188 N.Y. 274 | NY | 1907
George W. Kidd died December 3rd, 1901, possessed of an estate exceeding in value $800,000. He left a will which was admitted to probate by the surrogate of the country of New York on April 5th, 1903. By his will he created a number of trusts, the ultimate remainders in which were contingent. The details of the will are immaterial. It is sufficient to say that proceedings having been instituted to determine the amount of the transfer tax, and agreement was entered into in March, 1905, between the executor and the state comptroller, under the provisions of section 230a of the Tax Law, compromising the tax at the sum of $10,000, which was paid to the comptroller. Before this time one Grace G. Dickinson, a stepdaughter and a beneficiary to a limited extent under his will, brought an action in the Supreme Court against the executors and trustees of Mr. Kidd's will and the other beneficiaries thereunder, alleging an ante-nuptial agreement between her mother and the said Kidd, whereby, in consideration of the marriage and the promise of her mother to turn over to him the sum of $40,000, to be used in his business, the said Kidd agreed "that he would adopt said grace G. Slocum (now Dickinson), give her his name and make her his heir and that in case there should be issue of said marriage he would by will bequeath and devise all of his property equally to and among the said child and his other children, and in case there should be no issue of said marriage, then in that case he would devise and bequeath all of his property to the said Grace G. Slocum;" the performance of said agreement by her mother and the failure of the deceased to perform the same on his part. The pleadings in that action are not in this record; we have merely the findings and the judgment. The trial court found the facts as alleged and judgment was entered declaring the contract to be a valid contract entitling *278 the plaintiff to all the property, real and personal, of which the deceased died seized or possessed, and directing the defendants to execute and deliver to the plaintiff all necessary releases and conveyances of said property. Thereafter the executor of the will and Mrs. Dickinson instituted this proceeding to have the estate declared exempt from taxation. The application was granted by the surrogate, and the order granting it has been affirmed by the Appellate Division by a divided court.
While the principal argument before us has been devoted to the question whether the compromise made between the executor and the comptroller can now be set aside or attacked collaterally, we do not find it necessary to consider the question since we are of opinion that, giving full effect to the judgment in the Supreme Court action, nevertheless the estate is liable to the transfer tax. The contract between the plaintiff's mother and the deceased, which has been enforced by the judgment of the Supreme Court, was to bequeath and devise to his stepdaughter by will, either the whole property he might leave or a portion of it, dependent on the existence of other children. It was not a contract to convey, but a contract to make a will in her favor. Had the deceased performed his agreement and given her his property by will the estate would have been subject to the tax. Substantially this proposition was decided in Matter of Dows
(
It does not affect the question of the liability of the estate to taxation that in consequence of the failure of the testator to carry out his promise Mrs. Dickinson was obliged to resort to a court for relief. The method by which a court of equity in a proper case (for there is not in all cases an absolute right for its enforcement) enforces an agreement of the character of the one before us, is well settled. It does not set aside the will, for in the present case such a judgment would do the plaintiff in the Supreme Court action no good; she was neither heir at law nor next of kin; but it converts the devisees *280
under the will or the heirs at law or next of kin, as the case may require, into trustees for the beneficiary under the original agreement. The subject has been quite recently before us in the case of Phalen v. United States Trust Company (
The orders of the Appellate Division and of the Surrogate's Court should be reversed and the application denied, with costs in all courts.
O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; EDWARD T. BARTLETT and VANN, JJ., dissent.
Orders reversed, etc.