Decedent

[41-2 USTC
¶9605]Estate of Mark D. Kuhn, Deceased, Appeal of the Commonwealth
Trust Company of
Pittsburgh
.
In
the Superior Court of Pennsylvania., No. 190. April Term, 1941., 21 A2d
513,
07/18/41
Appeal from the decree of the Orphans' Court of
Allegheny
County
at No. 914 of 1939 (No. 355).
Priority in
admin
istration: Taxes due United States.--Federal income taxes payable from
the assets of an insolvent estate of decedent domiciled in
Pennsylvania
have priority over amounts due general creditors.
Hirsch,
Shumaker, Demmler & Bash, 418 Frick Bldg.,
Pittsburgh
,
Pa.
, for appellant. Bialas & Ryan, J.T. Ryan, 2610 Grant Bldg.,
Pittsburgh, Pa., George Mashank, Acting U.S. Attorney, Sharon, Pa.,
Elliott W. Finkel, Assistant U.S. Attorney, Washington, Pa., and Leonard
Shapiro, 513 Berger Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa., for appellee.
Opinion
BALDRIGE, J.:
This
controversy is between the
United States
and a general creditor as to priority of payment of Federal income taxes
out of the assets of an insolvent estate.
[The
Facts]
Mark D. Kuhn,
a resident of
Pittsburgh
, died
February 2, 1939
, intestate. Letters of
admin
istration were granted to his widow. She took credit in her account for
her widow's exemption of $500,
admin
istration expenses, and those incurred in the last illness and burial of
the decedent. To those items no exceptions were filed. There remained
for distribution the sum of $2,854.23. The Orphans' Court of Allegheny
County allowed a preference of $1,690.42 to the
United States
for Federal income taxes for the years 1934, 1935, and 1938, with
interest. The balance of the fund was distributed pro rata among general
creditors whose claims amounted to $38,987.05.
[Contention
of General Creditor]
The
Commonwealth Trust Company of
Pittsburgh
, one of the principal general creditors, having judgments aggregating
over $10,000, filed exceptions to the decree allowing priority to the
claim of the
United States
. It contends that section 13[a] of the Fiduciaries Act of 1917, June 7,
P.L. 447, 20 PS §501 prescribes the order the debts of a decedent
should be paid. That section reads as follows: "All debts owing by
any person within this State at the time of his decease shall be paid by
his executors or
admin
istrators, so far as they have assets, in the manner and order
following; namely,--One, funeral expenses, medicine furnished and
medical attendance given during the last illness of the decedent,
servants' wages, not exceeding one year; two, rents, not exceeding one
year; three, all other debts, without regard to the quality of the same,
except debts due to the Commonwealth which shall be last paid." If
this section controls and the Federal jurisdiction must yield thereto,
the claim of the
United States
comes under section 3, namely "all other debts" and is not
entitled to a preference.
[Statutory
Authority]
The authority
to lay and collect income taxes is given by the Sixteenth Amendment to
the United States Constitution which provides: "The Congress shall
have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source
derived, without apportionment among the several states, and without
regard to any census or enumeration." In the exercise of this
power, granted to facilitate the collection of taxes, Congress enacted
Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes, 31 U.S.C.A., Sec. 191, which reads
in part as follows: "Whenever any person indebted to the United
States is insolvent, or whenever the estate of any deceased debtor, in
the hands of the executors or
admin
istrators, is insufficient to pay all the debts due from the deceased,
the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied; * *
*." Its purpose was to secure adequate revenue to sustain public
burdens and to that end this section must be construed liberally: Price
v. U.S., 269
U.S.
492, 46 S. Ct. 180, 70 L. Ed. 373 [1 USTC ¶158]. The appellant
challenges its constitutionality as an unauthorized interference by the
Federal Government with the sovereign power of the
Commonwealth
of
Pennsylvania
to establish the manner and order the debts due from the estates of its
decedents shall be paid. A study of this statute convinces us that it is
secure against this attack.
As the lower
court well said: "There can not be two sovereigns controlling the
citizen or his estate after the delegation of power by one to the other
and an appropriate exercise of the power delegated. The delegation of
the power to lay and collect a tax on income by the states to the
Federal Government subordinated the sovereignty of the state of
Pennsylvania
to the Constitution and laws of the
United States
, the supreme law of the land."
Our conclusion
is supported in principle by the decisions of the United States Supreme
Court and our own Supreme Court. Chief Justice Marshall in U.S. v.
Fisher, 2 Cranch 358, ruled that the United States, as the holder of
a bill of exchange negotiated in the ordinary course of trade, was
entitled to a preference over general creditors where the debtor becomes
a bankrupt. The case arose under the fifth section of the Federal Act of
March 3, 1797
, which granted the
United States
priority in terms substantially similar to section 3466 of the Revised
Statutes. The famous Chief Justice answered the objection that Federal
priority usurped the states' right to establish priorities, as follows:
"This claim of priority on the part of the United States will, it
has been said, interfere with the right of the state sovereignties
respecting the dignity of debts, and will defeat the measures they have
a right to adopt to secure themselves against delinquencies on the part
of their own revenue officers. But this is an objection to the
constitution itself. The mischief suggested, so far as it can really
happen, is the necessary consequence of the supremacy of the laws of the
United States
on all subjects to which the legislative power of Congress stands."
It has been
ruled that Federal income taxes are "debts" within the meaning
of that word as used in section 3466 of the Revised Statutes and as such
are entitled to priority over claims of general creditors in the case of
an insolvent corporation being
admin
istered under a District Court receivership: Price, Receiver v.
United States
, supra.
Our own
Supreme Court followed the Fisher case in Commonwealth, for the
use of the United States v. Lewis, 6 Binney 266, where Federal
priority was sustained, under the Act of March 3, 1797, supra, in
the case of an insolvent estate of a deceased Collector of Customs for
the Port of Philadelphia. Chief Justice Tilghman, pointing to the
authority granted the
United States
under the Federal Constitution for the exercise of such priority,
stated: "Although it was thrown out in the course of the argument,
that under the constitution of the
United States
, congress had no power to assume a preference, yet no reasons were
assigned against the exercise of such power. Congress have a right 'to
make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into
execution the several powers vested in them by the constitution.' Art.
1, sec. 8. By the same article and section, they have power 'to lay and
collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises.' * * * It will appear from
these observations, that if the congress have judged it necessary to
give a preference to the United States, it is no more than most other
governments have done; which strengthens the argument in favor of the
necessity and propriety of the measure. But the validity of this law has
been already decided in the case of the
United States
v. Fisher, Etc., assignees of Blight, 2 Cranch 358, by the
Supreme Court of the
United States
, who in all cases arising under the constitution or acts of congress
made in pursuance of it, are judges in the last resort."
The United
States Supreme Court in Spokane County v. U.S., 279 U.S. 80, 49
S. Ct. 321, 73 L. Ed. 624 [1 USTC ¶387], where the insolvent
corporation was being
admin
istered by a state court receivership, sustained a preference given the
United States for accrued income taxes over county taxes due by the
corporation. In New York v. Maclay et al., Receiver, 288 U.S.
290, 53 S. Ct. 323, 77 L. Ed. 754, the United States filed its claim for
additional taxes with the receivers of an insolvent corporation, and the
state filed its claim for certain taxes. The court held that under
section 3466, supra, the claim of the
United States
had preference over the debt owing to the State of
New York
in a distribution of funds.
Under the
decisions reviewed, the constitutional power of Congress to enforce such
priority under the statute, even as against the estate of an insolvent
individual decedent who dies domiciled in the state, is clear. Compare Harrison
v. Deutsch, (
Ill.
) 13 N.E. 2d 511.
Judgment is
affirmed.