1. In determining the value of a devise to charities of a
remainder contingent upon the death without issue of a female life
tenant in order that such value may be deducted from gross income
in computing the federal estate tax, it is permissible to prove
that, before the death of the testator, the life tenant became
incapable of having issue, as the result of a surgical operation by
which her procreative organs were removed. P.
291 U. S.
281.
2. The ancient rule that a woman is conclusively presumed to be
capable of bearing children as long as she lives was, like other
irrebuttable presumptions, a rule of expediency or policy, based
upon the belief that to permit proof of the facts would result in
injuries of greater consequence than the predominance of truth over
error in the cases to which it applied. P.
291 U. S.
281.
3. Applicability of this presumption remains a proper subject of
judicial inquiry in the light of modern knowledge and experience.
Pp.
291 U. S. 282,
291 U. S.
285.
4. Application of a conclusive presumption of possibility of
issue in the present case would be subversive of the policy of the
estate tax statute to encourage bequests to charitable
organizations. P.
291 U. S. 286.
77 Ct.Cls. 37, 2 F. Supp. 472, affirmed.
Certiorari, 290 U.S. 14, to review a judgment allowing a claim
for overpayment of federal estate tax.
Page 291 U. S. 279
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Provident Trust Company is the administrator, with will
annexed, of the estate of the deceased, who died in 1921, leaving a
will thereafter duly admitted to probate. Subsequent to the filing
of the federal estate tax return, the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue imposed an additional estate tax, amounting with interest
to something over $21,000. The trust company paid the amount, and
filed a claim for refund of $18,404.05, on the ground
Page 291 U. S. 280
that, under the provisions of the will, the value of the
residuary estate, less the value of the life estate of the daughter
of deceased, should have been, but was not, allowed as a deduction
from the gross estate. The Commissioner rejected the claim, and
this action was brought.
The will, after making certain bequests, devised the remainder
of the estate to the trust company, in trust to pay the income
thereof to deceased's daughter during her natural life, and, upon
her death, to her lawful issue, and further provided that, upon the
death of the daughter without issue, the testator's residuary
estate should be distributed among designated charitable
institutions and societies -- all belonging to that class of
organizations bequests to which are deductible from the gross
estate under the provisions of § 403(a)(3) of the Revenue Act
of 1918, c. 18, 40 Stat. 1057, 1098. At the time of deceased's
death, the daughter was fifty years of age. She had been in poor
health and under a physician's care, and, on February 9, 1914, upon
medical advice, an operation was performed removing her uterus,
Fallopian tubes, and both ovaries. The court below specifically
found:
"The operation and removal of the organs were necessary to
prevent further impairment of her health. After the operation, she
could not have become pregnant, nor could she have given birth to a
child. She died on March 12, 1927, unmarried, and without ever
having given birth to a child."
Following her death, a state orphans' court awarded the residue
of the estate, subject to payment of transfer or inheritance taxes
which might be due, to the charitable organizations named in the
will.
Upon the foregoing facts, the court below held that respondent
was entitled to recover, and accordingly awarded judgment in the
sum of $17,204.66. 2 F. Supp. 472.
Page 291 U. S. 281
Section 403(a)(3),
supra, so far as it is pertinent
here, provides that, for the purpose of determining the value of
the net estate to be taxed, there shall be deducted from the value
of the gross estate
"(3) The amount of all bequests, . . . to or for the use of any
corporation organized and operated exclusively for religious,
charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes. . .
."
Article 53, Treasury Regulations 37, declares that the amount of
the deduction in such case is the value at the date of decedent's
death of the remainder interest in the money or property which is
devised or bequeathed to charity.
Compare Ithaca Trust Co. v.
United States, 279 U. S. 151. It
follows that, in making a deduction for that interest, the value
thereof must be determined from data available at the time of the
death of decedent.
Compare Humes v. United States,
276 U. S. 487,
276 U. S. 494.
The government contended in the court below, as it contends
here, that, in view of the restriction in respect of issue
contained in the will, the value could not be thus determined,
since the law, without regard to the fact, conclusively presumes
that a woman is capable of bearing children as long as she lives,
and that this presumption controls where the organs of reproduction
have been completely removed and inability to bear children admits
of no valid dispute no less than where the question turns upon the
circumstance of age alone, or upon conflicting evidence or medical
opinions. The lower court held otherwise for the reason that the
facts established as of the date of decedent's death forbade any
other conclusion than that the daughter was incapable of bearing
children, and a presumption to the contrary could not be
indulged.
The rule in respect of irrebuttable presumptions rests upon
grounds of expediency or policy so compelling in character as to
override the generally fundamental requirement
Page 291 U. S. 282
of our system of law that questions of fact must be resolved
according to the proof. Mr. Best, writing more than ninety years
ago when the force of the rule was more strictly regarded than it
has come to be since, said that modern courts of justice (that is
to say, the courts of that day) were slow to recognize presumptions
as irrebuttable, and were disposed to restrict, rather than extend,
the number.
"Many presumptions," he says,
"which in earlier times were deemed absolute and irrebuttable
have, by the opinion of later judges, acting on more enlarged
experience, either been ranged among
praesumptiones juris
tantum, or considered as presumptions of fact, to be made at
the discretion of a jury. . . . By an arbitrary rule to preclude a
party from adducing evidence which, if received, would compel a
decision in his favour is an act which can only be justified by the
clearest expediency and soundest policy, and it must be confessed
that there are several presumptions still retained in this class
which never ought to have found their way into it, and which, it is
to be feared, often operate seriously to the defeat of
justice."
Best, Presumptions of Law and Fact (London, 1844), §
18.
Certainly the world has gained in experience since that was
written, and the binding effect, in respect of particular
situations, of the ancient rule precluding proof of facts to the
end of avoiding supposed injurious results thought to be of greater
consequence than the predominance of truth over error still remains
a proper subject of judicial inquiry to be made and resolved in the
light of such further experience and knowledge.
Compare Funk v.
United States, 290 U. S. 371.
The foregoing observations are peculiarly apposite to the phase
of the subject now under review, for, as suggested by counsel for
respondent, the presumption here
Page 291 U. S. 283
involved had its origin at a time when medical knowledge was
meager, and many centuries before the discovery of anaesthetics
and, consequently, before surgical operations of the kind here
involved became practicable. It was not until a comparatively
recent period, therefore, that the effect of such an operation was
disclosed to observation, and the incontrovertible fact recognized
that a woman subjected thereto was permanently incapable of bearing
children.
The government argues that the rule is one of substantive law,
and evidence to overcome it is inadmissible. Whether in particular
instances so-called irrebuttable presumptions are, in a more
accurate sense, rules of substantive law, rather than true
presumptions, is a matter in respect of which a good deal has been
said by modern commentators on the law of evidence. 2 Chamberlayne
on Evidence, §§ 1086, 1087, 1159
et seq.; 5
Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.) § 2492.
Compare Heiner v.
Donnan, 285 U. S. 312,
285 U. S.
328-329; 2 Thayer, Evidence, 351, 352, 540, 541, 545,
546. But it is unnecessary to consider that interesting
distinction, since, as will appear, the presumption in question in
this instance must be dealt with as open to rebuttal, and
therefore, in any aspect of the matter, as a true presumption.
The presumption generally has been held to be conclusive when
the element of age alone is involved, albeit Lord Coke's view that
the law seeth no impossibility of issue, even though both husband
and wife be an hundred years old (Coke on Littleton, 551; 2
Blackstone Commentaries 125), if now asserted for the first time,
might well be put aside as a rhetorical extravagance. But the
presumption, even where age alone is involved, has not been
universally upheld as conclusive or applied under all
circumstances. It has been followed to a greater extent in this
country than in England, though even here
Page 291 U. S. 284
exceptional cases are to be found, [
Footnote 1] and in England such cases are very numerous.
[
Footnote 2] It does not seem
necessary to review the decisions in either jurisdiction. It is
enough to say that the English courts have treated the rule as
possessing a considerable degree of flexibility, and have refused
to give it a conclusive effect in a large number of cases; while
the American courts, adhering to a more rigid view, have applied
the rule more generally.
See extended note, 67 A.L.R. 538
et seq., where the decisions are classified and digested.
Few cases have arisen where elements other than, or in addition to,
that of age were present, and the conclusive character of the rule
in such cases is by no means established. Thus, in
Hill v.
Spencer, 196 Ill. 65, 70, 63 N.E. 614, 616, the Supreme Court
of Illinois held meaningless an allegation that a woman was past
the age of child bearing, but was careful to add, "unless more than
a mere matter of age is stated in the bill."
See Denver, etc.,
Railway v. Harris, supra, note
1 And, speaking generally, this Court has said (
Lincoln v.
French, 105 U. S. 614,
105 U. S.
617):
"But all presumptions as to matters of fact, capable of ocular
or tangible proof, such as the execution of a deed, are in their
nature disputable. No conclusive character attaches to them. They
may always be rebutted and overthrown."
The basis for the interposition of an irrebuttable presumption
is embodied in the general statement of Mr.
Page 291 U. S. 285
Wigmore, quoted by the court below, that evidence of certain
kinds of facts is excluded
"because its admission would injure some other cause more than
it would help the cause of truth, and because the avoidance of that
injury is considered of more consequence than the possible harm to
the cause of truth."
1 Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.) § 11. Relating this
obviously correct view to the presumption here invoked, not only do
we perceive no grounds of expediency or policy that call for its
hard and fast application to a particular physical condition, when
ignorance has been supplanted by knowledge so as to put beyond the
range of doubt the destructive effect of that condition upon the
capacity for childbearing, but we conclude affirmatively that the
policy of the statute under review, as applied to the case in hand,
is quite to the contrary.
The important point to be emphasized is that the question arises
with respect to a surgical operation, the inevitably destructive
effect of which upon the power of procreation is established by
tangible and irrefutable proof. Moreover, the case does not involve
the rule against perpetuities, the devolution of property, the
rights or title of living persons in or to property, or any other
situation such as constituted the background of practically all the
decisions which have sustained the conclusiveness of the
presumption. We have for consideration simply a statutory provision
exempting from a prescribed tax the value of all bequests, etc.,
made to or for the use of charitable organizations and those which
are akin, plainly evincing a legislative policy to encourage such
bequests.
Edwards v. Slocum, 264 U. S.
61,
264 U. S. 63.
And, in that view, we well may assume that Congress could not have
meant to leave its aim to be diverted by a purely arbitrary
presumption which, whether applicable or not to sustain another or
different policy, would deny the
Page 291 U. S. 286
truth and subvert the policy of this particular legislation.
Compare Humes v. United States, supra, at p.
276 U. S. 494.
The sole question to be considered is what is the value of the
interest to be saved from the tax? That is a practical question not
concluded by the presumption invoked, but to be determined by
ascertaining, in terms of money, what the property constituting
that interest would bring in the market, subject to such
uncertainty as ordinarily attaches to such an inquiry.
See
Ithaca Trust Co. v. United States, supra. Thus stated, the
birth of a child to the daughter of the deceased after his death
was so plainly impossible that, as a practical matter, the hazard
disappears from the problem. Certainly, in the light of our present
accurate knowledge in respect of the subject, if the interest had
been offered for sale in the open market during the daughter's
lifetime, a suggestion of the possibility of such an event would
have been ignored by every intelligent bidder as utterly destitute
of reason.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Male v. Williams, 48 N.J.Eq. 33, 36, 21 A. 854;
Ansonia National Bank v. Kunkel, 105 Conn. 744, 753, 136
A. 588;
Moore's Executor v. Beauchamp, 5 Dana 70, 72;
Bacot's Case, MS. (N.J.) cited in note to
Apgar's
Case, 37 N.J.Eq. 502;
Apgar v. Apgar, 38 N.J.Eq. 549,
552;
Carney v. Kain, 40 W.Va. 758, 811, 23 S.E. 650. And,
in
Denver & R.G. Ry. v. Harris, 122 U.
S. 597,
122 U. S. 608,
a personal injury case, this Court sustained without question the
admission of evidence that the injured person had been rendered
impotent as a result of the physical injury.
[
Footnote 2]
See note to
Apgar's Case, supra, note 1