1. The question whether a state statute providing for taxation
of trust income to the trustees when distribution by them is
discretionary, and to the beneficiary when it is not, would operate
to deny equal protection if income of a discretionary trust were to
be taxed under it first to the trustee and again to the
beneficiary, while income from ordinary trusts was taxed only once,
does not arise in a case where there has been but one tax imposed
under the statute -- the tax on the beneficiary -- and when there
is no ground to suppose that the statute will be so construed and
applied by the state authorities as to result in double taxation.
P.
305 U. S. 23.
2. Virginia and New York both have laws taxing trust income to
the trustee when distribution is discretionary, but to the
beneficiary when it is not.
Held, that taxation of a
citizen and resident of Virginia upon income received there from a
trust established and
Page 305 U. S. 20
administered in New York was not violative of the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, although such income came from
income of the trust which was taxed to the trustees by New York. P.
305 U. S. 23.
169 Va. 414; 193 S.E. 534, affirmed.
Certiorari, 303 U.S. 632, to review the affirmance of a judgment
denying relief in an action to set aside income tax assessments,
and to recover the taxes, theretofore paid under protest.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mrs. Mary T. Ryan, while resident and citizen of Virginia in
1930, 1931, and 1932, was beneficiary of a trust set up under the
will of her husband, Thomas F. Ryan, who died when a citizen of New
York, in 1928. The will was probated in New York; the trustees
qualified there, took over the assets and have kept them there. The
trust has been administered and accounts settled under the laws of
that state.
The will divided the estate into fifty-four parts, and directed
payment of the income therefrom to designated beneficiaries. These
are the provisions presently important:
"Twelve (12) of said equal parts to said Trustees in trust to
receive the income therefrom, and to pay over such part of said
income to my dear wife, Mary T. Ryan, as they in their sole
discretion may determine to be necessary and proper for her care,
support, and comfort during her life, in such installments and at
such intervals as they in their sole discretion may determine.
"
Page 305 U. S. 21
The will further provided that the trustees should
"divide any surplus income from said twelve parts not paid to my
wife as aforesaid into forty-two equal portions, and to pay such
surplus income in equal quarterly payments as near as may be"
to certain distributees as designated in said will, and that,
upon the death of the said wife, the principal amount of the said
twelve equal parts should be divided and distributed to certain
designated distributees, as set out in said will.
The New York and Virginia statutes laying taxes upon incomes
from trusts are substantially alike. They require trustees to
report income received and where the trust is discretionary to pay
the amount assessed upon the entire income; if the trust is an
ordinary one each beneficiary is assessed upon the amount received
by him.
For 1930, 1931, and 1932, New York in one or both of these ways
received taxes upon the entire income of the trust set up under the
will. Exercising their discretion, after satisfying the taxes, the
trustees paid to Mrs. Ryan considerable sums out of the income,
from twelve fifty-fourths of the estate -- in all, approximately
$300,000. For the same years, Virginia assessed ordinary state
income taxes against her on account of the sums so received. They
were paid, and this proceeding was begun in the circuit court of
Nelson County to recover them. It sustained the tax, and the
highest court of the state affirmed the judgment. The matter comes
here by certiorari granted upon the following statement:
"This petition presents the issue as to whether the State of
Virginia has the right, under the provisions of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, to assess an
income tax on income received by the said Mary T. Ryan for the
years in question, when the identical income in the hands of her
Trustees had been assessed with income taxes by the New York, and
which said taxes had
Page 305 U. S. 22
been paid there, thus imposing two State taxes on the same
income."
Counsel for petitioner submits:
The same income was subjected to taxation by two states. New
York unquestionably had the right to exact the tax upon the income
of the trust, and thereby Virginia was inhibited. The provisions of
the Fourteenth Amendment protect against such taxation by two
states on the same income. Here, both the Equal Protection and the
Due Process clauses forbid the challenged exactment.
The claim that equal protection has been denied seems to rest
upon an assumed literal construction of the Virginia statute which
would require income from discretionary trusts to be taxed against
both trustee and beneficiary, while only one tax (against the
beneficiary) would fall upon income from ordinary trusts.
We must, of course, deal with rights here actually involved. The
state has made one assessment against a resident beneficiary
because of income received within her jurisdiction, and her courts
have approved. They have not interpreted her statutes according to
the petitioner's assumption.
The right to recognize a distinction between ordinary and
discretionary trusts, and thus insure collection of taxes upon the
entire income actually received from the latter, seems clear
enough.
Has there been denial of Due Process:
The insistence is that the challenged assessment was upon the
identical income already rightly taxed by New York; that, under
numerous decisions by us, two or more states may not tax the same
subject; this would amount to double taxation, and infringe the Due
Process clause. To support this proposition, the cases noted in the
margin
* are cited.
Page 305 U. S. 23
Those cases go upon the theory that the taxing power of a state
is restricted to her confines, and may not be exercised in respect
of subjects beyond them. Here, the thing taxed was receipt of
income within Virginia by a citizen residing there. The mere fact
that another state lawfully taxed funds from which the payments
were made did not necessarily destroy Virginia's right to tax
something done within her borders. After much discussion, the
applicable doctrine was expounded and applied in
Lawrence v.
State Tax Comm'n, 286 U. S. 276, and
New York ex rel. Cohn v. Graves, 300 U.
S. 308. The attempt to draw a controlling distinction
between them and the present cause, we think, has not been
successful.
The challenged judgment must be
Affirmed.
*
Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v. Kentucky,
199 U. S. 194;
Frick v. Pennsylvania, 268 U. S. 473;
Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Virginia, 280 U. S.
83;
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Minnesota,
280 U. S. 204;
Baldwin v. Missouri, 281 U. S. 586;
Beidler South Carolina Tax Comm'n, 282 U. S.
1;
First National Bank of Boston v. Maine,
284 U. S. 312;
Senior v. Braden, 295 U. S. 422.