In computing succession taxes payable under the War Revenue Act
of 1898, upon legacies of the net income for life from funds placed
with trustees for investment and reinvestment, it was lawful for
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to assess the legacies by
means of general tables based on approved mortuary tables and on
four percent as the assumed value of money. P.
252 U. S. 550.
30 Stat. 448, §§ 29, 30; Rev.Stats., §§ 321,
3182.
The court takes judicial notice that at the time when the taxes
involved in this case were collected, four percent was very
generally
Page 252 U. S. 548
assumed to be the fair value or earning power of money safely
invested. P.
252 U. S.
550.
Where a will directed conversion of residuary estate into money
and its payment by the executors to a trustee of their selection,
in trust for certain legatees, and where the trustee had been
selected and the payments largely made, and there remained funds of
the estate, clearly exceeding the requirements of pending claims,
the payment of which to the trustee had become a duty of the
executors enforceable by the legatees under the state law,
held that the interests of the legatees in such funds were
vested, within the meaning of the Refunding Act of June 27, 102,
§ 3, 32 Stat. 406. New York Code of Civil Procedure, 1899,
§ 2718, 2721 and 2722, considered. P.
252 U. S.
551.
Proof that a suit by stockholders to obtain an accounting for
promotion profit was pending against a firm of which a testator was
a member, without showing the pleading, the issues, or character of
the suit, the amount or merit of the claim, or the result of the
litigation,
held insufficient to establish that legacies
in funds in the hands of his executors were not vested within the
meaning of the Refunding Act of June 27, 1302,
supra. P.
252 U. S.
552.
53 Ct.Clms. 640 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to recover the whole, or, failing that, a large
part, of a succession tax assessed under the Spanish War Revenue
Act of June 13, 1898 (30 Stat. 448) and paid by the appellants, as
executors of the will of John G. Moore, deceased, a citizen of New
York, who died in June, 1899.
Page 252 U. S. 549
The assessment was made against the appellants as persons having
in charge or trust, as executors, legacies arising from personal
property, and the contention is that right to recovery may be
derived either from the Act of Congress approved July 27, 1912 (37
Stat. 240), directing the Secretary of the Treasury to refund the
amount of any claims which should be satisfactorily shown to have
been "erroneously or illegally" assessed under warrant of § 29
of the War Revenue Act, or from the Act approved June 27, 1902 (32
Stat. 406), which directs the Secretary of the Treasury to refund
to executors so much of any tax as may have been collected under
warrant of that act "on contingent beneficial interests which shall
not have been vested prior to July 1, 1902."
The decedent, in his will, directed his executors to convert a
large residuary estate into money, to divide the same into three
equal shares, and to transfer two of such shares to a trustee, to
be selected by them, in trust to invest and reinvest and to pay to
each of his two daughters the whole of the net income of one share
so long as she should live.
Pursuant to authority derived from § 31 of the War Revenue
Act and Rev.Stats. §§ 321 and 3182, the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, in order to provide for the determination of the
amount of taxes to be assessed on legacies such as are here
involved, on December 16, 1898, issued instructions to collectors
of internal revenue throughout the country, which contained tables
showing the present worth of life interests in personal property,
with directions for computing the tax upon the same. These tables
were based on "Actuaries" or "Combined Experience Tables," and were
used in arriving at the amounts paid in this case.
On June 30, 1899, letters testamentary were issued to appellants
as executors, and on April 1, 1901, the United States Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, pursuant to the provisions of § 26 of the
Spanish War Revenue Act, assessed
Page 252 U. S. 550
a tax of about $12,000 on the share of each daughter, which was
paid on April 15, 1901.
On October 29, 1907, appellants presented to the government
their claim, which was rejected, for the refund of $21,640.55 of
the taxes so paid, "or such greater amount thereof as the
Commissioner might find refundable under the Refunding Act of June
27, 1902, or other remedial statutes."
The judgment of the Court of Claims, dismissing the amended
petition as to the claims for refund of the tax paid on the
legacies of the two daughters, and on three small legacies which
will follow the disposition of these, and need no further notice,
is before us for review.
Of the two claims of error argued, the first is that the Court
of Claims erred in refusing to hold that it was illegal to use
mortuary tables and to assume four percent as the value of money in
computing the tax that was paid, and that therefore the whole
amount of it should be refunded.
The objection is not to the particular table that was used, but
to the use of any such table at all -- to the method. Such tables,
indeed the precise table which was made the basis of the one used
by the collector, had been resorted to for many years prior to 1889
by courts, legislatures, and insurance companies for the purpose of
determining the present value of future contingent interests in
property, and we take judicial notice of the fact that, at the time
this tax was collected, four percent was very generally assumed to
be the fair value or earning power of money safely invested. Both
the method and the rate adopted in this case have been assumed by
this Court, without discussion, as proper in computing the amount
of taxes to be collected under this War Revenue Act in
Knowlton
v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41,
178 U. S. 44,
United States v. Fidelity Trust Co., 222 U.
S. 158,
Rand v. United States, 249 U.
S. 503,
249 U. S. 506,
and in
Henry v. United States, 251 U.
S. 393. It is much too late to successfully assail a
method so generally applied,
Page 252 U. S. 551
and as to this claim of error, the judgment of the Court of
Claims is affirmed.
The facts following are essential to the disposition of the
remaining question. The appellant executors appointed a trust
company trustee for the two daughters of decedent and prior to July
1, 1902, they paid to it, in trust for each of them the sum of
$426,086.08. After making these payments the executors had in their
custody in cash and securities in excess of $1,797,000, from which,
prior to March 16, 1906, they made further payments, amounting
approximately to $500,000 to the trust fund for each of the
daughters, thereby making each of them exceed $926,000. The
assessment of each was $665,000 in April, 1901.
The contention is that the excess of the assessment above the
amount which had been actually paid to the trustee prior to July 1,
1902, had not become vested prior to that date within the meaning
of the Act of June 27, 1902 (32 Stat. 406, § 3), and that it
should therefore be refunded.
The law of New York, in force when the estate was in process of
administration, provided (New York Code of Civil Procedure, 1899,
§ 2721) that,
"after the expiration of one year [from the time of granting
letters testamentary] the executors . . . must discharge all
specific legacies bequeathed by the will and pay general legacies,
if there be assets,"
and § 2722 gave to legatees the right to partition in an
appropriate court to compel payment of their legacies after the
expiration of such year.
Letters testamentary were granted to the appellants on June 30,
1899, and we have seen that assets abundantly sufficient to have
increased the trust fund legacies of the daughters much beyond the
amount at which they were assessed for taxation were in the custody
of the executors prior to July 1, 1902, and therefore, under this
law of New York, it was their duty to have made such payments prior
to that date unless cause was shown for not so doing.
Page 252 U. S. 552
The state law also authorized (§ 2718) the executors to
publish a notice once in each week for six months, requiring all
creditors to present their claims against the estate, and provided
that in suits brought on any claim not presented within six months
from the first publication of such notice, the executors should not
be chargeable for any assets which they may have paid out in
satisfaction of legacies.
The appellants first published the notice to creditors on April
25, 1900, and therefore they might safely have made payment on the
daughters' legacies after the 1st of November, 1900, one year and
eight months prior to July 1, 1902, unless cause to the contrary
was shown.
The only excuse given in the record for not complying with this
state law is that, in March, 1902, a stockholders' suit was
commenced against the partnership of Moore & Schley, of which
the deceased was a member, in which an accounting was sought for a
large amount of promotion profits in connection with the
organization of the American Malt Company. As to this, the Court of
Claims finds that the evidence does not show the pleadings, issues,
or the character of the suit, or the amount or merit of the claim,
or the result of the litigation. Obviously, such a showing of such
a suit cannot be considered to have been a genuine obstacle to
settlement of the estate, and the other claims against it were
negligible in comparison with the available assets.
It is thus apparent that, for many months prior to July 1, 1902,
there were abundant assets with which to make payments upon these
two legacies in an amount larger than was necessary to make them
equal to and greater than that for which they were assessed for
taxation; that, for many months before that date, it was the legal
duty of the executors to make such payment, and that, for a like
time, the legatees had a statutory right to institute suit to
compel payment.
It is obvious that legacies which it was thus the legal
Page 252 U. S. 553
duty of the executors to pay before July 1, 1902, and for
compelling payment of which statutory remedy was given to the
legatees before that date, were vested in possession and enjoyment
within the meaning of the Act of June 27, 1902, as it was
interpreted in
United States v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
222 U. S. 158,
McCoach v. Pratt, 236 U. S. 562,
236 U. S. 567,
and in
Henry v. United States, 251 U.
S. 393. The case would be one for an increased
assessment, rather than for a refund, if the War Revenue Act had
not been repealed.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS did not participate in the discussion or
decision of this case.