Scholey v. Rew

Supreme Court of the United States
90 U.S. 331, 23 L. Ed. 99, 23 Wall. 331 (1875)
ELI5:

Rule of Law:

A succession tax imposed on the devolution of real estate is an excise tax, not a direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution. Therefore, it is not subject to the constitutional requirement of apportionment among the states based on population.


Facts:

  • Scholey's wife inherited personal property from her first husband.
  • As executrix, Scholey's wife invested this personal property into real estate.
  • Upon her death, her will devised an equitable one-third interest in this real estate to her husband, Scholey.
  • Scholey was an alien (not a U.S. citizen) at the time of his wife's death.
  • Scholey claimed and accepted the benefits of the devise made to him in the will.
  • The United States assessed a federal succession tax on the interest Scholey received under his wife's will.
  • In a subsequent state court partition suit, Scholey received the full value of his one-third interest in the form of other estate property.

Procedural Posture:

  • Scholey paid a succession tax to the U.S. government under protest.
  • Scholey sued Rew, the tax collector, in the United States Circuit Court to recover the amount paid.
  • The Circuit Court found the facts specially and rendered judgment for the defendant, Rew.
  • Scholey, the plaintiff, appealed the judgment of the Circuit Court to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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Issue:

Is a federal succession tax levied on the value of real estate inherited by a devisee a 'direct tax' that must be apportioned among the states to be constitutional?


Opinions:

Majority - Mr. Justice Clifford

No, a federal succession tax on inherited real estate is not a 'direct tax' requiring apportionment. It is an excise tax or duty on the privilege of succeeding to property, which is within Congress's power to levy. The subject of the tax is the devolution of the estate, or the right to become the successor to the property, not the property itself. Direct taxes are limited to capitation taxes and taxes on land. This tax is distinguishable because it is levied on the transfer of title upon death. The court also rejected the plaintiff's argument that the devise was void due to his alienage, holding that because he accepted the full beneficial interest of the devise, he is estopped from denying its validity for the purpose of avoiding the tax.



Analysis:

This decision solidified the constitutional distinction between direct and indirect taxes, narrowly confining 'direct taxes' primarily to taxes on land and capitation taxes. By classifying the succession tax as an indirect excise tax, the Court affirmed Congress's broad power to tax transactions and privileges without the politically and logistically difficult requirement of apportionment. This ruling provided a crucial constitutional foundation for future federal wealth transfer taxes, including the modern estate and gift tax system, by establishing that taxing the transfer of property at death is a permissible exercise of Congress's taxing power.

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