89 N.J.L. 446 | N.J. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The writ is intended to reviéw an assessment of a transfer tax, imposed by the state comptroller, upon
The properly in question consists of certain stocks in the Standard Oil Company, and in six other New Jersey corporations, valued in the aggregate at $1,114,965. The deceased died in the District of Columbia, leaving a last will and testament, and a codicil, which were dnly admitted to probate, and letters testamentary granted thereon in that district to Lawrence Maxwell of Ohio, and the Fulton Trust Company of New York, a corporation organized under the laws of that state, who have qualified as executors. The beneficiaries named in the will were at the time of testator’s death non-residents of this state. The total amount of the state tax imposed was $29,071.68, the legality of which assessment is the subject of this litigation.
The tax was imposed in pursuance of chapter ,228 of the laws of 1909, as amended by chapter 151 of the laws of 1914. A subsequent amendment was passed in 1915 (Pamph. L., p. 745), but was not effective or in operation at the time of the death of the testator, and therefore has no bearing upon this issue.
The act of 1909 was the original act dealing with the subject-matter of fills contest, and presents in its title a clear statement of the legislative intent, “An act to tax the transfer of property of resident and non-resident decedents, by devise, bequest, descent, distribution by statute, gift, deed, grant, bargain and sale in certain cases.”
It is insisted that in imposing the tax the decisions of the New York courts construing a statute substantially similar in verbiage to the act in question, should have been followed by the comptroller. This contention, however, has been dealt with by this court in Hopper v. .Edwards, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Tronchard, and quite recently in Torrance v. Edwards, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Kaliseh, both adjudications being adverse to the claim urged here. That question therefore may be disposed of upon the doctrine of stare decisis.
The effect of the legislation under consideration has been determined by this court, and the Court of Errors and, Appeals
The inquiry presented by this controversy is not any criticism of these fundamentals, but resolves itself entirely into a criticism of the legal effect of the amendment of 1914, in its effort to reach the estates of non-resident decedents, by the method provided in section 20 of the act, which is as follows: “A tax shall be assessed on the transfer of property in this state of a non-resident decedent, if all or any part of the estate of such decedent wherever situated shall pass to persons or corporations taxable under this act, which tax shall bear the, same ratio to the entire tax, as the said estate would have been subject to under this act, if such non-resident decedent had been a resident of this state, and all his property, real and personal, had been located within this state, as such property within this state bears to the entire estate wherever situated, provided that nothing in this clause contained shall apply to any specific bequest or devise of any property in this state.” . *
The clear intent of this legislation, it has been determined, is to provide a mathematical formula to the estate of a nonresident decedent, which in practical application will work out a tax not on the entire estate of the decedent, but uj>on that portion of it wdthin the jurisdiction, so as to practically equalize in administration the tax imposed by the same legislation upon the estates of resident decedents.
The method in question doubtless had its origin in an intimation contained in the opinion of Mr. Justice Swayze in Beers v. Edwards, supra, in commenting upon the aci, of 1909, wherein he declared: “We do> not mean to say that the legislature might not have adopted another basis for the computation of the entire tax. It might perhaps have enacted that (he entire tax should he the amount to which the estate would have been subject, if the decedent had been a resident of Xew Jersey, and all his property had been situated here.”
Beferring to the same subject in the subsequent case of Carr v. Edwards, supra, in the Court of Errors and Appeals, lie declared: “The object and the effect of section 12 was to equalize the rate of the fransfex tax as between the estates of resident and non-resident decedents. The amount (of the tax) depends on the ratio of the Xew Jersey property to the entire estate wherever situated. This, however, merely affords a measure of the tax imposed; the tax is still by the very words of the section imposed upon the property located within the state.”
This method of dealing with the estate of non-residents found within the state was earlier supported hy the views of Mr. Justice Heed in Tilford v. Dickinson, 79 N. J. L. 302, in dealing with the legislative modus operemdi imposed hy the Tax act of 1906. This method of taxation was also dealt with hy Mr. Justice Xalisch, in this court, in Howell v. Edwards, supra, and its validity was there recognized and subsequently was the subject of consideration, and was practically applied by'this court in the recent opinion hy Mr. Justice Kalisch in Torrance v. Edwards, post p. 507. Pursuit of the subject further from the viewpoint of legality and reasonableness under the constitutional inhibitions, of this legislative method of equalizing taxation, as between (he estates of resident, and non-resident decedents, might appear to be but an academic task in the light of tírese adjudications, but it may not be out of place to observe in passing, that the principle of this legislation has met with
The general power of the state to enact legislation of this character, and its impregnability to' attack on constitutional grounds, is amply emphasized and vindicated by Mr. Justice Pitney in St. Louis and W. Railway Co. v. Arkansas, supra, wherein he declares: “Nothing in the fourteenth amendment imposes any iron-clad rule upon the states with respect to tlieir internal taxation, or prevents them from imposing double taxation, or any other form of unequal taxation, so long as the inequality is not based upon arbitrary distinctions.” There remains therefore to consider only the concrete objection presented by the prosecutor, in the form of various reasons to this method of taxation; the contention being that in the case sub judice its application results in inequality to this particular estate.
It must not be overlooked in any calculation, that as our legislation now stands, the non-resident decedent is accorded a favored status, since he is exempted in the succession tax from any imposition upon bonds and mortgages, commercial paper, bank deposits and debts, within this state, which taxable assets are subject to taxation as assets of a resident decedent. Hopper v. Edwards, ubi supra. Mention of this consideration is suggested, to evince the fact which at once must become apparent, that instead of subjecting the nonresident’s estate to an arbitrary and discriminative tax, the legislation in question, if discriminatory at all, is obviously so only in favor of the non-resident. - That such legislation may eventuate differently in results in specific instances, when compared with the results attainable in the case of the resident decedent, presents no legal ground for its condemnation. The never ending aim of popular government, and the age-long dream of the political economist, have been the evolution of a golden rule productive of equality of taxation. In this
That the ratio rule applied in this ease may not produce absolute equality in results may be conceded, but it will answer its purposes in the complicated relationship of musíate and federal life, if it be a business-like workable rule, manifestly the latest solution in the line of judicial and legislative thought upon one of the most abstruse problems of modern government.
It may well be that the tax ratio in actual application in this instance may, as exemplified by the prosecutor's method of computation, produce a result different from that which will be obtained under the method applicable to the estates of resident decedents; bui as we have observed, that fact does not furnish the determining test as to the validity of this legislative scheme, nor does it prove the absence of the necessary constitutional element of equality, as that term lias been defined by the adjudged cases. “It is,” says the learned editor and commentator of the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, “a matter of common experience that absolute equably in the imposition of a lax is not attainable, nor is this the meaning of the constitutional provision. All that it requires is an aim and intention on the part oí the legislature in framing the tax law to approximate to the ideal of absolute eqnalitj', as closely as the nature of the subject and the necessities of practical administration will permit. Hence the courts will not pronounce a statute invalid on this ground, unless it appears that it was framed on a plan or principle not calculated to produce equality and uniformity, or that its administration will result in such flagrant injustice as to evidence an entire disregard of the constitutional requirement.” 37 Cyc. 736, and cases cited.
Our examination of the computation of the tax made hv the comptroller, in this instance, satisfies us that it was made in accordance with the ratio provision of the act of 1914, and that it should for the reasons here presented be sustained.
The tax in question will therefore be affirmed.