1. The Act of September 8, 1916, c. 463, Title II, § 201
et seq., 39 Stat. 777, imposes a tax on the transfer of
the net estate of every decedent, graduated according to the value
as ascertained by deducting, in the case of a resident, from the
gross estate, funeral, administration and other expenses and
charges, and a specified exemption; the tax is due in one year from
the decedent's death, is payable primarily by the personal
representative, and is made a lien upon the gross estate except
such part as is paid out for allowed charges, etc.
Held,
an indirect tax, not requiring apportionment, and not an
unconstitutional interference with the rights of the states to
regulate descent and distribution. P.
256 U. S. 348.
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41.
2. That the tax may occasion inequalities in amounts received by
beneficiaries does not affect its validity. P.
256 U. S.
349.
3. "Charges against the estate," deductible under § 203 of
the act in computing net value, affect the estate as a whole, and
therefore do not include state inheritance and succession taxes on
the shares of individual beneficiaries. P.
256 U. S. 350.
263 F. 620 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 256 U. S. 346
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by the executors of one Purdy to recover
an estate tax levied under the Act of Congress of September 8,
1916, c. 463, Title II, § 201, 39 Stat. 756, 777, and paid
under duress on December 14, 1917. According to the complaint,
Purdy died leaving a will and codicil directing that all
succession, inheritance, and transfer taxes should be paid out of
the residuary estate, which was bequeathed to the descendants of
his brother. The value of the residuary estate was $427,414.96,
subject to some administration expenses. The executors had been
required to pay and had paid inheritance and succession taxes to
New York ($32,988.97) and other states ($4,780.91) amounting in all
to $37,769.88. The gross estate as defined in § 202 of the Act
of Congress was $769,799.39; funeral expenses and expenses of
administration, except the above taxes, $61,322.08; leaving a net
value for the payment of legacies, except as reduced by the taxes
of the United States, of $670,707.43. The plaintiffs were compelled
to pay $23,910.77 to the United States, no deduction of any part of
the above mentioned $37,769.88 being allowed. They allege that the
Act of Congress is unconstitutional, and also that it was
misconstrued in not allowing a deduction of state inheritance and
succession taxes as charges within the meaning of § 203. On
demurrer, the district court dismissed the suit.
By § 201 of the Act,
"a tax . . . equal to the following percentages of the value of
the net estate, to be
Page 256 U. S. 347
determined as provided in section two hundred and three, is
hereby imposed upon the transfer of the net estate of every
decedent dying after the passage of this Act,"
with percentages rising from one percentum of the amount of the
net estate not in excess of $50,000 to ten percentum of the amount
in excess of $5,000,000. Section 202 gives the mode of determining
the value of the gross estate. Then, by § 203 it is
enacted:
"That for the purpose of the tax, the value of the net estate
shall be determined -- (a) [i]n the case of a resident, by
deducting from the value of the gross estate -- (1) [s]uch amounts
for funeral expenses, administration expenses, claims against the
estate, unpaid mortgages, losses incurred during the settlement of
the estate arising from fires, storms, shipwreck, or other
casualty, and from theft, when such losses are not compensated for
by insurance or otherwise, support during the settlement of the
estate of those dependent upon the decedent, and such other charges
against the estate, as are allowed by the laws of the jurisdiction,
whether within or without the United States, under which the estate
is being administered, and (2) an exemption of $50,000."
The tax is to be due in one year after the decedent's death.
§ 204. Within thirty days after qualifying, the executor is to
give written notice to the collector and later to make return of
the gross estate, deductions allowed, net estate, and the tax
payable thereon. § 205. The executor is to pay the tax. §
207. The tax is a lien for ten years on the gross estate except
such part as is paid out for allowed charges, § 209, and if
not paid within sixty days after it is due, is to be collected by a
suit to subject the decedent's property to be sold, § 208. In
case of collection from some person other than the executor, the
same section provides for contribution from or marshalling of
persons subject to equal or prior liability "it being the purpose
and intent of this title that, so far as is practicable and unless
otherwise directed by the will of the decedent, the tax
Page 256 U. S. 348
shall be paid out of the estate before its distribution." These
provisions are assailed by the plaintiffs in error as an
unconstitutional interference with the rights of the states to
regulate descent and distribution, as unequal and as a direct tax
not apportioned as the Constitution requires.
The statement of the constitutional objections urged imports on
its face a distinction that, if correct, evidently hitherto has
escaped this Court.
See United States v. Field,
255 U. S. 257. It
is admitted, as, since
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S.
41, it has to be, that the United States has power to
tax legacies, but it is said that this tax is cast upon a transfer
while it is being effectuated by the state itself, and therefore is
an intrusion upon its processes, whereas a legacy tax is not
imposed until the process is complete. An analogy is sought in the
difference between the attempt of a state to tax commerce among the
states and its right after the goods have become mingled with the
general stock in the state. A consideration of the parallel is
enough to detect the fallacy. A tax that was directed solely
against goods imported into the state and that was determined by
the fact of importation would be no better after the goods were at
rest in the state than before. It would be as much as interference
with commerce in one case as in the other.
Darnell & Son
Co. v. Memphis, 208 U. S. 113;
Welton v. Missouri, 91 U. S. 275.
Conversely if a tax on the property distributed by the laws of a
state, determined by the fact that distribution has been
accomplished, is valid, a tax determined by the fact that
distribution is about to begin is no greater interference, and is
equally good.
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41,
dealt, it is true, with a legacy tax. But the tax was met with the
same objection -- that it usurped or interfered with the exercise
of state powers, and the answer to the objection was based upon
general considerations and treated the "power to transmit
Page 256 U. S. 349
or the transmission or receipt of property by death" as all
standing on the same footing.
178 U. S. 178
U.S. 57,
178 U. S. 59.
After the elaborate discussion that the subject received in that
case, we think it unnecessary to dwell upon matters that, in
principle, were disposed of there. The same may be said of the
argument that the tax is direct, and therefore is void for want of
apportionment. It is argued that, when the tax is on the privilege
of receiving, the tax is indirect, because it may be avoided,
whereas here the tax is inevitable, and therefore direct. But that
matter also is disposed of by
Knowlton v. Moore, not by an
attempt to make some scientific distinction, which would be at
least difficult, but on an interpretation of language by its
traditional use on the practical and historical ground that this
kind of tax always has been regarded as the antithesis of a direct
tax; "has ever been treated as a duty or excise, because of the
particular occasion which gives rise to its levy." 178 U.S.
178 U. S. 81-83.
Upon this point a page of history is worth a volume of logic.
The inequalities charged upon the statute, if there is an
intestacy, are all inequalities in the amounts that beneficiaries
might receive in case of estates of different values, of different
proportions between real and personal estate, and of different
numbers of recipients; or, if there is a will, affect legatees. As
to the inequalities in case of a will, they must be taken to be
contemplated by the testator. He knows the law and the consequences
of the disposition that he makes. As to intestate successors, the
tax is not imposed upon them, but precedes them, and the fact that
they may receive less or different sums because of the statute does
not concern the United States.
There remains only the construction of the Act. The argument
against its constitutionality is based upon a premise that is
unfavorable to the contention of the plaintiffs in error upon this
point. For if the tax attaches to the estate before distribution --
if it is a tax on the right
Page 256 U. S. 350
to transmit, or on the transmission at its beginning, obviously
it attaches to the whole estate except so far as the statute sets a
limit. "Charges against the estate," as pointed out by the court
below, are only charges that affect the estate as a whole, and
therefore do not include taxes on the right of individual
beneficiaries. This reasoning excludes not only the New York
succession tax, but those paid to other states, which can stand no
better than that paid in New York. What amount New York may take as
the basis of taxation and questions of priority between the United
States and the state are not open in this case.
Decree affirmed.