150 N.Y. 52 | NY | 1896
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *54 The only question presented by this appeal is the validity of an assessment of personal estate, made by the defendants as commissioners of taxes in the city of New York, upon the relators, as executors and trustees under the will of the late Jay Gould.
It appears that Mr. Gould died on the 2d day of December, 1892, leaving a will in which the relators, his children, were named as executors and trustees.
On the 13th of December, 1892, the relators presented their petition to the surrogate of New York, duly verified, in which it was stated that they were residents of New York *55 and the executors and trustees of the will which they prayed might be admitted to probate. The relators also signed and verified an affidavit, which was filed with the petition, pursuant to chapter 399 of the Laws of 1892, in which it was stated that the value of the personal estate was $70,000,000, and a like statement was indorsed on the petition. The citations to attend the probate were returnable Dec. 27, and due proof of service of the same upon all parties in interest was filed on that day and the proofs given as to the execution of the will and codicils, no objection having been made to the probate.
On December 29, 1892, the relators all qualified as executors and trustees by taking and subscribing the proper oath of office.
On the 9th day of January, 1893, the last day upon which by law the defendants had the power to make the assessment, they assessed the relators, as executors and trustees under the will, for the personal estate at the sum of $10,000,000.
On the 13th of January, 1893, the decree was made admitting the will to probate and letters testamentary issued to the relators. The relators subsequently applied to the defendants as commissioners of taxes for cancellation of the assessment and the application was denied.
They then procured a writ of certiorari to be issued at Special Term to review the action of defendants, which on the hearing was dismissed and this decision affirmed at General Term.
On the hearing before the defendants the relators presented questions with respect to the justice of the assessment, based upon allegations of inequality, as compared with that of other parties. It is admitted that under the statutes relating to the correction and reduction of assessments in the city of New York these questions are not open to review here. The argument in this court has been confined to the question of power in the defendants to make the assessment on the 9th of January, 1893, and that is the only question that need now be considered. The names of the relators were placed upon the assessment rolls and the tax extended on or before the 9th of January. It is assumed on both sides, as matter of law, that *56
there was no power to do this after that date, and such is the effect of the authorities on the question. (In re Babcock,
The relators could not lawfully have been assessed for the personal estate of the deceased unless, at the time, said estate was in their possession, or under their control, as executors or trustees, within the meaning of the statute. (1 R.S. [1st ed.] 389, § 5.)
The contention of the learned counsel for the relator is that, since the adjudication of the surrogate admitting the will to probate was not made, or the letters testamentary delivered, till four days after the assessment was made, that is, on the 13th of January, the relators did not and could not have such possession or control of the personal estate at the time the assessment was made. We think that this contention cannot prevail. The relators resided and were personally within the jurisdiction of the commissioners, and the assessment in form is in compliance with all the legal formalities requisite to constitute a valid charge against executors or trustees for the personal estate in their possession or under their control. It is the general policy of the law, and in fact the express command of the statute, that all property within the state, not expressly exempted, shall be liable to taxation. Equality, so far as practicable, is the principle upon which every just or reasonable system of taxation must be based. The proposition which the learned counsel for the relators has insisted upon in the argument of this appeal with so much earnestness and supported with so much ability would, if sanctioned and acted upon, go far to destroy this principle entirely, both in theory and practice. His argument proceeds, and his conclusion is based upon premises that seem to us to be erroneous; that is to say, that the probate of the will and the possession by the executors and trustees of the letters testamentary were necessary conditions that must precede any possession or control of the personal estate by them in law or in fact, within the meaning of the statute. *57
It is clear that Mr. Gould in his lifetime had the power to dispose of this vast estate in such manner as seemed best to him, and that he exercised that power in one of the methods sanctioned by law, that is, by will duly executed to take effect at his death. This disposition by the deceased owner necessarily implies that he has transferred the property to others, and so at the moment of his death it passed to the legatees and beneficiaries designated by him in his will, and, therefore, passed to the relators.
It is true that by statute the executors were deprived of power to dispose of the property, except for the purpose of paying funeral charges, or to interfere with it, except so far as necessary for its preservation until letters were granted to them by the public authorities after an adjudication that the will was executed by a competent person and with the necessary legal formality. But these limitations upon their powers for the purposes of administration did not affect their title, possession or control of the property in the sense in which these terms are used in the statute. When a deceased person has disposed of his personal estate by will, the title, possession and control thereof, from the moment of his death, must be vested in some one, and in the absence of some wrongful interference by a stranger, it is in the person designated for that purpose by the deceased owner in the instrument by which he has made the disposition.
The executor derives his appointment and his title to the estate from the will, though he is without any substantial power of disposition or administration until the probate court grants him authenticated evidence of his title and his right in the form of letters testamentary upon proof of the will. (Redf. on Surr. 254.)
The will is the source of the executor's title and general powers. The letters testamentary, founded upon the probate of the will, do not create the executor nor confer title upon him, but is the authentic evidence of the power conferred by the will and which existed before they were granted. (Hartnett v. Wandell,
In this case, after the death of the testator, no one had in fact or in law any possession or control of the personal estate except the relators. It consisted of certain securities which were deposited in a vault in the city to which they had access. They could exercise every power over the property that is conferred upon executors by the will or by law before probate and no one else could. The probate of the will and letters testamentary removed the prohibition of the statute against disposing of the property or interfering with it except for its preservation, but in all other respects the rights and powers of the relators were the same before as after the probate, though in some respects they may have been held in abeyance by force of the statute. The title, possession and control which the deceased owner had passed from him at the moment of his death under and by virtue of the will to the executors and beneficiaries. The temporary restrictions upon the power of disposition, imposed by the statute for the protection of the estate, had no effect upon the actual possession and custody of the property. They had all the possession and control that was usual under such circumstances and reasonably possible considering the great magnitude of the estate and the nature and character of the property. The possession and custody which the testator had was continued in the relators by force of his will for every purpose of taxation as well as protection. Any other conclusion would involve the anomaly that seventy millions of property could exist in full view of the commissioners without any power on their part to include it in the assessment rolls.
The learned counsel for the relators suggests that in such a case the proper procedure would be the appointment of a temporary administrator under § 2668 of the Code. But an *59 application for that purpose can be made only by a person who is either a creditor or interested in the estate, and the defendants, the commissioners of taxes, held no such relations to the estate, and consequently had no standing to make the application. The title to the property was in the relators when the assessment was made, if not by the terms of the will, then under the doctrine of relation. It is admitted that they had possession and control of it, at least for every purpose of care and protection, and we think that persons standing in such relations to the personal estate of a deceased person who has disposed of it by will are in the possession and control of the property within the meaning of the statute for all purposes of taxation.
The order appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed.