On November 24, 1913, St. Clair McKelway and Virginia B. McKelway, his wife, owned jointly certain securities consisting of corporate bonds, which they delivered to the Brooklyn Trust Company to hold as custodian, pay them the income in equal shares, and, should the agreement be in force at the death of either, to deliver and pay over the securities and any income thereon then on hand to the survivor.
At the time this agreement was entered into the interest in property which upon the death of one joint tenant passes by right of survivorship to his co-tenant was not in express terms subject to taxation and it has been held that in such cases.the survivor takes, not under the laws regulating intestate succession, but under the conveyance or instrument by which the tenancy is created.
(Matter of Klatzl,
“ Whenever intangible property is held in the joint names of two or more persons, or as tenants by the entirety, or is deposited in banks or other institutions or depositories in the joint names of two or more persons and payable to either or the survivor, upon the death of one of such persons the right of the surviving tenant by the entirety, joint tenant or joint tenants, person or persons, to the' immediate ownership or possession and enjoyment of such property shall be deemed a transfer taxable under the provisions of this chapter in the same manner as though the whole property to which such transfer relates belonged absolutely to the deceased tenant by the entirety, joint tenant or joint depositor and had been bequeathed to the surviving tenant by the entirety, joint tenant or joint tenants, person or persons, *18 by- such deceased tenant by the entirety, joint tenant 01 joint depositor by will.”
Mr. McKelway died on July 16, 1915, leaving a last, will and testament by which he gave his wife all his property and named her executrix thereof. The will was duly admitted to probate. The transfer tax appraiser found that the joint property was 'taxable as though it had passed by the will. The surrogate relieved the joint property from taxation, holding that the only transfer thereof was consummated in the lifetime of the testator and that it was not taxable for the reason that where there is no transfer there is no tax, and a transfer made before the passage of the amendment was not affected by it.
(Matter of Lansing,
It has been said that this kind of ownership is “an object of disfavor ”
(Overheiser
v.
Lackey,
Mr. and Mrs. McKelway owned this personal property as joint tenants but not by the entirety. There is a joint ownership of personal property analogous too joint estate in lands
(Overheiser
v.
Lackey,
As to the one-half which Mrs. McKelway herself owned and had the right to dispose of, the rule of the
Pell
case must govern. She gained nothing in regard thereto by the death of her husband except as the
jus accrescendi
eliminated his interest. The right of the survivor of two joint tenants of personal property to the exclusive ownership thereof may be deemed a taxable transfer of one-half of the joint property but not to the whole. It is taxable only to the extent of the beneficial interest arising by survivorship, which is, as we have seen, the accruer by survivorship of the whole instead of
*20
the half. To this extent it was a property right fully acquired only on survivorship, analogous to an interest created by a power of appointment under a will executed prior to the enactment of the law taxing transfers, and, therefore, one that could be cut down by the imposition of an excise tax after the joint ownership began.
(Matter of Vanderbilt,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs in this court and Appellate Division, and the proceeding remitted to the Surrogate’s Court for the purpose of imposing a tax in accordance with this opinion.
Hiscock, Ch. J., Chase, Hogan, McLaughlin, Crane and Andrews, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.
