10 Mills Surr. 91 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1913
The Dowager Duchess of Manchester at the time of her death was a British subject, domiciled in England, where her last will and a codicil thereto were duly probated on the 17th of December 1909. Subsequently the same testamentary instruments were proved de novo in this jurisdiction before a surrogate for this county, and letters testamentary were
As the Dowager Duchess of Manchester had become an English woman and was domiciled in England at the time of her death, the devolution and disposition of her movable estate, or, in other words, her personal property, are primarily governed by the law of her English domicile. Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y. 103. The law of England provides for a legacy duty upon every bequest of personal property contained in the will of the late Dowager Duchess. The annuity to the Countess
Although the will of the late Dowager Duchess of Manchester was proved here de novo, nevertheless England is in this instance, the principal place of administration. The administration here, whether so termed or not, is to some extent necessarily an acillary administration only. There cannot be two principal places of administration in respect of the estate of this deceased English lady. Despard v. Churchill, 53 N. Y. 192; Matter of Hughes, 95 N. Y. 55. The possession of the American executors is to be regarded in this instance, there being no claims of American creditors interposed, to some proper extent, as a possession of an English estate. The mere fact that the Dowager Duchess named executors domiciled in the various countries where her estate or her securities were situated does not make her foreign executors any the less her executors. If not strictly her executors, they are, in any event what in some systems is termed her, “ Posthumous agents.” For some purposes executors and a testator are eadem persona in legal contemplation. Otherwise such executors are “ posthumous agents,” ' and where no local impediment exists their obligations are not different from the paramount and legal obligations of the deceased whom they represent. It may be assumed, I think, that the Dowager Duchess of Manchester contemplated that her posthumous agents or executors, wherever they might be, would in respect of her estate comply with the law of her domicile in so far as
It is generally true that the courts of this state will not go out of their way to aid a foreign state in the enforcement of its peculiar revenue laws. It is contended on behalf of the Countess Zichy that while England may impose a tax upon her annuity or legacy the English authorities cannot collect it, as the property out of which the annuity is payable is not actually in England and the Countess herself is not within English jurisdiction. Apparently Countess Zichy would like to have her annuity regarded here as one given by an American lady to another American lady out of American property. But both ladies have long ceased to be Americans, and by figure of speech only is the property here American. The contention of Countess Zichy is only literally true in any aspect. When the Countess Zichy became the recipient of a legacy given by the will of an English' woman and payable out of an English estate, wherever situated, the legacy itself, to my mind, was burdened with certain implied conditions which bind the legatee whether in or out of English jurisdiction. In other words, the legatee must be taken to receive such
It is strenuously contended in behalf of the Countess Zichy that a legacy duty under the English law is payable only out of the particular legacy on which it is imposed, and that the English executors are liable for payment of the duty on her legacy only in the event that property shall come into their hands applicable to the discharge or payment of the particular legacy to the Countess Zichy. As the property on which the annuity to the Countess Zichy is charged, or out of which it is payable, has not come directly into the hands or possession of the English executors, and will not in the course of the administration of the estate of the late Dowager Duchess be received by the English executors, it is contended that the duty on the legacy to Countess Zichy, although payable under English law, should not be deducted by the American executors or by them paid or transmitted to the English, executors of the late Dowager Duchess. I do not quite see how the American executors can be expected to ignore the state of the law of the country of their testatrix, unless compelled so to do by the lex fori.
From the papers submitted to the surrogate on the hearing, it would appear that Mr. Justice Swenfin Eady, a judge of the English “ High Court of Justice,” has decided, or authorita
The objection should be overruled and the decree submitted by the accountants signed.
Decreed accordingly.