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Publication

Previously Taxed Property and the Federal Estate Tax

Bittker, Boris
Frankel, James
Abstract
In 1918 Congress added to the then simple but rapidly proliferating estate tax law a deduction for property previously taxed, the prototype of today's section 812(c).1 In recommending the new provision, the House Committee on Ways and Means said: It has come to the attention of the committee that persons closely related have died within such a short space of time that the same estate passing within a short period of time has been subjected to the estate tax, and thereby diminished unreasonably because of the short period within which the two levies have been made. For example, a husband dies leaving a large amount of property to his wife, an elderly woman, who dies within a few weeks after her husband's death. Under existing law the entire estate is taxed on the transfer from husband to wife and on the transfer from wife to other beneficiaries. To alter this result the Committee recommended and Congress adopted a provision allowing the executor to deduct from the decedent's gross estate any part thereof that was received by the decedent, directly or by exchange, from the taxable estate of any other person who had died within the previous five years. The provision was simple and straightforward