1. The tax imposed under § 302 of the Revenue Act of 1924,
determined by including in the gross estate of the decedent subject
to tax property held by the decedent and spouse as tenants by the
entirety, and bank deposits in their joint names, is not a direct
tax in violation of the constitutional requirement of apportionment
(Art. I, § 2, cl. 3, and § 9, cl. 4). Following
Tyler v. United
States, 281 U. S. 497. P.
284 U. S.
165.
2. As to property held upon tenancies by the entirety created
after the effective date of the 1924 Act, the validity of the tax
is conceded.
Tyler v. United States, 281 U.
S. 497.
Id.
Page 284 U. S. 161
3. As to property held upon tenancies by the entirety created
before the effective date of the 192 Act, but after that of the
1916 Act, and as to joint bank accounts the balances in which at
the time of the death are not shown to have been derived from
deposits made before the date of the 1916 Act, although the
accounts were opened earlier, the tax is not arbitrarily
retroactive.
Milliken v. United States, 283 U. S.
15. P.
284 U. S.
166.
4. In a suit to recover taxes already paid, the presumption is
that they were lawfully assessed, and the burden rests upon the
taxpayer to prove the facts that establish their illegality. P.
284 U. S. 167.
Certificate from the Circuit Court of Appeals, upon appeal from
a judgment of the District Court, involving questions as to the
validity of the federal estate tax as applied to property held by a
decedent and spouse as tenants by the entirety. This Court ordered
up the entire record.
Page 284 U. S. 164
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the District Court for the Middle
District of Pennsylvania, by the executor, to recover federal
estate taxes alleged to have been illegally exacted. A jury having
been waived, the court found the facts as stipulated and gave
judgment against the collector. 30 F.2d 395. Upon appeal, the Court
of Appeals for the Third Circuit, without deciding the case,
certified here the questions involved, and, on joint motion of the
parties, this Court ordered up the entire record. Judicial Code §
239.
The only controversy presented relates to taxes levied and
collected with respect to thirteen items of property, real and
personal, concededly held by decedent and his wife as tenants by
the entirety at his death in 1925. The applicable taxing statute is
§ 302 of the Revenue Act of 1924, 43 Stat. 253, 304, which provides
that the gross value of the decedent's estate subject to tax shall
include all property:
"(e) To the extent of the interest therein held as joint tenants
by the decedent and any other person, or as tenants by the entirety
by the decedent and spouse, or deposited, with any person carrying
on the banking business, in their joint names and payable to either
or the survivor, except such part thereof as may be shown to have
originally belonged to such other person and never to have been
received or acquired by the latter from the decedent for less than
a fair consideration in money or money's worth. . . ."
This provision, without any variation of present significance,
was in force under the 1916 and successive revenue acts. Section
202, Revenue Act of 1916, 39 Stat. 756, 777, 778; Revenue Act March
3, 1917, 39 Stat. 1000; § 402, Revenue Act of 1918, 40 Stat. 1057,
1097; § 402, Revenue Act of 1921, 42 Stat. 227, 278.
Page 284 U. S. 165
The thirteen items of property with respect to which the tax was
imposed may be classified in three groups: (1) property held upon
tenancies by the entirety created after the effective date of the
Revenue Act of 1924; (2) property held upon tenancies by the
entirety created after the Revenue Act of 1916 and before the
effective date of the Revenue Act of 1924, and (3) bank accounts
opened in 1910 in the joint names of decedent and his wife, in
which there were deposit balances at the date of his death.
The district court accepted the contention of the taxpayer that
the nature of the estate by the entirety, and particularly the
interest in it of a surviving tenant, are such as to preclude the
imposition of death or transfer taxes measured by the value of the
interest which ceases at the death of either tenant, and that the
tax, if deemed to be upon property, is a direct tax not
apportioned, forbidden by Art. I, § 2, cl. 3, and § 9, cl. 4, of
the Constitution. After the decision of the district court, this
contention was considered and rejected by this Court in
Tyler
v. United States, 281 U. S. 497,
holding that a like tax imposed under § 202(c), Revenue Act of
1916, was a valid indirect tax, measured by the value of the
property, rights in which devolved upon the surviving tenant upon
the happening of an event, the death of the other tenant by the
entirety.
The controlling force of that decision is acknowledged as to the
items of property in group (1), acquired after the passage of the
taxing act, and, as to them, it is conceded that the tax was
rightly levied.
But it is urged that the tax imposed with respect to groups (2)
and (3) is invalid. As the creation for the tenancies by the
entirety antedated the taxing act, and the earlier corresponding
sections had been repealed, it is insisted that the statute is
given a retroactive operation, such as that condemned by this Court
in
Nichols v.
Coolidge,
Page 284 U. S. 166
274 U. S. 531;
Untermyer v. Anderson, 276 U. S. 440;
Coolidge v. Long, 282 U. S. 582. As
§ 302(h) of the Act of 1924 specifically makes the quoted provision
of subdivision (e) applicable to estates created or existing before
the passage of the statute, the question presented is not one of
its construction or applicability, but of the power of Congress to
impose the tax. The government argues that the tax was laid on the
devolution of rights upon the wife at the death of her husband
after the passage of the Act, and that therefore the statute was
not applied retroactively, even though the estate was created
before its enactment. Without foreclosing consideration of this
contention at another time, we find it unnecessary now, in view of
the facts of the present case, to pass upon it.
Group 2. The tenancies in all of the items of the
second group were created after the passage of the 1916 Revenue
Act. Congress had by that Act adopted a system of death taxes,
embracing, as it lawfully might, estates by the entirety. As was
pointed out in
Tyler v. United States, supra, pp.
281 U. S.
503-505, such estates are appropriate subjects of death
taxes, and the taxation of them is a suitable measure to prevent
evasion of a system of taxation levied on estates passing at death
by will or inheritance. In both respects, they resemble gifts made
in contemplation or death, likewise taxed by the estate tax
provisions of the 1916 and later revenue acts. The considerations
which led us, in
Milliken v. United States, 283 U. S.
15, to uphold taxation of gifts in contemplation of
death, made after the 1916 Act and before that of 1918 at the
higher rate of the latter act, are equally applicable here. The
knowledge available before the creation of the estate that it was
embraced within an established taxing system and that its taxation,
on the same basis and in the same manner as decedents' estates, was
an essential part of the
Page 284 U. S. 167
system to prevent evasions, relieves the present tax of the
objection that it is arbitrarily retroactive.
Group 3. Although the bank accounts were opened before
the passage of the Revenue Act of 1916, the record does not
disclose whether the deposits, which were the sources of the credit
balances at the time of the decedent's death, were made before or
after 1916. If after, the tax was rightly laid, for reasons already
stated, which support the tax with respect to the items in Group 2.
As the suit is brought to recover taxes already paid, the
presumption is that they were lawfully assessed, and the burden
rests on the taxpayer to prove the facts which establish their
illegality.
Niles Bement Pond Co. v. United States,
281 U. S. 357,
281 U. S. 361;
Reinecke v. Spalding, 280 U. S. 227,
280 U. S. 232.
As the taxpayer has failed to sustain the burden in this respect or
to show that the wife had originally owned or paid for any of the
items or to present any facts to support a recovery other than
those stated, the judgment is
Reversed.