39 Misc. 133 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1902
This is an appeal from an order fixing the transfer tax. The decedent, a resident of Hew Jersey, died April 11, 1902, leaving a will whereby he gave all of his estate to his
After the decedent’s death certain policies of insurance on his life, issued by Hew York companies and payable to his estate, were found in a safe in this city. Where they were issued does not appear. They have been collected in Hew York and the amount represented by. them has been included in the property assessed to determine the tax. Such assessment is specified as a further ground for this appeal. In Matter of Abbett, 29 Misc. Rep. 567, Mr. Surrogate Varnum determined that policies of life insurance, issued by life insurance companies of this State on the lives of nonresident decedents, when such policies are not within the State, are not subject to the transfer tax. I was satisfied with his reasoning and with his decision, and will adopt his conclusion. A policy of life insurance is evidence of a right of action and is taxable as an asset of the estate of a deceased resident to whom it is payable. (Matter of Knoedler, 140 N. Y. 377), but it is not taxable if payable to a nonresident decedent, on the mere ground that the debtor is a Hew York corporation. It remains to be considered whether the rule will be otherwise where, as in this case, the policy is kept by the decedent in this •State and is here at the time of his death. In Matter of Whiting, 150 N. Y. 27, the bonds issued by foreign, as well as by domestic corporations, kept by the decedent in this State and found here on his death, were determined to be properly included in the appraisement to fix the transfer tax. The theory upon which the court proceeded to judgment was that the written instruments were physically within the State, and constituted property here subject to taxation. They were regarded as tangible and apparently in nature of chattels. A bond, by the terms of which a .corporation obligates itself to pay, absolutely and at all events, a specified sum of money, differs substantially from a contract of life insurance. A policy of life insurance is not
.It has, therefore, been held that it is not “ evidence of debt for ■ the absolute payment of money or at a particular time ” within the meaning of the provision in the Code of Civil Procedure . requiring an order of a judge that the issues on the pleadings in . an action upon it be tried. New York Life Ins. Co. v. Universal Life Ins. Co., 88 N. Y. 424. It has also been adjudged that it ■ is not “ an instrument for the payment of money ” within section 649 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that the sheriff may levy upon the cause of action evidenced by it without taking the policy into his actual custody. Kratzenstein v. Lehman, 19 App. Div. 228. Such a policy of insurance is> indeed, nothing • more than written evidence of a contract by the terms of which the company issuing it promises to pay a sum of money on certain conditions thereafter to be performed, and in the happening of the contingency of death therein specified.- It is a most material item of evidence, but is only a part of the perfected cause of action, leaving proof of other matters to be applied. It cannot be determined to be in itself property of a kind capable of having a situs apart from the person of its payee, except upon principles which have not yet received the approval of the courts of this State. The appeal is sustained and the order fixing the tax be- modified accordingly.
Appeal sustained and order fixing tax modified.