The three appeals were briefed and argued together and the assignments of errors covering all are: The court erred (1) in computing the tax on the transfers under the trust deed at the rate in effect at the time of the death of the testator instead of at the rate in effect at the time of the execution of the trust deed; (2) in adding the amount received under the will to the amount received under the trust deed and assessing .the tax on the sum instead of on each transfer separately at the rate in effect at the time thereof; (3) in the method of assessing the contingent remainders; (4) in including the gift of $23,000 to Mrs. Morgan as taxable; and (5) in assessing a tax on the value of the certificates in the Isaac Stephenson Company Trustees.
The first two assignments of error are so closely related that it is deemed best to treat them together. Answers to the questions, When does the tax accrue? or When does the *455transfer for tax purposes take place? will largely determine whether the court erred as to either. If the tax accrues and the transfer for tax purposes occurs as of- the time of the death of the testator, then the court adopted the correct rate, and was also right in adding the value of the two transfers together and taxing them as one sum. But if the tax accrues and is due and payable when the actual transfer takes place, irrespective of the death of the testator or intestate, then the court erred in assessing the tax on the value of the property under the trust deed at the rate in effect when Stephenson died, for ch, 320, Laws 1917-, which took effect June 2, 1917, increased the rates in force when the trust was created on May 12, 1917, and it also erred in adding together the value of the two transfers and taxing them as one.
Stephenson was- a resident of this state, hence for the purposes of this case reference need be made to only these provisions of our inheritance tax act. It provides for a tax (a) when the transfer is by a will or by the intestate laws of this state, and (b) ,when a transfer by gift, deed, or otherwise is made in contemplation of the death of the donor or grantor. Sub. (1), (3), sec. 1087 — 1, Stats. 1919. Sub. (4) of said section provides that “Such tax shall be imposed when any such person or corporation becomes beneficially entitled, in possession or expectancy, to any property or the income thereof, by any such transfer whether made before or after the passage of this act.” Sub. 1, sec. 1087 — 5, provides that “All taxes imposed by this act shall be due and payable at the time of the transfer, except as hereinafter provided.” ■ Sec. 1087 — 2 reads: “When the property or any beneficial interest, therein passes by any such transfer, . . . the tax hereby imposed shall be: . . .” These provisions of the' statute standing alone certainly give color to the argument that when a transfer occurs the tax becomes due and payable irrespective of the time of the death of the transferor.
*456- But language quite plain and persuasive when viewed merely in the light of its immediate context, must yield in meaning to the general scope and purpose of the act of which it forms a part, if such scope and purpose is plain and unambiguous, and if the language used is susceptible of a meaning consonant with such general scope and purpose. The inheritance tax act was passed for the purpose of imposing a tax upon the transfer of the estate of a decedent to another. The tax, of course, is upon the right to the transfer, not upon the estate. Nunnemacher v. State, 129 Wis. 190, 108 N. W. 627; State v. Pabst, 139 Wis. 561, 121 N. W. 351; Estate of Week, 169 Wis. 316, 318, 172 N. W. 732. The latter is only the measure of the tax. The tax is a graduated one both as to amount of estate transferred and as to the relationship of the receiver to the deceased. The statute contemplates but one estate, for each decedent, else there would be but little object in graduating the tax according to amount, for the estate could easily be split up into a number of gifts, trusts, or wills and intestate property, and thus the graduated feature of the statute could be .entirely defeated. The law provides for transfer by will, by intestate law, and by gift in contemplation of death. These all connote testamentary or intestate disposition of an estate. Gifts made in contemplation of death for taxing purposes under the statute become a part of the estate of the decedent. A deceased person can leave but one estate. All property owned by him at the time of his death is a part of his estate, and gifts previously made in contemplation of death for taxing purposes merge in the estate. Such is the obvious scope and purpose of the law, such has been the administration under it, and such has, been the construction given it by this court. State v. Pabst, 139 Wis. 561, 121 N. W. 351; Estate of Bullen, 143 Wis. 512, 128 N. W. 109; State v. Thompson, 154 Wis. 320, 142 N. W. 647; Estate of Ebeling, 169 Wis. 432, 172 N. W. 734; Estate of Week, *457169 Wis. 316, 172 N. W. 732. In the Pabst Case it is said: “The provisions of ch. 44, Laws 1903, in. words are expressive of the intent that the tax shall be imposed at the time of the death of the transferor, in the manner and under the conditions prescribed, upon the interests transferred by him.” Page 584. “The context of the law expresses as its purpose and object that the tax shall be imposed on the transfer at the time of the death of the decedent and rest as a lien on the property so transferred until paid.” Page 585. And in the same case, speaking of the provisions of sub. 1, sec. 1087 — 5, the court says: “This portion of the law does not operate to postpone the imposition of 'the tax on the transfer beyond the time of the death of the trans-feror, for, as we have seen, the tax comes into existence at the time.of the death of the decedent.” ' Page 585. And again, “the tax is imposed at the time of the devolution of the property, which is at the time of the transferor’s death.” Pages 586, 587. Language could not very well be more clear and explicit to the effect that for taxing purposes the tax accrues and the transfer takes place a"s of the time of the death of the transferor. In Estate of Bullen, 143 Wis. 512, 128 N. W. 109, transfer of property made in contemplation of death was treated as part of the estate. So, also, in State v. Thompson, 154 Wis. 320, 142 N. W. 647; in Estate of Ebeling, 169 Wis. 432, 172 N. W. 734; and in Estate of Week, 169 Wis. 316, 172 N. W. 732. In the latter case it is said: “The transfer, contemplated occurs at the instant of death.” Page 318.
Sub. 1, sec. 1087 — 5, makes every administrator and executor equally liable with a trustee or person to whom transfer of property has been made in contemplation of death, for the whole tax, including that on the portion of the estate transferred in contemplation of death as well as that transferred by will or under intestate laws. If each was to be taxed separately and at the actual time of transfer, *458it would be unjust to hold an executor or administrator liable for a tax .on property that is no part of the estate he is administering.
In view of the evident purpose of the inheritance tax act; in view of the unbroken administration of .it since 1903; in view of the consistent and repeated constructions given it by this court; and in view of the fact that the construction contended for by appellants would frustrate the obvious intent of the legislature to tax estates as a unit, and would in a very material manner render necessary a reconstruction of our taxing scheme, this court cannot follow courts that have reached a different conclusion upon somewhat similar statutes. The case In Matter of Hodges, 215 N. Y. 447, 109 N. E. 559, decided in 1915, is especially relied upon by appellants and is squarely in point. There a different conclusion is reached. That case, however, was decided after the Pabst Case, which was decided in 1909,- and cannot, therefore, have the weight that it might have were the question an open one in this state. Our conclusion is the county court properly added the value of the property passing under the trust to the value of the property passing under the will and applied the correct rate to the sum thereof.
The trust of May 12, 1917, was created by Stephenson for the period of the life of himself and wife and twenty-one, years thereafter. A number of estates for the trust term were created, with a remainder in fee to the beneficiary of such estate. The county court assessed the estate of each such beneficiary the full present value thereof as though it passed immediately to him in fee. It is claimed that this was error and that it' should have valued the term estate and the remainder estate separately and taxed each separately; that since it was uncertain whether the beneficiary would survive the trust term, he took a contingent remainder liable to be defeated by his prior death. For taxing purposes the value of an estate cannot be diminished by dividing it into term estates and remainders. The state *459is entitled to an inheritance tax' measured by the clear market value of the property transferred. Sub. (8), sec. 1087 — 1. Where the term tenant and the remainderman are the same, as in this case, there is no necessity of separately valuing the term estate and the remainder, since the value of one added to the value of the other always equals the value of the whole estate. Sub'. 6, sec. 1087 — 15, provides that' “In estimating the value of any estate or interest in property to the beneficial enjoyment or possession whereof there are persons . . . presently entitled thereto, no allowance shall be made in respect of . . . any contingency upon the happening of which the estate or property or some part thereof, or interest therein, might be abridged, defeated' or diminished.” And the term estate and the‘contingent remainder are alike both presently taxable. Sub. 8, sec. 1087 — 15.
If the contingent remainder is defeated and it passes to another remainderman, an adjustment pursuant to secs. 1087 — 15 and 1087 — 8 will be made.
The expression “lowest rate” used in sub. 8, sec. 1087 — 15, refers to the lowest rate based upon the relationship Of the beneficiary to the transferor and not to the lowest basic rate based upon the value of the estate transferred. For this reason, and for reasons stated in discussing the first and second assignments of error, the court properly refused to tax the term and remainder estates separately where the same person was the beneficiary of both.,
Did the county court err in taxing the gift of $23,000 made to Mrs. Morgan.,? It is urged that this gift to the daughter is only a trifle larger per cent, of the value of Stephenson’s estate than the gift of $1,000 was of the value of the Ebeling estate (169 Wis. 432, 172 N. W. 734), which this court held exempt because not deemed to have been made in contemplation of death; and that it did not constitute a material part of the testator’s estate within the meaning of sub. (3), sec. 1087 — 1, which provides, “Every *460transfer by deed, grant," bargain, sale or gift, made within six years prior to the death of the grantor, vendor or donor, of a material part of his estate, or in the nature of a final disposition or distribution thereof, and without an adequate valuable consideration, shall be construed to have been made in contemplation of death within the meaning of this section,” and was therefore not taxable. As was stated in the Ebeling Case, whether a gift is so material as to be deemed to have been made in contemplation of death is in each case a judicial question. And while it must be admitted that the ratio, the gift bears to the whole estate is a very important factor, it is not per se the determining factor in each case. The size of the gift itself, irrespective of the size of the estate, has a direct bearing upon the answer. It was the legislative intent that a gift of a material part of an estate made within six years of the donor’s death should not escape taxation. Now a large sum of money is a material part of any estate no matter how large, because it is a matter of substance — a matter that is not immaterial. The gift to Mrs. Morgan no doubt equals that of the average estate probated in this state. Add to that the fact that within the period of six years prior to his death Stephenson had-given her over $26,000 in other gifts held not taxable, and to other persons about $150,000 more in gifts not taxed, and it cannot be said the court was guilty of an abuse of discretion in finding the gift of $23,000, which was wholly unexplained, to be a material part of testator’s estate and therefore taxable. Each case must be viewed in the light of its own facts and circumstances in determining whether or not a gift is taxable. So viewing this case, we conclude the court not only did not abuse its discretion in finding the fact as it did, but that it reached the right result.
The Isaac Stephenson Company Trustees was a trust created in 1912 by the stockholders of the I. Stephenson Company, a Michigan corporation, which had a capital stock of $800,000 divided into 80,000 shares of the par *461value of $10 each. In the trust the stockholders were called certificate holders, and held certificates of parts in number and par value equal to the number and par value of their shares of stock. In the trust each share was called a part. Five trustees were created, and they were required to carry on the lumber operations and general business of the former corporation during the lives of two of the certificate holders of the survivor of them, unless sooner terminated by a two-thirds vote of the certificate holders, each part being entitled to one vote. The certificate holders also ha<d the right to remove and appoint trustees as well as terminate the trust at any time. When terminated, the trust property, which at the time of Stephenson’s death consisted of real estate and personal property, but chiefly real estate, should vest in the I. Stephenson Lumber Company, a Wisconsin corporation. The trust agreement contained these provisions:
“The beneficial interest of each certificate holder in said trust estate or parts of such interest may be passed by an assignment and transfer of his or her certificate or parts thereof, but any such beneficial interest shall not vest in the assignee until there has been a transfer of the old certificate upon the books of the trustees and a new certificate or certificates issued in place thereof.”
“The beneficial ownership of parts of said trust estate hereunder shall not entitle the certificate holder to any title in or to the trust property whatsoever, or any right to call for a partition or division of the same or'for an accounting.”
“It is hereby expressly declared and understood that no partnership or partnership relations or liabilities shall be created or established by or between the parties to this agreement or any of them, their successors, legal representatives, heirs, or assigns, by virtue of this agreement, and that this agreement shall not be construed as creating or establishing any partnership or partnership relations or liabilities by or between any such parties.”
“The death of a certificate holder during the continuance of the trust shall not operate to determine the trust, nor shall it entitle the legal representative of the deceased certificate holder to an accounting or to take any action in the *462courts or elsewhere against the trustees; but the executors, administrators, or assigns of any deceased certificate holder shall succeed to the rights of said decedent under this trust fipon the surrender of his certificate for the parts of said trust estate of which he had the beneficial ownership and the issuing in lieu thereof of a new certificate to the person entitled thereto.”
So far as we have discovered, the trust agreement contains no provisions that in any way' militate against or modify the effect of the above quoted provisions. Stephenson at the time of his death owned 27,836% parts of the 80,000 parts of the trust, and the question arises whether such ownership was of personal property or of real estate. It is claimed on the part of the appellants that the certificates represented the ownership of an interest in real estate situated in Michigan and therefore did. not constitute a taxable estate in Wisconsin. The state claims the certificates represent beneficial ownership in personal property and áre therefore taxable because their situs is that of the residence of the deceased. Upon digesting the trust provisions it will be found that authority to sell real estate is given though a sale is not compelled; that the personal property and the real estate constitute but one fund; that ownership in certificates passes by assignment; that it gives no title in the trust property; that it' does not descend to the heirs but goes to the administrator or. executor; and that the trust does not constitute a partnership. It would be difficult to designate indicia of personal property more effectively than is.done here. A declaration that the trust property shall be regarded as personal property could do no more. Indeed; that might be a misnomer if the trust contained specific provisions negativing it, for it is the substance of an agreement and not the name given it that controls. It is a fitnda-mental rule that an equitable conversion may be effected by an agreement as well as by will or otherwise, and that there need be no specific directions to sell land to convert it into *463personalty. Such direction may arise by necessary implication from the nature of the instrument or from the language used. 6 Ruling Case Law, 1065. Neither is there necessity for a direction to the trustees to convert land into personalty where, as here, the creators of the trust have done so. They have by the provisions above referred to indelibly stamped the trust property as personalty by giving it all the qualities thereof for purposes essential to or convenient for the prosecution of the business of the trust. Having made the property personalty for their own uses, it will be "so considered for taxing purposes.
It may be argued that none of the above provisions takeñ singly are sufficient to constitute a conversion. Thus it is said that a tax certificate which constitutes an interest in land (Eaton v. Manitowoc Co. 44 Wis. 489) passes by an assignment. This is true, but it does not pass to the administrator or executor but to the heirs, as land doés. Madler v. Kersten, 170 Wis. 424, 175 N. W. 779. If there be 'a weakness or ambiguity in any single provision there can be no reasonable doubt left when all are considered together, as they should be. The cases of Dana v. Treasurer, 227 Mass. 562, 116 N. E. 941, and Priestly v. Treasurer, 230 Mass. 452, 120 N. E. 100, sustain the conclusion here reached under facts quite similar, while the case of Bartlett v. Gill, 221 Fed. 476, reaches a different conclusion. Undoubtedly the trust certificates represent an interest in real estate, just as do mortgages, and shares of a-corporation owning realty, biit they must be regarded as intangible property for taxing purposes just as the latter are, because the creators of the trust have made them intangible or personal property in unmistakable terms.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.