamentary gifts. In this point of view, she becomes a purchaser of the property left to her by the Avill. So, on the other hand, the husband offers a price-for his wife’s legal'right of doAver which he proposes to extinguish; and, if she agrees to the terms, she relinquishes it and is entitled to the price. It is, therefore, a matter of convention or contract between them; and what she thus becomes entitled to *427receive is not by. way of bounty, like other general bequests, but as purchase money for what she relinquishes, and which, consequently, must be paid in preference to other legacies; they being merely voluntary.”

In Blatchford v. Newberry, 99 Ill. 11, the sixth paragraph of the syllabus holds: “A provision by will in lieu of dower is, in fact and in legal effect, a mere offer by the testator to purchase out the dower interest for the benefit of his estate.” That part of the opinion upon which the above syllabus is predicated will be found on pages 55 to 62 inclusive. There are numerous other cases to the same effect as those last above cited, one (which I have misplaced and will not take the trouble to try to find again) from the supreme court of the United States. To my mind these cases clearly show that, to the extent of the value of her dower interest, Mrs. Sanford took nothing by way of “gift, legacy or inheritance” from her husband, and that, if she saw fit to exchange her vested interest of that value for another interest which was tendered her in lieu thereof, it was simply an exchange of one interest for another, and she was entitled to have the value of that which she was giving deducted from that which she was to receive.

2. Should the property conveyed to Charles in satisfaction of his claim have been deducted? The district court held that it should not. In this I think the court erred.

In the light of the view that I take of this branch of the case, the authorities cited on page 17 of brief of appellee are unimportant. The question as to whether or not the rules of law in reference to taxation of property are applicable is not involved; nor is the question of the possibility of double taxation; nor is it material for the consideration of this point whether the act of our legislature under consideration constitutes a tax upon property or upon the right of succession. The only question involved by the admitted allegations of this *428petition are: Can the amount of a claim of a citizen of this state for services rendered a nonresident in his lifetime, and Avhich, after the death of such nonresident debtor, is ascertained, adjusted and paid by the executors of his will, be taxed as a gift, legacy or inheritance? I say, No.

The petition alleges and the demurrer admits the folloAving facts: That the decedent left no personal property in this state, but that all of such property Avas OAvned and held by him and taxed in Cass county, IoAva; that Charles W. Sanford was in the employ of the decedent for eleven , years prior to his death, under an agreement that he should be paid for his services, and that, in case he should not demand or withdraw from the business of the deceased the amounts due him for such services, such amounts were to draw interest until a final settlement or adjustment should be made; that, after the death of the testator, the widow of the deceased, who was one of the executors, and Charles had a settlement and adjustment of the claim for such services, and that as a result of such settlement and adjustment it Avas “ascertained and agreed” that the estate was indebted to Charles in the sum of $35,524.95. which amount it Avas agreed Charles should- receive in real estate situated in Nebraska; and that, under such agreement, a sufficient amount of real estate in Nebraska was set over to Charles in full settlement and satisfaction of his claim, and was so accepted by him.

Prom the above admitted facts I conclude that the law Avhich requires that the personal estate of a decedent be first exhausted before recourse is had to the real estate does not apply. A citizen of this state who has a claim against a nonresident, or against a nonresident estate; is not required to go to the domicile of such nonresident or nonresident estate and litigate his claim in the courts of that jurisdiction, when there is property, either real or personal, situated in this state. It is possible that, if there had been personal property of *429the decedent in this state, Charles would have been obliged to first exhaust that personal property before he could proceed against the real estate, but, where there was no personal property in this state7 he could proceed at once against the real estate. It perhaps would have been better practice for him to have made application to the county court of some county in this state, in which real estate of the decedent was situated, for the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed, and haAe filed his claim with, and had it alloAved by, that court; but I do not think he was required to do that when the executors of a solvent estate, who were also the sole beneficiaries under the will of decedent, came into this state and, for the purpose of saving expenses of administration here, took the matter up with him, “ascertained” the amount justly due him, and set over to him a sufficient amount of the estate situated in this state to satisfy such claim. In Schouler, Executors, (3d ed.) sec. 176, it is said: “But may not the title and authority of a foreign -domiciliary representative be voluntarily recognized and debts paid him, or other assets voluntarily surrendered to him there? The doctrine of the English courts is that such payment or surrender affords no protection against the claim of a local administrator. A preference for the English doctrine seems to be expressed in Justice Story’s treatise, though he had judicially affirmed the contrary in a circuit decision. The supreme court of the United States, hoAveAer, has maintained the validity of such payments or delivery of the assets, as between different states, so as to discharge the local debtor or possessor; and the general current of American authority supports this doctrine; there being, it is assumed, when such payment or delivery was made, no local administration.” Where there is no local administration, as in the case at bar, I see no reason why the converse of the above proposition should not be given the same legal sanction. If I, having in my hands assets belonging to a nonresi*430dent at the time of his decease, can voluntarily deliver up those assets to a domiciliary executor, and thereby be absolved from all liability for such assets, why should not the same domiciliary executor be authorized to save his estate costs and expenses by recognizing a claim held against his estate by a nonresident creditor, when said claim is known and admitted to be correct, and satisfy the claim by turning over to such creditor a sufficient amount of property situated in the state where such creditor resides? If he does so, who shall pass upon the question of his authority to make such settlement, or upon the question as to whether or not such settlement was beneficial to the estate? I answer: The court from which such executor’s appointment emanated. I do not think that a court of this state can, in any kind of an action where the above facts are alleged and admitted to be true, go behind such settlement, adjustment and satisfaction of such claim.

It is suggested by one of my associates that the act of the executors in allowing this claim was without authority and void. The only theory upon which we could say that is that the- district court for Cass county Avas without poAver'to authorize the executors to make such a settlement; for, if it had such power, then it must be presumed that the executors had first obtained such authority. But, conceding that the Iowa court did not have poAver to grant such authority, the fact still remains that, under the admitted allegations in the petition, appellee has not been prejudiced by the act of the executors. I think it will not be questioned by any of my associates that, after the death of Mr. Sanford, Charles might have applied for and obtained ancillary administration in this state, and secured the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed, and could have filed his claim and had it alloAved; and, there being no personal property in this state, could have obtained leave to sell the real estate to pay the claim. If that course had been pursued and evidence introduced *431upon the hearing of the claim establishing the facts admitted in this case to be true, the county court would have had no alternative but to allow the claim precisely as it was “ascertained” and adjusted by the executors in this case; and, upon allowing that claim, the county court would have been compelled to deduct the amount thereof from the value of the real estate situated in this state, and the residue only would have been liable for an inheritance tax.

In In re Estate of Stone, 109 N. W. 455 (132 Ia. 136), the third paragraph of the syllabus states: “A contract between the beneficiaries in a will, including a collateral legatee, renouncing the provisions of the will and providing for a division of the property, was valid and enforceable, though its effect was to deprive the state of a collateral inheritance tax otherwise assessable on the legacy to the collateral legatee.” The reasoning in that case, applied to the case at bar, renders the fact that appellee, as a result of the adjustment of the claim of Charles by the beneficiaries under the will, may be deprived of an inheritance tax upon the amount of that adjustment immaterial.

3. Should the amount of whatever tax is found due draw interest from the date of the death of a testator, or from the date of the final determination of the amount of such tax?

At the oral argument I was inclined to the latter view; but on careful examination of the question I have reached a different conclusion. The reasoning of Steele, J., in People v. Rice, 40 Colo. 508, 91 Pac. 33, covers every phase of the question, and I am inclined to agree with the learned judge that “these are matters which should have appealed to the legislature; but the legislature, having before them the laws of other states containing more liberal provisions with respect to such matters, did not make provisions fov a rebate of interest under such conditions, and this department, therefore, cannot grant relief.”

*432The fourth point, that the inheritance tax law is null and void, is without merit.