110 N.E. 497 | NY | 1915
The testatrix died April 3, 1912, leaving a will which was probated April 12, 1912, and upon which letters testamentary were duly issued to the executors named therein. By said will she gave her residuary estate to her brothers Edmund Penfold and William Hall Penfold in equal shares. Within a few days after the probate of said will a proceeding was commenced in said Surrogate's Court to fix the clear market value of the estate for the purpose of determining the amount of the *165 transfer tax imposed upon the transfers made by said will. An order was entered April 15, 1913, confirming the report of a referee appointed in said proceeding and in said order the cash value of the interest of each of said residuary legatees was fixed at $342,308.96 and the tax upon each was fixed at $6,619.37.
On the 27th day of September, 1912, for the purpose of securing a five per cent discount upon said tax as provided by statute the executors paid on account of the transfer tax $6,619.37 for each of said residuary gifts, the same being based upon the clear market value of the estate as stated in the petition in the proceeding. The amount so stated and paid is the same amount as subsequently found by said order fixing the tax.
No question is presented relating to the regularity of the proceeding, the accuracy of the statements made in the petition or the amount of the tax if it is based upon the value of the estate of the decedent at the date of her death.
The securities owned by the descendent at the time of her death depreciated in value and were sold or transferred in lieu of cash by the executors at an aggregate loss to the estate of $66,546. This application was made to the Surrogate's Court after the entry of the decree of the Surrogate's Court on the final accounting of the surviving executor, to modify the order fixing the tax on the estate of the decedent by deducting from the clear market value of the estate of the decedent at the time of her death the loss thereon by depreciation prior to and including the date of the decree on the accounting by the surviving executor.
The Surrogate's Court denied the appellant's motion and the Appellate Division has unanimously affirmed the order of the Surrogate's Court. The question arising in this court is, whether a transfer tax is payable upon the clear market value of the estate of a decedent at the date of the death of such decedent or whether the transfer tax *166 is so payable upon the amount ultimately paid to the beneficiaries under the will.
The appellant's claim is that as the interest of a beneficiary under a will remains a chose in action until the same is actually transferred to such beneficiary by the personal representative of the decedent, the amount actually coming into the possession of the beneficiary and not the amount of the property at the time of the death of the decedent should be taken as the basis for the computation of the tax.
The statutes imposing a transfer tax in this state affecting the question now before us for consideration are:
"A tax shall be and is hereby imposed upon the transfer of any tangible property within the state and of intangible property, or of any interest therein * * *
"1. When the transfer is by will or by the intestate laws of this state of any intangible property, or of tangible property within the state, from any person dying seized or possessed thereof while a resident of the state * * *
"7. The tax imposed hereby shall be upon the clear market value of such property, at the rates hereinafter prescribed." (Tax Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 60], § 220, as amended by chapter 732, Laws of 1911. Also, see chapter 664, Laws of 1915.)
"All taxes imposed by this article shall be due and payable at the time of the transfer, except as herein otherwise provided. * * *." (Tax Law, § 222.)
"If such tax is paid within six months from the accrual thereof, a discount of five per centum shall be allowed and deducted therefrom. If such tax is not paid within eighteen months from the accrual thereof, interest shall be charged and collected thereon at the rate of ten per centum per annum from the time the tax accrued. * * *." (Tax Law, § 223.)
Neither the right to make a testamentary disposition or the right to inherit property is an inherent right. It is *167
not guaranteed by the fundamental law. It depends entirely upon the consent of the legislature. It can withhold or grant the right, and if it grants it it may make its exercise and its extent subject to such burdens and requirements as it pleases. (Matter of White,
The transfer tax is not a tax upon property but upon the right of succession to property, (Matter of Gihon,
In Matter of Seaman (
In Matter of Davis (
In Matter of Westurn (
In Matter of Sloane (
The tax is upon the transfer by will of the property of which decedent died "seized or possessed." It is by the statute "due and payable at the time of the transfer," that is at the death of the decedent. It accrues at that time and the amount of the tax is not affected by an increase (Matter of Vassar,
There are many authorities in this state to sustain the conclusion reached by the courts in this case. (Matter of White,supra; Matter of Green,
The decisions in the Gihon Case (supra) and Matter ofPhipps (77 Hun, 325, 328) are not in any way in conflict with the other decisions cited in this opinion. In the Gihon case the court simply held that the right of succession to property of an estate or an interest therein is a right of succession to property of the estate subject to the legal expenses of administration being first deducted therefrom. The right to make such deductions is necessarily implied, as shown by the opinion therein, from the provisions of the act. (Former Tax Law, § 227, now § 226.)
In the Phipps case the residuary interest sought to be subjected to the tax was not one arising under the will of the decedent but one arising under a will of a person who had previously died and which had not been reduced to possession by the decedent whose estate was under consideration.
The necessity for certainty and uniformity in the time when the tax accrues and becomes due and payable required the adoption by the legislature of a fixed and arbitrary rule.
If, as claimed by the appellant, the tax is imposed upon the several bequests as choses in action, the value of which can only be determined at some date subsequent to the death of the decedent when on an accounting by the personal representative or otherwise the bequest is received in possession, it would lead to such confusion and uncertainty as to make the collection of the tax unnecessarily burdensome and at least to some extent impracticable.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN, SEABURY and POUND, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed. *171