60 N.Y.S. 927 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
Lead Opinion
The respondent is the residuary legatee under the will of Zefita, Countess De Rohan Chabot, who died on the 29th of February, 1896, being at that time a nonresident of this state, but residing in Paris, France. The surrogate of New York county made an order appointing an appraiser to ascertain the estate of the Countess De Rohan Chabot for the purpose of assessing the amount of the transfer tax. Upon the appraisal which was then made a transfer tax was assessed, not only upon certain real property of which she died seised in the city of New York, but upon a very considerable amount of personal property of which she was said to be the owner. The personal property upon which the transfer tax was assessed consisted of bonds of various corporations and stock of New York corporations actually situated within the state of New York. In addition to those securities, there were stocks of corporations which were not within the state of New-York, but those stocks were not attempted to be assessed, and no question is raised here concerning them. From the order of the surrogate assessing the personal property an appeal was taken, and the surrogate upon the appeal modified his first order by striking out the
The facts are that in 1873 Henry Heyward, the father of this decedent, by his will, bequeathed a certain portion of his property to his wife, Zefa, for her life, and upon her decease or remarriage he bequeathed the said property to. his son, Frank, and to his daughter, Zeñta, or to the survivor of them. By the same will the remainder to the children was subject to the power given to Mrs. Heyward to appoint by her last will and testament that share, or any part thereof, to such of the testator’s lineal descendants, and in such proportions, as she might see fit. Mrs. Heyward, the widow, enjoyed the life estate until her death, in- 1895. Henry Heyward’s son, Frank, by his last will and testament, gave all his estate to his mother, Zefa Heyward, for her life, with remainder over to his said sister, Zefita, the decedent. Mrs. Heyward’s will was contested, but was admitted to probate on the 29th day of February, 1896,—the very day on which the Countess Zefita died. Her executor duly qualified. The estate which she transferred consisted of securities situated in the city of New York. Zefa Hey-ward and the Countess Zefita were both nonresidents of this state, residing in France. Jennie McLane, the respondent here, who was the residuary legatee of the Countess Zefita, also resides in Paris, and is a nonresident of this state. It is insisted by the learned counsel for the comptroller that all the personal property which passed to the Countess Zefita after the death of her mother, except the stocks of the foreign corporations above referred- to, was liable to a transfer tax before it could be paid over to her legatees, and the question presented is whether this contention is correct. The personal property which might be liable to the tax is easily divisible into three groups. In the first place, there is the property which Mrs. Heyward took by bequest from her son, Frank, of which ■she had a life estate, and the remainder in which went at her death to the Countess Zefita. As to this property there can be no question that the Countess Zefita was entitled to it immediately upon the death of her mother, and that Mrs. Heyward’s executor never had any title to it, so that the Countess Zefita was the actual •owner of this property immediately upon the death of Mrs. Hey-ward, and required no process of administration upon the estate of Mrs. Heyward to entitle her to possess it. This property belonged to her at the time of her death, and it was undoubtedly subject to the transfer tax, within In re Whiting’s Estate, 150 N. Y. 27, 44 N. E. 715. Another portion of the property against which it is claimed that the tax should be assessed was that of which Mrs. Heyward had an estate for life under the will of her husband, with a remainder to the Countess Zefita, and with a power of appointment to Mrs. Heyward of that property. By Mrs. Hey ward’s will that power of appointment was executed to the Countess Zefita. In that property also Mrs. Heyward had only a life estate. It never went to her executor, but immediately on her death it became the property of the appointee, and the appointee
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice RTJMSEY that the property which came to the deceased from her father and her brother subject to the life estate of her mother was subject to taxation, but I cannot agree with his disposition of the question as to the liability of the tax of the personal property which was actually owned by Mrs. Heyward in her own right at the time of her death. This property in question belonged to Mrs. Heyward, and was, by her last will and testament, devised and bequeathed to the decedent absolutely. That it was property within this state, and subject to its laws, is conceded. Mrs. Heyward, by her will, left all of her property, after the payment of certain specific legacies, to the decedent; and, while the formal legal title of her personal property vested in the executors for the purpose of administration, the beneficial interest in this property passed at once to the residuary legatee. It seems to me.that this residuary legatee had something more than a right of action against the executors to recover a legacy. She had the absolute right to all the personal property of the decedent, except such a portion of it as was necessary to satisfy the specific legacies and pay the expenses of administration. While it is quite true that the situs of an indebtedness is determined by the residence of the creditor, where the question is as to the ownership of specific personal property, the situs of that property does not depend upon the domicile of the possessor, but upon the place where that specific property is situated. The title to this personal property which vests in the executors is merely the formal title, which vests in them for the purpose of administration. The right to the property itself passed to the decedent as residuary legatee under the will of her mother. That will was admitted to probate upon the day of the decedent’s death, and it must be presumed that by the admission of the will to probate the right of the decedent to the property was determined during her lifetime. She thus became the beneficial owner of the property, the formal legal title of which was in her mother’s executors, and it was this ownership or right to the property that passed by her will to the respondent. By section 1 of the transfer tax law (chapter 399, Laws 189-2) it is provided that “such tax shall also be imposed where any such person or corporation becomes beneficially entitled in possession or expectancy to any property, or the income thereof, by any such transfer.” Upon the death of her mother the decedent became entitled to her residuary estate by her mother’s will.
The decision of the supreme court in Re Phipps, 77 Hun, 328, 28 N. Y. Supp. 330, must be read in connection with the decision of the court of appeals in Re Houdayer’s Estate, 150 N. Y. 38, 44 N. E. 718, and the principle established by this latter decision must, I think, be controlling. There the question was as to whether or not a sum of money deposited in a trust company .in the city of
“In my judgment, this is sound reasoning upon an unsound basis, because it places form before substance. It enables a large sum of money invested and left in this state, and enjoying the protection of its laws, to escape taxation because the decedent had voluntarily commingled his own funds with those of an estate he represented, and for the further reason that his rights as against the trust company were intangible. But what were his rights, or those of his successors, as against the state of New York, in view of the command of its legislature that all property, or interest in property, within the state, susceptible of ownership, should be subject to a transfer tax upon the death of its owner, whether he was a resident or nonresident? What was the real thing, the essence of the transaction, that gives rise to this controversy? * * * A reasonable test in all cases, as it seems to me, is this: Where the right, whatever it may be, has a money value, and can be owned and transferred, but cannot be enforced or converted into money against the will of the person owning the right without coming into this state, it is property within this state for the purposes of a succession tax. Thus the right in question is property, because it is capable of being owned and transferred. It is within this state, because the owner must come here to get it. It is subject to taxation, because it is under the control of our laws. It has a money value, because it is virtually money, or can be converted into money upon demand. It is subject to a transfer tax, because the passing, by gift or inheritance, of ‘all property, or interest therein, whether within or without'this state, over which this state has any jurisdiction for the purposes of taxation,’ comes within the expressed intention of the legislature.”
It is true that this opinion does not seem to have been concurred in in its entirety by a majority of the judges of the court, but the result was concurred in, and the result in that case could only have been reached by a determination that a deposit of money in this state, where the technical relation of debtor and creditor created between the depositor and the bank in which the money was deposited was property within this state, and that the courts would look to the substance, and not to the form, in determining whether or not there was property within this state subject to taxation. Now, in this case it seems to me clear that there was substantial property within this state which belonged to this decedent, and which passed by her, under the will, to her residuary legatee. The specific personal property was here. The beneficial ownership of the property passed by her will to the respondent, and the mere fact that the formal legal title had vested in the executors for the purpose of administration does not affect the right or title that this respondent has to that property under the will of the decedent. Such a right to specific personal property within this state that can be transferred which is subject to our laws, and when the owner, to obtain possession of it, must come within this state, I think is property subject to taxation under the law of this state, and that the order of the surrogate should be entirely reversed, and the order entered upon the report of the appraiser restored.