105 A.D. 487 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The testator was a resident of the city of New Orleans in the State of Louisiana, and died there on the 7th day of December, 1902j leaving a last will arid testament which ivas admitted to probate in the State of Louisiana on the 8tli of December, 1902. At the time of his death his total personal estate was valued at $1,020,000, of which there was situated in the State of New York property of the value of $594,185.02. The appraiser deducted for the proportionate amount of expenses of administration, debts and commissions of the executors, the sum of $60,998.74, leaving a net personal estate within the State of New York of $533,186.28. The will of the testator made certain specific bequests, and in addition thereto he gave to his sister, Mrs. H. A. Searles, of Jersey City, N. J., an annuity of $2,000, and to his sister Isabella an annuity of $4,000, and the will contained the following provisions: “ Requesting my executors to arrange for these annuities through such life insurance companies as the Mutual, New York Life, or Equitable Life, all of New York.” In pursuance of this direction the executors purchased an annuity for Mrs. Searles from the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, paying therefor the sum of $46,203, and purchased a like annuity for the testator’s sister Isabella from the Mutual Life Insurance Company for the sum of $28,398.88, making a total sum of $74,601.88 paid for these annuities, and the executors elected that the estate in the State of New York be applied towards the payment of the specific legacies, including the annuities aforesaid, the testator leaving the residuum of his estate to the Tulane University of Louisiana.
Section 230 of the Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 908, as amd. by Laws of 1902, chap. 496), in force when the testator died, contains provisions regulating the method of assessing the value of contingent interests in property, the title to which shall have been transferred and upon which transfer a tax is imposed. It is the value of the annuity to the annuitant, or the value of the interest to the person to whom such interest is given, that it was the object of this section of the Tax Law to regulate. Thus, the section provides that whenever a transfer of property is made, upon which there is, or in any contingency there may be, a tax imposed, such property shall be appraised at its clear market value immediately upon such transfer, or as soon thereafter as practicable; that in estimating the value of any estate or interest in property, to the beneficial enjoyment or possession whereof there are persons or corporations presently entitled thereto, no allowance shall be made in respect of any contingent incumbrance thereon, nor in respect of any contingency, upon the happening of which the estate or property or some part thereof or interest therein might be abridged, defeated or diminished; that
Thus, it is the value of these annuities to the annuitants which the statute contemplated should be determined by the prescribed method, and I think a consideration of the whole section shows that what the Legislature had in view was to provide a method for the d .¡termination of the value of an annuity to the annuitant. There was in this State at the time of the death of the testator certain personal property which was subject to the laws of this State and subject to taxation here. The executors followed the directions contained in the will and purchased the annuities from two of the life insurance companies designated by the testator. To obtain those annuities they have been required to pay a certain sum of money, and that having been paid from the personal property in this State and the executors having elected that those annuities should be chargeable upon the property in this State, the question upon this
Now, what is assessed is the value of the residuary bequest which was transferred to the residuary legatee. It is the value of that property that is the subject of taxation by this proceeding. In other words, what was the fair value of the property in this State which passed to the residuary legatee ? And it would seem that the tax upon that transfer is to be based upon the amount that the residuary legatee will actually receive and not upon an assumed value of an annuity to somebody else in which the residuary legatee has no possible interest. The tax is imposed by section 220 of the Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 284), which provides that “ a tax shall be and is hereby imposed upon the transfer of any property, real or personal, of the value of five hundred dollars or over, or of any interest therein or income therefrom, in trust or otherwise, to persons or corporations not exempt by law from taxation on real or personal property, "x" * * 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.”
Thus, the tax that is here imposed upon the residuary legatee is a tax upon the transfer of this personal property within this State by the will of the testator to the residuary legatee. The State is certainly not to impose a tax upon the residuary legatee on property that the residuary legatee can never receive and which has been paid out by the executors for the benefit of others in pursuance of a direction contained in the will. The residuary legatee will obtain the projrerty in this State, after deduction of the proper proportion of the debts and expenses of administration and the specific legacies which were actually paid from the property within this State. The result of the determination of the appraiser would be that the residuary legatee would be required to pay a tax upon $66,095.88, which it is not entitled to receive and never can receive — a i'esult certainly not contemplated by the Legislature when imposing a rule by which the value of an annuity should be determined when it became necessary to tax the annuitant.
It follows, therefore, that the surrogate was right in sustaining the exception by the residuary legatee to the report of the appraiser-, and directing a reappraisemeut which should fix the value of the
Patterson, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with costs.