153 N.Y.S. 164 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The executrix of the estate of Alexander Thompson and the Comptroller of the State of New York appeal from an order of the Surrogate’s Court modifying, and affirming as modified, tin order assessing a transfer tax of $1,3.77.76 against property alleged to have been jointly owned by the decedent and his wife.
The decedent, a resident of the State of New York, died on the 6 th of February, 1911, leaving a will in which his daughter, Mary 0. Thompson, was named as sole executrix. Prior to January 26, 1911, he was seized of real estate of the value of approximately $67,000. On that day he executed two deeds, by which he transferred this property to himself and wife as joint tenants, instructing the person who drew the deeds that it was his intention “his wife would take his property when he died.” He was then in his seventy-ninth year. In the preceding August he had broken his shoulder and was confined to his bed for several weeks, and also in November had quite a serious illness. At the time he executed the deeds he also executed a codicil to his will. This was on January twenty-sixth, and two days later he was found by his attending physician to be suffering from pneumonia, from which he died shortly thereafter.
In view of the advanced age and failing health of the decedent, taken in connection with the other evidence bearing upon the execution of the two deeds referred to, the learned
The Comptroller contends that the exemption of $5,000 ought not to have been deducted, since there had been an exemption of $5,000 from the value of the property passing under the will; in other words, that there could be but one exemption of $5,000 from the entire estate. The surrogate held otherwise and we think properly.
The executrix contends that there should have been an exemption of $5,000 from the value of each of the transfers. The surrogate held, and we also think properly, there could he only one exemption from the aggregate value of the property transferred in contemplation of death. I think, when property is transferred in contemplation of death, it has to be treated as a class by itself and the exemption allowed by the statute is to be only from the aggregate value of all of the property thus transferred, and this exemption is to be in addition to the exemption allowed where property passes under the will. (See Tax Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 60; Laws of 1909, chap. 62], §§ 220, 221, as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 706, then in force.)
In Matter of Hodges (168 App. Div. 913) this court affirmed a decision of the Surrogate’s Court (86 Misc. Rep. 367) which held that the value of a gift in contemplation of death is not to be added to the value of a legacy for the purposes of taxation, but is to he taxed separately and the recipient of such a gift is entitled to an exemption thereon independently of his or her exemption as a legatee. The allowance to the widow of the exemption of $5,000 in respect to the real property of the decedent conveyed to her in contemplation of death was, therefore, proper.
At the death of the decedent $12,830.82 was on deposit in various banks in accounts entitled “ Alexander Thompson or Mary E. Thompson. ” The surrogate held that inasmuch as the
West v. McCullough (123 App. Div. 846; affd., 194 N. Y. 518) is directly in point. There a husband changed a savings bank deposit from his own name to that of his wife and himself, and it was held, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the form in which the account was opened showed an intention on the part of the husband to create a right of survivorship in the wife, even though the husband never delivered the hank books and subsequently made withdrawals from the account. Mr. Justice Miller, who delivered the opinion, said: “ It may be that the husband’s right to confer upon the wife this peculiar estate or interest, a right of survivorship only, simply by making a deposit or investment in their joint names, was an outgrowth of doctrines applicable to the status of husband and wife at common law; it was declared to rest upon the presumption that by doing that the husband intended to benefit the wife. As he could not thus benefit her during their joint lives, he having the right to reduce to possession even her own choses in action, it followed that he must have intended to give her the right of survivorship, and it was decided that he could do that without the formalities necessary for a gift inter vivos or causa mortis. A rule based on human experience, acted upon for many years in the light of judicial decisions, ought still to hold good. * * * In case a person deposits his own money in a savings bank in the name of himself and another, not his wife, the presumption is, that it was done for the purposes of convenience only. (Matter of Bolin, 136 N. Y. 117.) But in the case of husband and wife the courts have said, and I think experience has shown, that the husband is presumed to have intended to benefit the wife to the extent at least of conferring upon her the right of survivorship. ”
Taking all the evidence bearing upon the subject, we think it clearly appears the decedent intended, if his wife survived him, that the funds standing in those accounts should pass to her as survivor: If this be true, then it follows that no part • of the same was subject to a transfer tax. The transaction was complete in each instance when the money was deposited in their joint names, and did not, therefore, constitute a gift intended to take effect at or after the death of the decedent.
What has been said of the bank accounts is equally true of the bonds and mortgages which were executed by third parties to Alexander Thompson and Mary E. Thompson, his wife. These securities were executed at various times between 1905 and 1908, inclusive, and amounted to $38,900. There were also two mortgages, aggregating $3,500, which were originally executed to the decedent individually, and which, in 1905, he assigned to himself and wife. While the assignment was not recorded until after decedent’s death, the mortgages were delivered to his wife during his lifetime, and were in her possession at the time of his death. I am unable to see any essential difference between a husband making a deposit in the name of himself and wife and his taking securities in their joint names; in either case, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it must be presumed a right of survivorship is created when the security is taken, which, upon the death of the husband, is not taxable.
The order appealed from, therefore, and the report of the appraiser must be modified as indicated in this opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs to either party.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Order and report of appraiser modified as indicated in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.