114 Misc. 161 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1921
The executors appeal on several grounds from the order assessing the transfer tax. The first ground is that the appraiser has included as taxable property the transfers effected by the exercise of powers of appointment of parts of two trust estates. These powers were created by the wills of the father and grandfather of decedent, who were residents of Massachusetts. The decedent, who died April 18, 1919, was a resident of New York. The trust property is located in Massachusetts. The trustees are residents of that state, and the will of decedent was proved in Massachusetts. It is claimed by the executors that the statute is unconstitutional in its application to these transfers and that this court has no jurisdiction to assess a tax upon them. The appeal on this ground is overruled. Section 220, subdivision 6, of the Tax Law provides that as a condition of exercising a power of appointment it shall be “.deemed a transfer taxable under the provisions of this chapter
It appears, however, that her will exercised the powers in favor of her trustees with life estate to her children, and that the transfer to them is part of what they would have received under the wills of their ancestors if the powers had not been exercised. It is claimed that an election to take under the latter’s wills had been made by the children. The appraiser therefore erred in including the value of their life estates as taxable (Matter of Lansing, 182 N. Y. 238; Matter of Slosson, 216 id. 79), and the report is remitted for the purpose of eliminating the values of
Second. The executors’ second ground of appeal is that if these transfers are taxable, the remainders should be suspended from taxation until it is determined whether the donees of the new powers given in Mrs. Canda’s will shall exercise them. Her will provides that in default of the exercise of the powers, the remainders shall vest in the issue of her children, or in default of issue in their next of kin under the laws of Massachusetts. The appeal on this ground is denied. The donees of the new powers reside abroad, the son of Mrs. Canda in France, and the daughter in England. There is an ample fund in the state of New York now from which to pay the transfer tax. If this property be removed from the state in the course of administration, or on final distribution, there will be no ■ funds available for the payment of the tax in case the remainders vest under the will of this decedent. It seems to me that the provisions of section 230 and of section 241 of the Tax Law contemplated the very situation existing here, and the impounding of sufficient assets to meet this contingency as a protection to the state treasury. Under her will the estates subject to contingencies are easily ascertainable, by computation, and come within rule 1 laid down in Matter of Terry, 218 N. Y. 218, 223. The contingencies in this estate are not mere possibilities of reverter, as in Matter of Terry. The probability of the vesting of the remainders in default of the exercise of the powers is not remote. Crackanthorpe v. Sickles, 156 App. Div. 753; Real Property Law, § 41. Since Matter of Howe, 86 App. Div. 286; affd., 176 N. Y. 570, the decisions of the Court of Appeals have progressively aided the state comptroller in securing the immediate payment of the tax upon transfers limited
Third. The appeal of the executors on the inclusion of a tax under section 221-b of the Tax Law on the securities in the trust fund in Massachusetts is sustained. Matter of Bowers, 183 N. Y. Supp. 137.
Fourth. The appeal of the executors on the refusal of the appraiser to deduct the federal inheritance tax is denied. Matter of Sherman, 222 N. Y. 540; Matter of Bierstadt, 178 App. Div. 836.
Decreed accordingly.