Clarke v. Welden
Clarke v. Welden
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented in this appeal is whether, in computing the Maryland inheritance tax chargeable to the sole beneficiary of a Maryland decedent, the entire Federal estate tax is deductible, including that portion attributable to real estate of the decedent located in the District of Columbia. The case arises from an ac
The decedent died in January, 1947. The will made no provision regarding the payment of Federal estate tax. In addition to substantial Maryland assets, the decedent left real estate in the District of Columbia. In computing the inheritance tax due to the District of Columbia, the appellee was allowed a deduction representing a portion of the Federal estate tax, calculated by dividing the net value of the real estate there located by the net value of all property subject to Federal estate tax. In computing the Maryland inheritance tax she claimed as a deduction the entire revised Federal estate tax on all the decedent’s property, including the District of Columbia real estate, and paid the tax so computed. The appellant claims additional inheritance taxes computed on that portion of the Federal estate tax, claimed as a deduction here, equal to the deduction claimed in the District of Columbia, or, to express the claim in another way, on the amount of Maryland assets used to pay the portion of the Federal estate tax attributable to the foreign real estate.
The appellant does not deny that the Federal estate tax is a deductible item in determining the amount of the distributive share subject to Maryland inheritance tax, or that it has been the administrative practice to allow it. It was recognized as a fully deductible item in 24 Opinions of the Attorney General 892, but it does not appear in that opinion whether any foreign assets were involved. It was reasoned that since the Federal tax is upon the right to transmit property whereas the Maryland tax is upon the right to receive it, the amount distributed must necessarily be reduced by the Federal tax chargeable against the entire net estate. Cf. Bouse v. Hutzler, 180 Md. 682, 685. The domiciliary executor is chargeable with the payment of the Federal
The appellant insists, however, that the full deduction should not be allowed where a portion of the deduction is claimed and allowed in another state where taxable assets are located. He argues that the allowance of the full amount under such circumstances would permit a double deduction. The argument would have more force if we were dealing with a uniform and mutually exclusive system, which we are not. Doubtless Maryland could, if it chose, disallow the deduction altogether, or allow it only in part, since the question is one of policy and not jurisdiction to tax. Cf. Stebbins v. Riley, 268 U. S. 137. Likewise, the District of Columbia could have disallowed the proportionate deduction, but instead it chose to allow it by regulation not open to challenge here. See Section 6(g) Regulations Pertaining to the Inheritance and Estate Tax Law for the District of Columbia. There is no language in the Maryland statute to support an apportionment in any case, nor can it fairly be argued that the amount of the deduction here should be made to depend upon the policy of another taxing jurisdiction, which might, perhaps, not levy a tax at all. Any economic benefit from the District of Columbia allowance is a matter of grace in the amount due there, stemming from that law and not from ours.
The appellant argues that the result reached in some of the cases last cited has been reached in Maryland by administrative practice. He points to three opinions of the Attorney General holding that a proportionate deduction is allowable in the case of a non-resident decedent leaving real estate in Maryland. 28 Opinions of the Attorney General 269, 29 Opinions of the Attorney General 241, and 30 Opinions of the Attorney General 154. The first of these opinions, and the only one where there was a real consideration of the question, seems to have relied entirely on a statement in the earlier
The appellee suggests that such a remedy has been supplied by Chapter 156, Acts of 1947 (Section 161 (3) (c), Article 81, Code of 1951), although this Act did not take effect until June 1, 1947, shortly after the death of the decedent in the instant case, and was in terms applicable only to the estates of persons dying after that date. This statute calls for contributions from various beneficiaries under various circumstances, so that the burden of the estate tax shall be cast proportionately and equitably upon all the beneficiaries, unless the will provides otherwise. The appellant argues that this statute has no reference at all to the situation presented in the instant case, involving apportionment not between beneficiaries but between different taxing jurisdictions. We express no opinion on the point.
It is sufficient to say that we find nothing in the statutes in effect at the death of this decedent that would justify an apportionment.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CLARKE, Register of Wills for Montgomery County v. WELDEN, and Individually
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published