delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are asked to say whether the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment precludes New York from taxing the exercise, by a domiciled resident, of a general testamentary power of appointment of which he was the donee under the will of a resident of Massachusetts, the property appointed being intangibles held by trustees under the donor’s will.
Respondents’ decedent died a resident of New York, where his will was probated and letters testamentary were issued. Decedent’s father had previously died a resident of Massachusetts, where his will had been probated. By his will the father bequeathed his residuary estate in trust to divide the trust fund into as many shares as he should leave children surviving. To his son, the New York decedent, he gave a life estate in one share and a general power to dispose of that share “by will.”
The son was also one of the three testamentary trustees. For some years they managed the trust property as a single trust fund, but in 1911 his one-third share was seg *659 regated and he was permitted by the other trustees to manage it as a separate trust, although all continued as trustees and as such accounted to the Massachusetts Probate Court for the administration of his share of the fund. From 1918 to 1929 the New York decedent resided in New York; from then until 1934 he resided in Illinois, when he returned to New York where he resided until his death in 1937. Throughout he kept in the state of his residence the paper evidences of the intangibles comprising his share of the trust. At the time of his death it consisted wholly of receivables and corporate stocks and bonds. By his will decedent appointed his share of the trust fund to his widow, and the New York tax authorities, in computing the tax, included in the decedent’s gross estate the intangibles bequeathed to her under the power.
Article 10-C of the New York tax law, by § 249-n, imposes an estate tax “upon the transfer of the net estate” of resident decedents. Under this statute the net taxable estate is arrived at by deducting from the gross estate, as defined by § 249-r, the specified deductions allowed by § 249-s. Section 249-r, so far as relevant, provides:
“The value of the gross estate of the decedent shall be determined by including the value at the time of his death of all property, real or personal, tangible or intangible, wherever situated . . .
“7. To the extent of any property passing under a general power of appointment exercised by the decedent (a) by will . . •
An order of the New York Surrogate’s Court,
For purposes of estate and inheritance taxation, the power to dispose of property at death is the equivalent of ownership.
Bullen
v.
Wisconsin,
*661
These were not novel propositions, when they were restated in the
McCanless
and
Elliott
cases,
1
and they were challenged then, though unsuccessfully, only on the ground that the transfer of the intangibles was subject to taxation in another state where they were held in trust. But the contention that the due process clause forecloses taxation of an interest in intangibles by the state of its owner when they are held in trust in another state was rejected in
Bullen
v.
Wisconsin,
In numerous other cases the jurisdiction to tax the use and enjoyment of interests in intangibles, regardless of the location of the paper evidences of them, has been thought to depend on no factor other than the domicile of the owner within the taxing state. And it has been held that they may be constitutionally taxed there even though in some instances they may be subject to taxation in other jurisdictions, to whose control they are subject and whose legal protection they enjoy.
2
And such interests taxable
*662
at the domicile of the owner have been deemed to include the exercise or relinquishment of a power to dispose of intangibles. Chan
ler
v.
Kelsey,
Decedent’s complete and exclusive power to dispose of the intangibles at death was property in his hands in New York, where he was domiciled.
Graves
v.
Elliott, supra.
He there made effective use of the power to bestow his bounty on the widow. Its exercise by his will to make a gift was as much an enjoyment of a property right as would have been a like bequest to his widow from his own securities.
See Helvering
v.
Horst,
Since it is the exercise of the power to dispose of the intangibles which is the taxable event, the mere fact that the power was acquired as a donation from another is without significance. We can perceive no ground for saying that its exercise by the donee is for that reason any the less the enjoyment of a property right, or any the less subject to taxation at his domicile. The source of the power by gift no more takes its exercise by the donee out of the taxing power than the like disposition of a chose in action *663 or a share of stock, ownership of which is acquired by gift.
But respondents argue that because here the power was bequeathed by a Massachusetts will, which placed the intangibles subject to the power in a Massachusetts trust, there was nothing; within the jurisdiction or control of New York which could be deemed subject to its taxing power. If by this is meant that the power was ineffective because its exercise by the New York will did not conform to the requirements of the will creating the power and defining the manner of its exercise, or to the laws of Massachusetts governing the disposition of intangibles, no such question is before us. We must take it that the New York courts assumed, as we do, that the power had been so exercised by the New York will as to confer on the widow the right to demand the property of the trustees in Massachusetts, and that even upon that assumption they held that the exercise of the power in New York could not constitutionally be taxed.
Whether the New York tax statute would apply if the New York will were ineffective to transfer the intangibles because it failed to comply with the requirements of the Massachusetts will or statutes, is for the New York courts to decide. Whether in such a case the statute could be constitutionally so applied is a question not presented by the record. But if, as is assumed, the power has been effectively exercised, the New York will is the implement of its exercise, made effective as a will by New York law whose aid the decedent invoked for the exercise and enjoyment of the property right conferred on him by the Massachusetts will. Its exercise is a subject over which the sovereign power of taxation extends.
Admittedly, under prevailing notions of choice of law in the courts of these two states, the law of the donor’s domicile, here Massachusetts, may be looked to in New
*664
York in determining whether, in some respects' at least, there has been a valid and effective execution of the power of appointment.
Sewall v. Wilmer,
Wachovia Trust Co. v. Doughton, supra, on which respondents rely, denied the constitutional power of a state to tax the effective exercise of a testamentary power in circumstances like the present. The only grounds for the decision were that the intangibles held in trust in another state, which were the subject of the power, had no situs in the state where the domiciled testator had exercised the power by his will; that its exercise was subject to the laws *665 of Massachusetts where the will donating the power and establishing the trust had been probated, and that no “right” exercised by the donee was conferred by the state of his domicile where it was exercised.
The conclusion there reached and the reasons advanced in its support cannot be reconciled with the decision and the reasoning of the
Bullen,
the
McCanless
and the
Elliott
cases. It is plain that if appropriate emphasis be placed on-the orderly administration of justice rather than blind adherence to conflicting precedents, the
Wachovia
case must be overruled. There is no reason why the state should continue to be deprived of revenue from a subject which from the beginning has been within the reach of its taxing power; a subject over which we cannot say the state’s control has been curtailed by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. No interest which could be served by so rigid an adherence to
stare decisis
is superior to the demands of a system of justice based on a considered and a consistent application of the Constitution. See
Burnet
v.
Coronado Oil & Gas Co.,
Reversed.
Notes
See
Orr
v.
Gilman,
See
Kirtland
v.
Hotchkiss,
