63 N.Y.S. 1079 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The single question arising on this appeal may be stated as follows : Is the right of succession to the trust fund created by the will of William H. Vanderbilt and as to which a power of appointment was given to the testator’s son Cornelius Vanderbilt, subject to the imposition of a transfer tax under the provisions of chapter 284 of the Laws of 1897 ? The question arises upon .the following facts:
William H. Vanderbilt died in 1885, and his will was admitted to probate in the month of December of that year. The trust fund involved in this proceeding was established in favor of his son Cornelius, who was to enjoy the income for life. The testator directed that upon the death of Cornelius the fund should be .paid to his lawful issue in such shares or proportions as Cornelius might by his last will have directed or appointed, and in default of such appointment, the gift is made directly to the issue with an alternative disposition oil failure of such issue. Cornelius Vanderbilt died in 1899, leaving a last will and testament, which was duly admitted to probate, and in and by which he exercised the power given by the will of his father by appointing a certain specified portion of the fund to one of his sons and directing that the balance be equally divided among his other children. At the time of the death of William H. Vanderbilt, this fund, or the right of succession to it, was not taxable under the Collateral Inheritance Tax Law. The trustees of the fund held and administered it until the death of Cornelius Vanderbilt. In 1897 an amendment of subdivision 5 of section 220 of the Tax Law was- passed, which provides that whenever any person shall exercise a power of appointment derived from any disposition of property made either before or after the passage of the amendment, such appointment when made shall be deemed a transfer,' taxable under the provisions of the act, in the same manner as though the property to which such appointment relates belonged absolutely to the donee of such power and had been bequeathed or devised by such donee by will. In December, 1899, a trustee of the fund under the will of William H. Vanderbilt, presented a petition to the surrogate setting forth the creation of the trust fund
On the argument of this appeal and in the briefs submitted by counsel, many subjects were discussed in an interesting and instructive manner, but the practical question presented for determination relates to the authority to impose a tax upon the succession to this trust fund, as that fund is at present situated. The provision of the amendment of 1897 covers directly and in terms the present case. The fund, or the right of succession to the fund, has never, as matter of fact been taxed, and we think the power to impose a tax was not exhausted by the proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court for the imposition of a tax directly connected with the general estate of William H. Vanderbilt. The real ground upon which the con-' tention of the appellant is made here, is that the execution by Cornelius Vanderbilt of the power of appointment related back to the will of his father, which gave him that power, and that, therefore, everything connected with and every interest affected by the exercise of that power is to be regarded as coming under the administration of William H. Vanderbilt’s estate and must be controlled
The rule respecting the relation back of the appointment to the original will giving the power to appoint has been applied in cases under the Collateral Inheritance Tax Law and under the Transfer Tax Act. (Matter of Harbeck, 161 N. Y. 211.) In that case it appeared that a testator, whose will went into effect in 1878, long before the enactment of the Transfer Tax Law, gave a power of appointment over a certain fund to his widow, which power was exercised by her in 1896. It was held that the source of the title of the appointees to the fund was the original will of Harbeck, and that the names of the appointees, although designated by a later instrument, must be read into the original will; from which it followed that there being no law in existence at the time the original will was proven, imposing a tax on the succession to the fund, that right was exempt from taxation. In that case the court states three propositions as being settled: First, that the tax sought to be imposed is not a tax upon property, but upon the right of succession ; second, that the Transfer Tax Act (as it then stood) had no retroactive effect; and, third, that the beneficiaries whose succession is sought to be taxed took by virtue of the will of Harbeck. But in the same case it is stated that the question of the retroactive effect of the Transfer Tax Law, in a case like this, has ceased to be of any special public importance, in consequence of the enactment of the amendment of 1897 of section 220 of the Transfer Tax Law. While this may not be construed as a judicial declaration that the legislation embodied in the amendment is to be given full retroactive effect, it is a strong intimation in that direction.
Scrutinizing the text of the amendment of 1897 it appears that the direct object of that legislation was to make the time at which the appointee would become entitled in possession the time at which
As affecting, contract obligations the argument of the learned counsel proceeds upon the theory that when the will of William H. • Vanderbilt was proved and a tax was paid under the law as it then existed upon rights of inheritance under that will, no power remained in the State to impose any further tax upon anything which passed under Mr. William H. Vanderbilt’s will, or upon any right of succession acquired by any one under that will. The argument seems to be that when the Collateral Inheritance Tax Law of 1885 was passed it constituted a contract between the State of New York and William H. Vanderbilt that his estate, provided he should die while that law was in full operation and unchanged, might be disposed of by him without the imposition of any further or other tax upon any rights or interests acquired under that will. We cannot assent to that proposition. As was remarked by Judge Earl, in the case of People ex rel. Gallatin, Nat. Bank v. Commissioners (67 N. Y. 519), “ It is never to be assumed that the State has, by any act, fettered its power of taxation in the future, unless it appears with irresistible clearness that the enactment was intended to be in the nature of a private contract as distinguished from a mere act of general legislation. [The People v. Roper, 35 N. Y. 629 ; The People v. Commissioners, etc., 47 id. 501; Rector, etc., of Christ Church v. County of Philadelphia, 24 How. [U. S.] 300.)” We do not find in the original act of 1885 anything which authorizes the legal conclusion that the provisions of that act are in their nature different from the ordinary features distinctively belonging to or connected with the power of the State over taxation. It cannot be inferred that the Legislature was impotent to amend or modify the law. It was held in Carpenter v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (17 How. [U. S.] 456) that where an estate was actually in the process of settlement, it was competent for the State to impose a tax upon property not taxable at the time of the pro
The exact situation of the fund in this case as affected by the question is the following: For purposes of general construction and the derivation of title to the fund as it now stands, the gift of the remainder comes under the will of William H. Vanderbilt. When he died, the law as it then existed made no provision for the taxation to the ultimate right of succession to the fund. The legal title to it upon the probate of his will was in his executors until they accounted in the Surrogate’s Court, constituted the fund out of the assets of the estate, and transferred it from themselves as executors to themselves as trustees, which we assume in this case was done. Then they held the fund still under the will but undistributed and finally undistributable until the power of appointment was exercised by Cornelius Vanderbilt. Meantime, and while they held it so undistributed in fact, the State, in the exercise of its general power of taxation, found it expedient to tax the right to the succession, which right had not theretofore been taxed, making the transfer consist in that act by which each of the appointees became entitled to claim and to receive the particular or specific distributive share allotted to him. Of the general power of the State to fix the time at which the right of succession shall be taxed, and to define what shall be a transfer within the meaning of that act, we have no doubt, so long as that definition does not involve a violation of either contract or vested rights, and, as we have said, no contract relation was established by the act of 1885.
Although the execution of a power may for certain purposes relate back to the instrument conferring the power, there was no complete vesting of an estate in the children of Cornelius Vanderbilt, under the power, until that power was exercised. That seems to have been directly held in Matter of Stewart (131 N. Y. 274). The only distinction in the facts between that case and this is that in the Stewart case the power was unlimited and here it is confined to a class, but in both the particular persons and the specific amounts they are to receive would not be ascertained for the purposes of taxation until after the exercise of the power. Until that power was exercised, there was no method of determining the amount each of the appointees should receive or of a tax.
If the views above expressed are correct, then it is quite apparent that property has not been taken without due, process of law, but only in the ordinary exercise of the right of the State to impose burdens upon the citizen by way of taxation.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with costs.