197 A.D. 597 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
This is an appeal by the executors of Louise S. Canda, deceased, from an order of the Surrogate’s Court of the county
Three questions are raised by the appellants, which are as follows:
First. The taxability of the exercise by the testatrix, Louise S. Canda, a resident of the State of New York, of two powers of appointment, one under the will of her grandfather, Benjamin Sewall, and the other under the will of her father, Charles T. Hubbard. Both of said testators were residents of the State of Massachusetts, and the property appointed was at all times and now is located in Massachusetts.
Second. The taxability at this time of certain remainders created by the will of said Louise S. Canda, deceased, respecting said appointed property, which remainders are subject to be defeated by the exercise of absolute and general powers of appointment conferred upon the beneficiaries of the precedent trust estates.
Third. The deductability of the Federal estate tax from the assets taxable in this proceeding. f '
The last question was not argued, but is presented by the appellants for the purpose of preserving their rights in case they desire to raise the question as a Federal one, such claim having been determined adversely to the contention of the appellants by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Sherman (222 N. Y. 540) and Matter of Bierstadt (178 App. Div. 836).
Louise S. Canda, the testatrix, married one Ferdinand E. Canda, and became a resident of the State of New York. She died on April 18, 1919, leaving a last will and testament, which was apparently executed in the State of New York, but which has been probated in the State of Massachusetts. No application has been made to prove decedent’s last will and testament within the State of New York. The testatrix was the donee of the said two powers of appointment, which powers she exercised in and by her said last will and testament. The first power arose under the will of her grandfather, Benjamin Sewall, who died in 1879, a resident of the State of Massachusetts. The second power arose under the last will and testament of decedent’s father, Charles T. Hubbard, who died in 1887, and who was also a resident of the State of
The appraiser has fixed the value of the aforesaid powers of appointment at the sum of $451,474.13. So far as material to this appeal, decedent exercised her two powers of appointment by designating trustees in the State of Massachusetts with direction to hold such trust property and. to pay and divide the net income equally between her son and daughter during their respective lives. Her will then provided as follows: “ * * * and upon the death of either of them, whether before or after my death, to pay over, transfer and convey one-half of the principal of the trust fund as then existing in the proportions and to the persons and. uses that the one so dying shall by his or her last will direct and appoint, and in default of such appointment in equal shares to his or her children and the issue of any deceased child, such issue to take the parent’s share by representation, and in default of such children and issue to those persons who would have taken the same if my child so dying had died seized and possessed thereof in his or her own right and had died intestate and domiciled in said Commonwealth of Massachusetts. And thereafter to continue to hold the remaining half of said trust fund and to pay the net income thereof, as often as semi-annually, to the survivor of my said two children,
The surrogate has held that the life estates bequeathed to testator’s two children are not taxable for the reason that the transfer to them to such extent is part of what they would have received under the wills of their ancestors if Louise S. Canda had not exercised the powers conferred upon her. Decedent’s two children claim the right to elect to take under the wills of the donors of the powers, and, therefore, render their life estates in the trust immune from taxation. The surrogate’s determination in this respect seems to be upheld by the authorities (Matter of Lansing, 182 N. Y. 238; Matter of Slosson, 216 id. 79) and is not questioned on this appeal.
Upon the first question above set forth and presented upon this appeal the surrogate has held (114 Misc. Rep. 161) that as the decedent was a resident of this State at the time of her death and has made a will exercising the aforesaid powers of appointment, the remainders over are assessable under subdivision 6 of section 220 of the Tax Law, and that such remainders are presently assessable at their highest ascertainable value. So far as material, subdivision 6 of section 220 of the Tax Law, under which subdivision property passing under a power of appointment is taxable, if at all, reads as follows:
“6. Whenever any person or corporation shall exercise a power of appointment derived from any disposition of property made either before or after the passage of this chapter, such appointment when made shall be deemed a transfer taxable under the provisions of this chapter in the same manner as though the property to which such appointment relates belonged absolutely to the donee of such power and had been bequeathed or devised by such donee by will.”
It is claimed by the appellants that as the donors of the aforesaid powers of appointment were both residents of the State of Massachusetts and that as all of the property to which the powers of appointment relate is situate in th'e State of Massachusetts and decedent’s will has been there probated, and not here, the State of New York has no control over the transfer which the State now claims the right to tax. On the other hand, it is asserted by the respondent, and the surrogate has held, that as decedent’s will was executed in New York and decedent was a resident here, the beneficiaries under her will came into possession of the aforesaid appointed property through" the exercise of a power or privilege conferred upon the testatrix by this State, and that for such reason the surrogate has jurisdiction to assess the tax on the exercise of such power.
In order to determine whether or not the aforesaid remainders-are taxable, it is necessary to ascertain whether the beneficiaries under the will of Louise S. Canda actually came into possession of the appointed property by virtue of the laws of the State of New York and by reason of a privilege conferred by this State which enables the beneficiaries to take. It must be conceded that the property in question formed no part of the estate of Louise S. Canda. (United States v.
As the respondent contends that the right of Louise S. Canda to exercise said powers of appointment is a privilege conferred by the laws of the State of New York, where the decedent was domiciled, it is thought best to review briefly the authorities relating to the exercise of powers of appointment by a donee living in a jurisdiction other than that in which the donor resided at the time of his death. In Matter of New York Life Ins. & Trust Co. (139 N. Y. Supp. 695) the surrogate reviewed at considerable length the development of the law respecting the exercise of such powers of appointment and after considering both the English and American decisions, he concludes: “ It will be perceived that in respect of powers of testamentary appointment over settled property in England or America the law of the domicile of the donor of the power, and not that of the donee of the power, determines in most cases whether or not there was a sufficient testamentary execution of the power of appointment given to the donee of the power.”
The general rule respecting the passing of an estate under a power of appointment was well stated by Chancellor Kent in 4 Kent’s Commentaries, 337, as follows: “An estate created by the execution of a power takes effect in the same manner as if it had been created by the deed which raised the power. The party who takes under the execution of the power, takes under the authority, and under the grantor of the power, whether it applies to real or personal property, in like manner as if the power, and the instrument executing the power, had been incorporated in one instrument.”
The above rule is stated and reiterated in Matter of Harbeck
In England such has been the rule since 1838 when the case of Tatnall v. Hankey (2 Moo. P. C. 342) was decided by the English Privy Council. In the Tatnall case it was determined that the English Court of Probate had jurisdiction to examine into the execution of the power of testamentary appointment executed outside of the kingdom for the purpose of determining whether the instrument whereby it was exercised in fact and in law made testamentary disposition of the property included within the power of appointment. The will in question was executed in Paris and was not in accord with the laws of England, but was ultimately proved in England and accepted by the English Probate Court for the purpose of establishing the due exercise of the power of appointment by the donee. Again, in 1909, the English House of Lords, in Murphy v. Deichler (A. C. 446) confirmed the rule laid down in Tatnall v. Hankey (supra) and held that a power of appointment by will over Irish property was properly exercised by a will of the donee executed in English and Irish form, although the testator was domiciled in Germany and the will was not executed according to the law of the domicile of the appointor.
In Bingham's Appeal (64 Penn. St. 345) the facts were as follows: William Bingham, the donor of the power, was domiciled in Pennsylvania, where his will was proven in 1856. In his will he created a trust, the income therefrom to be paid to his son Alexander with a power of appointment to his said son by his last will and testament. The son, Alexander Bingham, died in England.in 1865, that country being then his domicile, leaving a will. The court held: “Whether a power contained in a Pennsylvania will over Pennsylvania property has been duly executed, is evidently a question of Pennsylvania law, and not that of a foreign country * * *.
Similar rules were laid down in-the following cases: Cotting v. DeSartiges (17 R. I. 668); Lane v. Lane (4 Pennewill [Del.], 368); Prince de Bearn v. Winans (111 Md. 434).
In a very similar case to the one at bar the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Walker v. Treasurer & Receiver General (221 Mass. 600) held as follows: " It follows that no privilege by which the property passes, whether by exercise of the power or by failure to exercise it, is conferred by the law of this Commonwealth. Hence no commodity exists here on which the tax can be levied. By resort to the courts of Maryland all questions as to the succession of this trust estate will be determined without invoking the law of Massachusetts. That will be settled without dependence upon the moral support or actual assistance of our laws. The circumstance that the will has been set up in this Commonwealth is not of controlling significance. There is nothing in this Commonwealth upon which St. 1909, c. 527, Sec. 8 can operate.”
In the case at bar the existence of the power did not of itself vest any estate in the donee, and no part of the aforesaid property which was subject to the power of appointment vested in the testatrix, nor could it be distributed as a part of her estate. (United States v. Field, 255 U. S. 257; 41 Sup. Ct. Rep. 256.)
In Matter of Harbeck (161 N. Y. 211) it was held that a bequest in the exercise of a power of appointment by will was not taxable under the Transfer Tax Act of the State of New York as it then existed. The will in question was made by John H. Harbeck, who died in February, 1878. The testator bequeathed the sum of $300,000 in trust, the income thereof to be paid to his wife during her life and after her death the principal to such persons as she should appoint by her last will and testament. Decedent’s wife made a will dated October 20, 1887, which was admitted to probate in February, 1896. The State of New York attempted to assess the transfer through the exercise of the aforesaid power of appointment under our then existing Transfer Tax Law. The court held that the law as it then existed was not suffi
“ In the past, however, there have been a few cases in which the courts have been called upon to decide that while the instrument by which the power is said to be executed becomes incorporated into and forms a part of the original instrument creating the power, yet it takes effect as of the date of the" execution of the power, and these cases have been laid hold of to make the final step in the transfer of the property from the testator Harbeck to the beneficiaries operate as the dominating one; the act of the appointor, instead of that of the testator, being treated as the one by which the fund is transmitted to them. In other words, notwithstanding the general rule by which a paper constituting an execution of the power of appointment becomes incorporated into the original instrument creating the power (so that the latter is given the same effect as if the names of the appointees were originally written into the instrument creating the power), it is said that the date of the original instrument is to be ignored, and that upon which the power of appointment is exercised substituted fully in its stead. * * * But long after the decisions in the cases relied upon by the learned judge who wrote for the Appellate Division * * * this court had that question before it in Genet v. Hunt (113 N. Y. 158) * * *. The court held that the trusts under the will should be regarded as having been created at the date of the trust deed, and that they were, therefore, invalid. * * * ‘ An estate created by the execution of a power takes effect in the same manner as if it had been created by the deed which raised the power.’ ”
Since the Tax Law was amended in the respects hereinbefore stated, there have been decisions thereunder in which it has been held that while the beneficiaries under the will of a donee of a power of appointment technically take under the instrument creating the power, yet as the possession of the
The learned justice then quotes the portion of section 220 of the Tax Law above referred to, and says: “ If the subject of the taxation, whether that be property of a tangible nature or a privilege conferred by the State, is within the jurisdiction or dominion of the Legislature, then it is for that body to determine the question of taxation. In the statute now under consideration the State has enacted that as a condition of exercising a power of appointment, it shall be ‘ deemed a transfer taxable under the provisions of this act in the same manner as though the property to which such appointment relates belonged absolutely to the donee of such power.’ * * * It being the privilege upon the right to succession to property by means of a will that is taxed, and the subject of the litigation being within the jurisdiction of the State, it seems clear that the beneficiary under the power of appointment contained in the will of Caroline C. Hull, a resident of this State, upon the exercise of that power by Wager J. Hull, likewise a resident of this State, is bound to pay the tax imposed upon that privilege, regardless of the question of where the property to which the power related was located.
In Matter of Dows (167 N. Y. 227) practically the same question was presented, and the court there held: “ But whatever be the technical source of title of a grantee under a power of appointment, it cannot be denied that in reality and substance it is the execution of the power "that gives to the grantee the property passing under it. * * * If, as said by the Supreme Court of the United States, the right to take property by devise is not an inherent or natural right, but a privilege accorded by the State which it may tax or charge for, it follows that the right of a testator to make a will or testamentary instrument 'is equally a privilege and equally subject to the taxing power of the State. When David Dows, Sr., devised this property to the appointees under the will of his son, he necessarily subjected it to the charge that the State might impose on the privilege accorded to the son of making a will. That charge is the same in character as if it had been laid on the inheritance of the estate of the son himself, that is, for the privilege of succeeding to property under a will.”
In both of these cases, however, the beneficiaries under the will of the respective donees unquestionably took under a will probated under the laws of the State of New York, whereas, in the case at bar the testatrix had only to execute a will in conformity with the laws of the State of Massachusetts in order to exercise the power of appointment conferred upon her under the wills of her father and grandfather. This she did, and her will has not been offered for probate in this State.
In Matter of Delano (176 N. Y. 486) the Court of Appeals again considered the validity of a transfer tax imposed upon the exercise by will of a power of appointment conferred upon the testatrix. In that case the power had been conferred by deed and not by will. The Appellate Division, First Department (82 App. Div. 147), held that as the deed in question
The decision of the Court of Appeals in the Delano case was sustained in the United States Supreme Court in Chanler v. Kelsey (205 U. S. 466). The opinion was written by Mr. Justice Day and the court held that the assessment of the tax under the New York State law was not in violation of the Federal Constitution (Art. 1, § 10, subd. 1; 14th Amend., § 1), and that the State had a clear right to tax the exercise of a power of appointment. The learned justice said, in part, referring to the objection that property was being taken without due process of law: “ In support of this contention, common law authorities are cited to the proposition that an estate created by the execution of a power takes effect in the same manner as if it had been created by the deed which raised the power; that the beneficiary takes, not under the execution of the power by the donee, but by authority and under grant from the grantor, in like manner as if the power and the instrument which created it had been incorporated into one instrument. * * * However technically correct it may be to say that the estate came from the donor and not from the donee of the power, it is self-evident that it was only upon the exercise of the power that the estate in the plaintiffs in error became complete. * * * It may be that the donee had no interest in the estate, as owner, but it took her act of appointment to finally transfer the estate to some of the class and take it from others. Notwithstanding the common law rule that estates created by the execution of a power take effect as if created by the original deed, for some purposes the execution of the power is considered the source of title.”
It follows from the above decisions that while upon principle an inheritance tax is not one upon property but is rather one upon the succession of property, the State has also the
The Court of Appeals has held in Matter of Fearing (200 N. Y. 340) that when property is transferred under a power of appointment and the appointee is a resident of another State, a tax cannot be assessed on the transfer for the reason that the privilege of exercising the power is granted by the laws of a State other than the State of New York. The opinion was written by Judge Gray, who says, in part: “ Such an appointment to others was, for the purposes of taxation, to be deemed the equivalent of a bequest, or devise, by the donee of the power of property belonging to the donee. Prior to this amendment of the Transfer Tax Law, there was no provision for the taxation of transfers under powers of appointment; but, with the passage of the amendment, the privilege of exercising the power by will was subjected to the charge of a tax upon the right of the appointees to take. Whereas, previously, the source of the appointees’ right of succession was deemed to be in the will creating the power of appointment; thereafter, it was to be deemed to be in the execution of the power itself. The actual transfer effected by the exercise of the power was to be taxed. The Legislature, in the exercise of its control over testamentary dispositions of property, could validly burden such transfers with a tax, regardless of the technical source of the title of the appointee under the rules of the common law.”
In the Fearing case the donee of the power was a non-resident of this State. The property transferred under her will in the exercise of such power was bonds outside of the State of New York. The grantor of the power, Daniel B. Fearing, died in 1870, a resident of the State of New York, leaving a will which created the power and which will was in this State admitted to probate. The only question which appears to have been determined in Matter of Fearing is that a tax cannot be levied under our Tax Law upon the exercise of a power of appointment by a donee who is a non-resident of this State and who attempts to execute the power by a will or deed
The respondent contends that the question at issue has been twice passed upon in the Surrogate’s Court of New York and Kings counties, the first case being that of Matter of Frazier (N. Y. L. J. March 28, 1912), and the later case, Matter of Seaman (Id. Dec. 5, 1913). In Matter of Frazier (supra) the decedent was a resident of this State and exercised a power of appointment under a last will and testament which was propounded and admitted to probate in this State. The learned surrogate, in commenting upon the right of the State to assess a transfer tax, said: “ The right of an individual to make a will or testamentary instrument is not a natural or inherent right, but a privilege which the State can grant or withhold at its
In the Seaman Case (supra) the surrogate based his decision upon the authority of Matter of Frazier (supra).
In the case at bar, however, no distribution has taken place by virtue of the laws of the State of New York, nor has any property been transferred for distribution to an executor or administrator appointed in this State, nor has the decedent’s will been admitted to probate in the State of New York. In fact, neither the testatrix nor any of her personal representatives have endeavored in any way to take advantage of the laws of the State of New York for the purpose of passing the title to or distributing any part of decedent’s estate.
While the last two cases cited seem to be some authority on the side of the respondent, Matter of Thomas (39 Misc. Rep. 136) holds that under a quite similar state of facts the State was not authorized to assess a tax upon the transfer under a power of appointment there involved. The decision was made in 1902. The donor of. the power there under consideration was Edwin L. Parker, who was a resident of Baltimore county in the State of Maryland. In his will, made and proved in Maryland in 1868, he devised and
“ In the present case no transfer of any kind of any part of the assets of the estate of Edwin L. Parker, in the hands of his trustees at the time of the death of his daughter, has been effected or permitted by any law of the State of New York. All of those assets were in the State of Maryland, held by trustees residing in Maryland, under a will of a citizen of Maryland, pursuant to the laws of that State. It is true that the will of the decedent which effected the appointment was executed here, but it derived none of its force or validity from our law. Its legal effect depended entirely upon the law of Maryland, and if its probate in this State was necessary
Had it become necessary in the case at bar to admit the decedent’s will to probate in this State for the purpose of passing the title to any part of the property over which the decedent had a power of appointment, or had the personal representatives of the deceased elected to take advantage of our laws for the purpose of passing the title to such property, there might be some argument that the State would be authorized to assess a tax upon the remainders upon the theory that such power was exercised by virtue of a privilege conferred by the laws of New York. It was not necessary to the exercise of such power to probate the will here, and it was not probated here. The case, therefore, is barren of any proof showing that the State of New York has granted any right or privilege which has in any way affected the passage of the title to the property which the beneficiaries clearly have the .right to possess under the laws of the State of Massachusetts and under the wills in question.
It, therefore, follows that the determination reac.hed by the surrogate in respect to the right of the Staté to assess a tax under the section of the Tax Law above mentioned was erroneous.
Having reached the conclusion that said remainders are in no event subject to taxation, it is unnecessary to consider the second question raised by the appellant respecting the manner and time of such taxation, or the amount of tax to be assessed.
The order appealed from should be reversed, with costs to the appellants against the respondent, and the matter remanded to the surrogate of New York county for disposition in accordance herewith.
Dowling, Laughlin, Smith and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with costs to appellants against respondent, and proceeding remitted to Surrogates’ Court for further action in accordance with opinion. Settle order on notice.