Tо say nothing of the magnitude and importance of this case, and] the almost certainty that it will be passed upon by higher courts, the nice question of law involved makes it proper for the surrogate to state his reasons for his decision and the process by which he reached it. There is not а question of fact in the case. There might have been one, but it was removed by stipulation in open court that $220,000 was the amount necessary to produce the income of $12,-000 a year, reserved to the grantor in the trust deed, hereinafter more fully dealt with. The matter is all reduced to a question of law.
It is the usual practice in these tax matters for the surrogate to make an order pro forma, affirming the county treasurer’s report, and assessing the tax in accordance with said report, and then passing upon the matter more carefully and judicially when the matter latеr comes before him on appeal. The statute (Consol. Laws, c. 60, art. 10) seems to contemplate this practice, and to treat the surrogate first as a taxing officer and later a judicial officer.- The parties interested, however, have expressed the wish that the surrogate should give this matter his best attention and most careful review in the first instance. This will be done, not, however, with any hope of satisfying both parties to the controversy.
The trust deed provided that the annual inсome from the trust fund, over and above the $12,000 a year, should go to the beneficiaries in certain proportions, and that at the grantor’s death the whole trust fund should go to the same beneficiaries in the same proportions. It is not contended by the Comptroller that the accumulated inсome during the grantor’s life, over and above the $12,000 a year, payable to her, is taxable, although it was in the hands of the trustees and undivided at the death of decedent, and the appraiser has excluded such accumulated income from the amount found by him to be taxable.
It is noteworthy that the will and the trust deed were executed on the same day, and both follow the same scheme of distribution; the executors named in the one and the trustees named in the other being the same persons, and the beneficiaries under the will and in the trust deed being the same persons, and taking the samе proportionate shares under each. These facts strongly suggest that the trust deed was made in preparation for death; although there is nothing to show that death was impending, or soon expected, and was probably not contemplated within the meaning of the words of the statute. See Matter of Spaulding,
The learned attorney for the Comptroller points out that, by the terms of the trust deed, the entire property was liable for the payment of the annual income of $12,000 to the grantor—that is to say, if the income were any year insufficient, the corpus was to be used to make up the fixed amount of $12,000 a year, .reserved to tlie grantor— and that therefore this case falls within the rule of that long line of cases holding that a trust deed, by which the corpus of property is to go to the grantee at the death of grantor, and the life use is reserved to the grantor, is a transfer of property intended to take effect at the. death of the grantor, and that the transfer is taxable. Matter of Green,
“The income upon the securities turned over to the trustees was not greatly in excess of the monthly payments made to Susan'S. Patterson, provided for in the trust agreement.”
The witness is here referring, I believe, to the first few years of his administration of the trust. I can hardly believe, however, that the proper theory of taxing the property passing by this trust deed (over and above the $220,000, conceded to be taxable) is the remote possibility that it might have been resorted to to pay the grantor her $12,-000 a year. I believe that the authorities sustain the proposition that a trust deed giving all the income of an estate to beneficiaries for the life of the grantor and the corpus at grantor’s death, is, so far as the corpus is concerned, a transfer intended to take effect in possession and enjoyment at the death of grantor, and therefore taxable. In such a case the beneficiary possesses and enjoys the income during the life of the grantor, but possession and enjoyment of income is not possession and enjoyment of the principal which produces that income. It seems to me that the plain wording of the statute is enough to fix tax-ability upon the entire corpus of the property passing by this trust deed, even if the entire income derived therefrom had gone to the beneficiaries from and after the delivery of the deed, because, by the terms of the deed, the corpus was intended to pass into the possession and enjoyment of the beneficiaries at or after the death of the grantor.
Very few cases that are exactly in point have been called to our attention. In the Matter of Masury,
In Matter of Bostwick,
The matter of Keeney,
In the Keeney Cаse, the court at page 286 of 194 N. Y., at'page 429 of 87 N. E., uses this apt language, showing the danger of a failure to exercise a watchful care over the kind of transfer with which we are now dealing:
“A not wholly unnatural' desire exists among owners of property to avoid the imposition of inheritanсe taxes upon the estates they may leave, so that such estates may pass to the objects of their bounty unimpaired. It is a matter of common knowledge that for this purpose trusts or other conveyances are made whereby the grantor reserves to himself the beneficial еnjoyment of his estate during life. Were it not for the provision of the statute which is challenged, it is clear that in many eases the estate on the death of the grantor would pass free from tax to the same persons who would take it had the grantor made a will or died intestate. It is true that an ingenious mind may devise other means of avoiding an inheritance tax, but the one commonly used is a transfer with reservation of a life estate.”
People v. Kelley,
“The present case seems to fall squarely within the terms of the statute.”
And in commenting on the Matter of Green,
“It was there held that the real questiоn was not whether the remainders vested at the time of the creation of the trust, as is the present claim of the respondent, but whether the remainders were intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the donor. In the present case, as in that case, although the remainders must be held to have vested, yet the remainderman could not have had actual possession and enjoyment, or right of possession until after the death of the founder of the trust”
I am led to the conclusion that decedent’s trust deed of May 21, 1903 (acknowledged May 22, 1903), was a transfer intended to take effect (so far as the principal is concerned) at or after the death of decedent, and is taxable.
An order will enter accordingly.
