Court Opinion

ID: 9639441
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 16:17:55.579278+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:10:18.511639
License: Public Domain

HOUGH, Circuit Judge
(after stating the facts as above). Consideration of the problem presented seems to require some definition of the nature of the tax imposed. To call it, as it is officially called, an estate tax, does not advance the matter, for the phrase merely indicates the incidence of the charge, not its nature or species.
We think that authority, rather than speculation on the reason of things, must control definition, and we premise by holding that this tax, like any similar burden imposed by the nation rather than a state, is an excise upon the right or privilege (it matters not which word is preferred) of transmitting property from á decedent to those chosen by will or selected by the law of descent. It is not a tax upon the right or privilege of receiving that which is given by will or conferred by law; it is upon the succession from the deceased owner. That which is taxed is the right or privilege of transmitting property, and, if there be “no property to transmit, there would be nothing upon which the tax levied on the occasion of death could be computed.” Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, 20 S. Ct. 747, 44 L. Ed. 969. And see the cases collated. in Randolph v. Craig (D. C.) 267 F. 993.
Furthermore these citations prove it as law that such taxes are and have been “almost from the beginning of our national life treated as duties and not as direct taxes.” Knowlton v. Moore, supra. If the tax were direct, it would admittedly require apportionment under the Constitution, for which the statute makes no provision.
We next inquire as to'the nature, or at least as to the presently material attributes, of the property whose transmission gives rise to this indirect tax — this duty or excise. It is and must be the property of the decedent whose estate bears the incidence of tax. No estate, no tax, said White, C. J., in substance, in Knowlton v. Moore, supra; and it is laid on the transfer of “the net estate of every decedent dying after the passage of this act.” Such’ are the statutory words; so what is taxable in this instance is the property lately of Mr. Nash, and not the property of any one else.
We now consider the extent and intent of the applicable and above-cited statute. Transfers “in contemplation of death” are *627not relevant, and this is admitted, as it must be, whether regard be had to the language of the act, or the facts pleaded and undenied in respect of the conduct of Mr. Nash in 1910, when he was a man vigorously and successfully oeeupying a laborious and important place in the financial world, a position he continued acceptably to fill almost to the day of his death.
• The statutory declaration is (speaking in terms of this ease) that Mr. Nash’s “gross estate” shall be determined by “including” any “interest therein” — i. e., any interest in “all property * * * ' wherever situated” — of which Mr. Nash “at any time made a transfer, or * * * created a trust * * * intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death, whether such transfer or trust is made or created before or after the passage of this act.”
Having regard to the recent history of estate tax legislation, as shown by Shwab v. Doyle, 258 U. S. 529, 42 S. Ct. 391, 66 L. Ed. 747, 26 A. L. R. 1454, the report of the same case below in (C. C. A.) 269 F. 321, Coolidge v. Nichols (D. C.) 4 F.(2d) 112, and Girard Trust Co. v. McCaughn (D. C.) 3 E. (2d) 618 (reversed in the Third Circuit, since argument herein, and still unreported), we have no doubt that the intent of the draftsman of the act of 1921, and therefore the intent of the Congress that approved his work, was to coerce, by words too strong to be avoided, the reluctance of courts to give retroactive effect to statutes of exaction, so as to impose on citizens burdens for doing what at the time of doing was unburdened. That reluctance was fully voiced in the Shwab and its allied eases in 258 U. S. 529, 42 S. Ct. 391, 66 L. Ed. 747, 26 A. L. R. 1454. Since mere retroactivity of a national taxing statute confessedly does not produce uneonstitutionality, we are quite unable to see how it can be doubted that the intent of the statute was to reach past transactions irrespective of their antiquity. If Mr.- Nash had been an old Parr, the transfer of 1910 might have taken place in 1810; the legal result would have been the same under this statute.
But the time of creating the trust is not the only matter determinative of the application of the statute; the transfer must be made or the trust created with intent that it “take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death” — i. e., after the death of the transferor.
Again, to state the question in terms of this case, there was a “transfer” — i. e., a passing of title — by Mr. Nash; but did he “create” a trust? In a strict legal sense he certainly did not, Mrs. Nash did that; but for the purposes of this statute we believe there is no difference between creating a trust and utilizing one already created, the terms of which suit the wishes of the transferor. So we regard the statute as intended to apply to Mr. Nash as fully as though he had executed a deed of trust inter vivos to the same legal effect as Mrs. Nash’s will.
But, further, what is meant by the phrase “take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after” the death of the trust creator? The natural inclination of every lawyer is to recognize that “take effect” is not a phrase of art, to search for some artistic equivalent, and find it in the word “vest.” But if, as the result of a passage of title, the passing estate is vested, whether in fee, for life, in remainder, or in reversion, even though subject to divestment by subsequent event, then the transfer is complete, and so is the “possession or enjoyment,” for one “possesses and enjoys” a reversion as thoroughly as he does a fee, even though most men prefer a fee to a reversion.
But if the transfer of an estate results in the immediate vesting thereof, and of each and every part of the same, the transaction is complete, and the grantor or transferor has no “interest” left therein; wherefore on his death there can be found no such “interest” to include in his gross estate.
On the interpretation of these words we think the cases hopelessly at variance. On comparing the Girard Trust Co. Case, Coolidge v. Nichols, supra, Shukert v. Allen (C. C. A.) 6 F.(2d) 551, Cleveland, etc., Co. v. Routzahn (D. C.) 7 F.(2d) 483, and Erick v. Lewellyn (D. C.) 298 E. 803, there will be seen a diversity of opinion incapable of reconciliation. One man may regard the words of the act as a conveyancer would, i. e., read them like the carrying words in a deed; while another may look only to what Congress is supposed to have wanted, i. e., to collect the largest quantum of tax and so read “possession” and particularly “enjoyment” as meaning the time when remaindermen and/or reversioners will’obtain the usufruct of the property.
The ruling decisions seem to -us to go no further than to definitely hold that a trust creation, wherein the possession or enjoyment in the usufruct sense is deferred until “at or after” the death of the settlor, is a “completed” transaction, a holding consistent only with the more technical and legal interpretation of the statutory words. Shwab v. Doyle, .258 U. S. 529, 42 S. Ct. 391, 66 L. Ed. 747, 26 *628A. L. R. 1454; Union Trust Co. v. Wardell, 258 U. S. 537, 42 S. Ct. 393, 66 L. Ed. 753; Levy v. Wardell, 258 U. S. 542, 42 S. Ct. 395, 66 L. Ed. 758. But it is observable that this was said only as preparatory to a holding that the aet of 1916 (39 Stat. 778 [Comp. St. §§ 6336%a-6336%m]), in laying taxes in respect of transfers made at “any time,” did not mean (as to completed transactions) any time prior to the passage of the act. The point that, if the transaction was “complete,” there could be no “interest” left in the estate of the transferor, was certainly not decided and apparently not argued.
Before expressing opinion on this point, we shall consider the ownership and nature of the property in respect of which this particular tax is laid. This excise is on the transfer by his will of the estate of Mr. Nash; if he had no estate, or one less than the statutory exemption, there would be no tax.
It is not on the transfer of 1910; and at that date there was no tax burden of any kind upon what Mr. Nash then did. It is not laid because Mr. Nash died owning or having any testamentary power over what he parted with in 1910. The statute does not pretend to declare ownership, and it could not if it would; for the right to own property, grant it, and dispose of it by will is a matter for the states, and not the nation, and by the law of New York Mr. Nash did not own, and could neither grant nor bequeath, what was owned by the trustees of Mrs. Nash. He did possess and enjoy-a life interest in the net income, but that is not relevant to this tax.
Furthermore, Mr. Nash never did own more than $200,000 worth of the property used in computing this tax. By financial operations successfully carried on by Mrs. Nash’s trustees, they acquired $500,000 worth of securities, by using the capital given them. How, in any reasonable usage of the word, Mr. Nash can be said to have an “interest” in 1922 in what he never owned, because he “transferred” in 1910 the capital so skillfully increased by others, we are quite unable to perceive.
It is suggested that what was given in 1910 was a seed from which has grown a lusty plant, and the giver bears the same relation to the plant that he did to the seed. The analogy would be attractive, had the gift been a tract of land, which increased in value; but it fails completely with personal property, that changes in kind and nature by sale and new purchase.
The $500,000 worth of personalty under consideration was no part of the estate gross or net of Mr. Nash, and it is noticeable that the statute does not attempt to say that it does so belong. At the utmost, and under the second above stated construction of the word “interest,” it only directs that the “value” of the interest transferred shall be included in determining the tax on the estate of'which the decedent died seized or possessed.
Thus it is seen that what this statute was held to mean by the decision below is this: An excise tax on the transfer of property occurring.by reason of the death of A., payable only out of A.’s estate, and graduated by the size of that estate, is augmented by treating as part of A.’s property the property of another, three-fifths of which Mr. Nash never owned, and two-fifths of which he gave to that other 12 years before his death.
Thus we must first decide whether, within the meaning of the statute, Mr. Nash at the moment of his death had any interest, within the meaning of the act; we incline to hold that the applicable words should be treated technically, and that therefore there was no interest left from or arising out of the gift computed in 1910. We agree with the reasoning of Brewster, J., in Coolidge v. Nichols, supra, while feeling that nothing ultimate will be reached on this subject, until determination of the certiorari granted in Shukert v. Allen, supra.
But, if the technical construction is wrong, then we must face the question whether it is within the power of Congress to do what has been done; i. e., use the.property of A. as a measure for the tax to be laid upon B. Thus stated^ it would seem impossible to support the tax; attack must be on the form of statement. We have at great length examined the assemblage of phenomena that make up this case, in order to ascertain what they amount to; and we think the foregoing an accurate statement of what the tax at bar really is.
If that description be accepted, while there is no classification of taxpayers, the tax itself is “arbitrary and capricious.” Barclay v. Edwards, 267 U. S. 442, 450, 45 S. Ct. 135, 348 (69 L. Ed. 703). Further, a tax on a transfer by A., but measured by anything other than the estate of A., may be a duty or excise in form, but it is a palpable effort to tax something other than the transfer. In this case the effort is to tax in 1922 in respe.et of something untaxable in 1910. Cf. Lewellyn v. Frick, 268 U. S. 238 at 251, 45 S. Ct. 487, 69 L. Ed. 934.
If it be said that Congress might have taxed the 1910 transfer, and therefore can tax it even in 1922, the answer is that nothing *629of the kind has been attempted. There is no tax now laid on the transfer of 1910, nor the property transferred. Could Congress in 1922 have laid a tax on Mr. Nash because he gave away $200,000 in 1910? If that be assumed as possible, it is not possible that the tax so laid, and computed on the gift, its credits and gains, could ever be an excise on the transfer.
But if the tax be laid as it actually has been, and called an excise on the transfer of something else, the name is merely false, there is no excise, and the exaction falls into the category of unapportioned direct taxes. We think this an effort to use a constitutional power as a hook on which to hang a cloak that conceals unconstitutional action. There is no real difference between disguising this direct tax under the name of a duty, and laying a tax in order generally to regulate some subject taxable, but not otherwise subject to national regulation. The real purpose is dealt with, notwithstanding the cloak. The Child Labor Cases, 259 U. S. 20, 42 S. Ct. 449, 66 L. Ed. 817, is the leading example.
It follows that we think there was no “interest” shown in Mr. Nash, justifying the tax laid; but, if the statute required the tax as laid, then the exaction was arbitrary and unconstitutional.
Judgment reversed, with costs.