delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to the Surrogate’s Court of the county of New York. It is brought to review a decree of the court, sustained by the Appellatg-Division of the Supreme Court,
The deposit in question represented the proceeds of railroad stock sold to a, syndicate and handed to the Trust Company, which, by arrangement with the testator, held the proceeds subject to his order, paying interest in the meantime. Five days’ notice of withdrawal was -required, and if a draft was made upon the company, it gave its check upon one of its banks
*203
of deposit. The fund had been held in this way from March 31, 1899, until the testator’s death on May 26,1900. It is probable, of course, that he did not intend to leave the fund there forever and that he was looking out for investments, but he had not found them when he died. The tax is levied under a statute imposing a tax “ upon the transfer of any property, real or personal. ... 2. When the transfer is by will or intestate law, of property within the State, and the decedent was a nonresident of the State at the time of his death.” Laws of 1896, c. 908, § 220, amended, Laws of 1897, c. 284 ; 3 Birdseye’s Stat. 3d ed. 1901, p. 3592. The whole succession has been taxed in Illinois, the New York deposit being included in the appraisal of the estate. It is objected to the New York tax that the property was not within the State, and that the courts of New York had no jurisdiction ; that if the property was within the State it was only transitorily there,
Hays
v.
Pacific Mail Steamship Co.,
In view of the state decisions it must be assumed that the New York statute is intended to reach the transfer of this property if it can.be reached.
New Orleans
v.
Stempel,
*204
The answer is somewhat obscured by the superficial fact that New York, like most other States, recognizes the law of the domicil as the law determining the right of universal succession. The domicil, naturally, must ’control a succession of that kind. Universal succession is the artificial continuance of the person of a deceased by an executor, heir, or the like, so far as succession to rights and obligations is concerned. It is a fiction, thé historical origin of which is familiar to scholars, and it is this fiction that gives whatever meaning it has to the saying
mobilia sequuntur',personam.
But being a fiction it is' not allowed to obscure the ¿acts, when the facts become important. To a con-, siderable, although more or less varying, extent the succession determined by the law of the domicil is recognized in other jurisdictions. But it hardly needs illustration to show that the recognition is limited by the policy of the local law. Ancillary administrators pay the local debts before turning over the residue to be distributed, or distributing it' themselves, according to The rules of the domicil. The title of the ¡principal administrator, or of a foreign assignee in bankruptcy, another type of universal succession^ is admitted in but a limited way or not at. all. See
Crapo
v.
Kelly,
To come closer to the point, no one doubts that succession to a tangible chattel may be taxed whenever the property is found, and none the less that the law of the
situs
accepts its rules of succession from the law of the domicil, or that by the law of the domicil the chattel is part of a
universitas
and is taken into account again in the succession tax there.
Eidman
v.
Martinez,
' No doubt this, power on the part of two States to tax on dif-.
*205
ferent and more or less inconsistent principles, leads to some hardship. It may be regretted, also, that one and the same State should be seen taxing on the one hand according to the fact of power, and on the other, at the same time, according to the fiction that, in successions after death,-
mobilia sequuntúr personam
and domicil governs the whole. ' But these inconsistencies infringe no rule of constitutional law.
Coe
v.
Errol,
The question then is narrowed to whether a distinction is to be taken between tangible chattels and the deposit in this case. There is no doubt that courts in New York and elsewhere have been loath to recognize a distinction for taxing purposes between what commonly is called money in the bank and actual coin in the pocket. The practical similarity more br less has obliterated the legal difference.
Matter of Houdayer,
If the transfer of the deposit necessarily depends upon and involves the law of New York for its exercise, or, in other words, if the transfer is subject to the power of the State of New York, then New York may subject the transfer to a tax.
United States
v.
Perkins,
Power over the person of the debtor confers jurisdiction, we repeat. And this being so we perceive no better reason for denying the right of New York to impose a succession .tax on debts owed by its citizens than upon tangiblé chattels found within the State at the time of the death. The maxim mobilia sequuntur personam has no more truth in the one case than in the other. When logic and the policy of a State conflict with a fiction due to historical tradition,, the fiction must give way.
There is no conflict between our views and the point decided in the case reported under the name of
State Tax on Foreign Held Bonds,
In the case at bar the law imposing the tax was in force before the deposit was made, and did not impair the obligation of the contract, if a tax otherwise, lawful ever can be said to have that effect.
Pinney
v.
Nelson,
Decree affirmed.
