174 N.E. 457 | NY | 1931
Several years before his death Hampton Howell, a resident of Suffolk county, entered into a separation agreement with his wife. The tenth paragraph of this document provides: "The said husband hereby agrees to provide by last will and testament that should he depart this life previous to the decease of the wife, the said wife shall receive an amount equal to one third of his net income arising from his estate after the payment of all debts, inheritance or succession taxes, legal fees, *213 administration expenses, etc., for the balance of her natural life and at her death the principal of said fund shall go to the adopted child of the parties hereto, said Gilbert Howell, and in consideration whereof the said wife hereby agrees that should the said husband predecease her all rights under this agreement except as to the provision to be made by his last will and testament, shall cease and determine; and should the said wife predecease the husband then and in that event the said wife, for herself, her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, hereby agrees that all rights under this agreement or under said will shall cease and determine." Mr. Howell afterwards executed a will by the seventh clause of which he directed his residuary estate to be divided into three equal parts, one of which he directed his trustee to invest and to pay the income to his widow during her life. The trustee was directed, at her death, to pay the income from this third over to the adopted son, Gilbert, in accordance with the terms of a trust created for his benefit. The husband predeceased the wife, and the issue of law is whether her life interest and the son's remainder in the one-third of the residuary is taxable.
At the date of Mr. Howell's death, January
Prior to the amendment of section 220 of the Tax Law by chapter 430 of the Laws of 1922, no statute dealt with transfers for a consideration adequate or inadequate. Even under the terms of this section, as amended by chapter 143 of the Laws of 1925, transfer by will or intestacy is left unaffected by consideration. In the absence of enactment bearing upon such a question this court, during a long term of years, had passed upon the effect of transfers by will wherein definite contractual obligations based upon consideration and enforceable against the estate were recognized and expressly found. Matter of Gould
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Not until the insertion in subdivision 4 of section 220 by chapter 430, Laws of 1922, of the provisions relating to "a valuable consideration" and to "equivalent monetary value" for property transferred by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift, did the Legislature, in any respect, adopt the judicial thought as expressed in Matter of Orvis. Even then, the transfer by will was left untouched. Section 220, as amended by that act, consisted of eight subdivisions. Transfers by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift were then included within subdivision 4 and provided for the transfer of many different items, under many different conditions. Subdivision 4 ended with the clause: "Ifany one of the foregoing transfers is made for a valuable consideration, the portion of the transfer for which the grantor or vendor receives equivalent monetary value is not taxable, but the remaining *217
portion thereof is taxable." The term "any one of the foregoing transfers" is ambiguous and might be deemed to include all transfers which were described not only in subdivision 4 but in each of the preceding subdivisions. If such a construction were to be given it, transfers by will or intestacy would be included, for subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of section 220, as amended by that act, dealt with such transfers. The later amendment of section 220 by chapter 143, Laws of 1925, removed all doubt. Subdivision 4 no longer related to transfers by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift but the provisions controlling them were inserted in subdivision 2. The last clause in subdivision 2 is the same as in old subdivision 4 with one exception of vital importance. The expression, "any one of the foregoing transfers," is changed to "any one of the transfers mentioned in this subdivision," thus, without possibility of ambiguity, limiting the class to transfers by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift and excluding transfers by will or intestacy. The taxing power includes the right of selection and this right is unrestrained provided all persons in the same situation are treated alike and the tax is imposed equally upon all property of the class to which it belongs. (People ex rel. Hatch v. Reardon,
Did the interests of Mr. Howell's widow and of the adopted son result from a contract or from an instrument testamentary in character? If they accrued under a deed, grant, bargain or sale to take effect after the death of *218 the grantor or vendor and if equivalent monetary value were given therefor, the transfer is free from the imposition of a tax. If, on the other hand, they passed by will, the tax was properly imposed. This would be true even on the assumption that the separation agreement is supported by adequate consideration. We cannot doubt that the transfer was by will. In its essence, this case does not differ from the principle in Matter of Kidd. It is true that this testator, unlike Kidd, discharged the obligations of his agreement, but, if he had refused or neglected to observe them, equity would have enforced them. Like Kidd, he did not contract to convey; he contracted to make a will in favor of his wife and adopted son. These two cases are similar in the element of uncertainty. Neither recognized the existence of any specific debt. Each agreed to devise or bequeath by will a proportion of his estate, provided he possessed one. Each was free, in the absence of fraud, to consume his entire substance in living expenses or by speculation. Howell's contract to make a will transferring his property by such an instrument has been faithfully kept. The transfer was by the method defined in subdivision 1 of section 220 and is subject to taxation in pursuance of its provisions.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Surrogate's Court affirmed, with costs to the appellant in the Appellate Division and in this court payable out of the estate.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *219