18 Barb. 104 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
By the revised statutes, all
lands and personal estate within this state are liable to taxation, subject to certain exemptions. Personal estate includes moneys, goods, chattels, debts due from solvent debtors, whether on account, contract, note, bond, or mortgage, &c. (1 R. S. 387, §§ 1 and 3.) By the act of 1851, (ch. 176, § 2,) it is declared that every person shall be assessed in the town or ward where he resides, when the assessment is made, for all personal estate owned by him, including all personal estate in his possession or under his control as agent, guardian, executor or administrator,
The debts owing to Lord, upon the contracts, pertained to him, and followed his person wherever he might be. This is the general rule of law. (Story’s Confl. of Laws, 309 to 314. 2 Kent’s Com. 406.) Smith, the agent, had no possession of the debt. He had possession of the contracts, the evidence of the debt or the covenants to pay, but this gave him no possession of the property called debts. The term possession is not applicable to a debt. It properly applies to corporeal things, movable and immovable; (Bouv. L. D.) He who is entitled to a debt has a chose in action. (2, Black. Com. 396, 7.)
Nor was this debt personal estate, under the contract of Smith as the agent of Lord, in contemplation of the statute. True, Smith could receive payment and transmit the money to Lord, acting as the agent of Lord in receiving the money. He had no power to sell the debts or assign the contracts, or to release the debtors without payment. The debts were the personal estate of Lord in New-York, and Smith was his mere agent to receive and trans
I am satisfied that Smith was not liable to be taxed on account of the contracts in his possession. The questions submitted to the court are, 1st. “ Are the debts secured by the contracts taxable as personal estate ? 2d. Are the debts secured by such bonds and mortgages and contracts, or either of them, in the possession or control of Smith, so as to be taxable to him as the agent of the plaintiff?”
I do not think it necessary or proper to consider and answer the first question. If Lord should be taxed in the city of New-York on account of such debts, he can properly raise the question there. The answer to the other question is given above.
There should be judgment for the plaintiff.
Judgment accordingly.
Marvin, Bowen and Mullett, Justices.]