86 A.D. 458 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This is a transfer tax proceeding, the county treasurer of Kings county appealing from an order of the Surrogate’s Court modifying, and, as modified, affirming the ex parte order of the surrogate, entered upon the report of an appraiser. The decedent, a resident of Brooklyn, died March 22, 1900, leaving a last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate on the 9th day of April, 1900. The executors and the treasurer of Kings county both appealed from the formal order entered upon the report of the appraiser. The appeal of the executors was sustained, and that of the county treasurer overruled. From the order entered the county treasurer appeals to this court, urging four propositions.
By the terms of the will of Otto Huber, the decedent, who died in Brooklyn on the 22d day of March, 1900, it was provided: “ I further direct that my executor and trustee John F. Clarke be paid from my estate the sum of fifteen hundred dollars annually, together with the commissions allowed by law, as long as he shall act as such executor and trustee, the same to be received by him in full compensation for any and all services, legal or otherwise, which he shall render my estate.” The learned surrogate has held that this annuity of $1,500 per year was not subject to the transfer tax, and the county treasurer urges upon this appeal that under the provisions of section 227 of chapter 908 of the Laws of 1896, the learned court has fallen into error, and that Mr. Clarke’s annuity is subject to the tax fixed by the appraiser at $979.80. In this contention we are persuaded that the appellant is right. Indeed, it is difficult to read the language of the section and arrive at any other con
transfer.is by will,” etc. (Laws .of 1896, chap. 908, § 220, as amd. by Laws of 1891, chap. 284), and there Can be no doubt that this annuity, whatever, its purpose, was, transferred .by the will of Otto Huber, and accepted by Mr. Clarke. This question, it appears to us, was fully.disposed of by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Gould (156 N. Y. 423), and the order of the Surrogate’s Court' in this respect should be reversed and the tax assessed originally should be imposed.
The decedent, after making the above provision for-his executor and trustee,, and bequeathing, to his widow a cash legacy .of $25,.000. and releasing debts due from relatives; gave his remaining property to his executors in trust to invest the same, collect the rents, income and profits, and pay them to his widow, “ as long as she shall live and remain my widow.” Upon the death of his widow the decedent provided that the trustee pay the income to his daughter Helen during her life; If the daughter predeceased .the widow then the capital was to be divided at the wife’s death equally among the issue-of-the daughter her. surviving. . If, on the other hand, the daughter survived the widow, and was under twenty-one years of age when the widow died, the income was to be. accumulated during, .the: daughter’s minority, and on her death the capital was to be divided-in -the same way as though she had predeceased her mother — that is, among her lawful issue. If the widow remarried, the trust as to her was to cease, and the rents, income and profits over and above the sum of $5,000 (to be .paid to the wife during her life) was to be accumulated during the minority.of the daughter, and- on her death-the .corpus was to be divided,, as before, among- the lawful, issue of said daughter. H the.daughter died without lawful issue, then upon the'death or remarriage of the wife the corpus was to be divided among the next, of kin and heirs, at law of the testator according, to the statutes applicable to. estates of intestates. It is apparent from -the scheme of this will that the remaindermen entitled to the corpus of the estate after the death of the life tenants,.the widow and the daughter, must be. either the issue of the daugh
A more difficult question is presented in respect to the transfer of-the testator’s interest in the estate of his father, Otto Huber, Sr. The latter died on the 31st day of August, 1889, leaving a last will and testament under date of July 15,1887, which was duly admitted to probate in 1889. By the 1th paragraph of this will the testator gave to his wife, Emilie, “ all the use, profits, rents, revenue and income of all my real and personal estate for and during her natural life; ” and by the 5th paragraph, upon the- decease of his said wife he -gave.“ all the rest, residue and■ remainder of my estate to my •children in equal shares.” He was survived by his wife and seven •children, so that it is evident that Otto Huber, Jr., the decedent in the present proceeding, was, at the time of his death, vested with an indefeasible remainder in fee in the one-seventh part of his-father’s estate, expectant upon the life estate of his mother, Emilie Huber. By the 11th paragraph of the will of Otto Huber, Jr., he •declares : “ It is my intention by this my last will and testament to •dispose of all "the property which I may now possess or may hereafter acquire, and more particularly all my right, title and interest in and to all property, both real and personal which I may have or hereafter" acquire in the estate of my deceased father, Otto Hubei,
In Matter of Phipps (77 Hun, 325), relied upon by the respondents, the facts are not analogous to those here involved. Elizabeth Fogg, a resident of the State of Hew York, made a will, in which she gave and devised her residuary estate, some of which was real estate, but where located did not appear, to Hiram Fogg, of Bangor, Me., and John A. Phipps, of Boston, Mass. Phipps died at his home in Boston before the estate of Elizabeth Fogg had been administered, leaving by his will his interest in the estate to his wife. The question presented was whether the interest transferred by Phipps to his wife in the State of Massachusetts was taxable in the State of Hew York under the provisions of section 1 of chapter 483 of the Laws of 1885, as amended by chapter 713 of the Laws of 1887, and by chapter 215 of the Laws of 1891, and the court held that it was not, the decision going upon the principle that the mere chose in action transferred in another State, although relating to property which was within this State, because it had not been determined and transferred under the' original will, was not property transferred by will within the meaning of the statute. The same principle was
While it might he doubtful about the importance of determining the exact value of a single share of stock in the brewery property, if no other matters were involved, we are of opinion that it was proper to permit a cross-examination to determine the value of this stock, and this should be taken into consideration in determining the value of the property transferred.
. The order appealed from should be reversed in respect to the points considered, and should be remitted to the surrogate for a new appraisal of the estate, in accordance with the foregoing opinion, with costs-of this appeal. . .
. Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, HirsChberg and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed and proceedings remitted to the surrogate for a new appraisal of the estate, in accordance with the opinion of Woodward, J., with, costs of this appeal. ■
Laws of 1899, chap. 76, amdg. Laws of 1896, chap. 908, § 230.— [Rep.