delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented in this case is the validity of a collateral inheritance tax on certain property bequeathed to plaintiffs in error by Emily M. Lord, deceased. The testatrix and her husband had lived for many years at Morristown, New Jersey. She died there January 18, 1892. At the time of her death she owned real estate situate in the State of New York, and certain personal property on deposit in a safe deposit company in the city of New York. The inheritance tax was claimed under chap. 713 of the Laws of the State of New York for 1887, entitled “An act to amend chap. 483 of the Laws of 1885/entitled 'An act to tax gifts, legacies and' collateral inheritances in certain cases.’ ”
That act has twenty-six sections. It is sufficient, however, to refer to a part of § 1 and § 15:
“Sec. 1. After the passage of this act all property• which shall pass by will or by the intestate laws of this Stat'e, from any person who may die seized or possessed of the saíne while a resident of this State, or if such decedent was not a resident of this State at the time of death, which property, or any part thereof, shall be within this State, . . . shall be and is *482 subject to a tax of five dollars on every hundred dollars of the clear market value of such property.”
“Sec. 15. The Surrogate’s Court in the county in which the real property is situate of a decedent who was not a resident of the State, or in the county of which the decedent was a resident at the time of his death, shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine all questions in relation to the tax arising under the provisions of this act; and the surrogate first acquiring jurisdiction hereunder shall retain the same, to the exclusion of every othe'r,” '
It appears that the husband of the testatrix died in Morris-town only ten days before his wife, but as he owned no real estate situate in the State of New York no inheritance tax was collected from his estate. In claiming the equal protection of the law under the Fourteenth Amendment' counsel for plaintiffs in error, after pointing to the discrimination between the two cases, contend that—
“The act of 1887, in so far as it applied to the property of non-residents, was not capable of verbal separation as between provisions relating to the property of non-residents who owned land in the State and provisions relating to the property of non-residents who did not own land in the State, nor can the legislature have intended that it should apply to the former and not to the latter. Being unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment as to the property of such non-residents as did not own land in New York, in that it takes their property without due process of law, it was therefore unconstitutional as to the property of all non-residents.”
Also that—
“The. imposition of a tax under the act of 1887 on the property bequeathed to these plaintiffs in error cannot be made without such a discrimination as will deny to them the equal, protection of the laws.”
We do not understand that the Court of Appeals of the State of New York has decided that the State has no power to collect an inheritance tax where the only property belong *483 ing to the decedent situate within the State of New York is personalty, but simply that no provision has been made for-reaching such a case.
Both parties refer to the
Matter of Embury,
“The statute, therefore, only conferred on the surrogate jurisdiction in the case of such non-resident decedents as should die seized of real estate within the surrogate’s county. . . . In other words, the statute of 1885, as amended by the act of 1887, declared such of Embury’s property as was in New York taxable, but omitted to give the Surrogate’s Court jurisdiction to impose the tax, a situation to which an expression of the Court of Appeals in
The Matter of Stewart,
Subsequently the Court of Appeals, in
The Matter of Fitch,
Under this condition an inheritance tax may be collected where the' decedent owns both personal and real property within the State of New York and not where the only property belonging to the decedent situate within the State is personalty. But though the operation of the statutes , creates a difference, this even if intentional is not of itself sufficient to invalidate the tax. The power of the State in respect to the matter .of taxation is very broad, at least so far as the Federal. Constitution is concerned. It may exempt certain property from taxation while all other is subjected thereto. It may tax one class of property by one method of procedure and another by a different method.
Bell’s Gap Railroad
v.
Pennsylvania,
“Nor do the exemptions of the'statute render its operation unequal within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. The right to make exemptions is involved in the right to select the subject of taxation and apportion the public.burdens among them, and must consequently be understood to exist in the lawmaking power wherever it has not in terms been taken away. To some extent it must exist always, for the selection of subjects of taxation is of itself an exemption of what is not selected. Cooley on Taxation, 200; see also the remarks of Mr. Justice Bradley in Bell’s Gap Railroad v. Pennsylvania,134 U. S. 232 .”
Indeed, it may be laid down as a general rule that mere inequalities or exemptions in. the matter of state taxation are not forbidden by the Federal Constitution.
There is no error in the rulings of thfe courts of the State of New York, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
