143 N.Y.S. 849 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The action was brought to recover a penalty under section 227 of the Tax Law as it stood on July 22, 1906. (Gen. Laws, chap. 24 [Laws of 1896, chap. 908], § 228, as renumbered § 227, and amd. by Laws of 1905, chap. 368.)
The defendant, the Mercantile Safe Deposit Company, was
Through the agency of one Osborne, in April, 1897, the defendant rented a safe, which was recorded on defendant’s books in the name of “Russell Sage or Charles W. Osborne,” who were severally to have access to the same, Osborne’s right of access to be uninterrupted in the event of Sage’s death. Sage never visited the safe, but Osborne used it constantly, putting in and taking out securities. On July 22,1906, Sage died, a fact which was almost immediately brought to the knowledge of defendant’s officers. Thereafter Osborne’s use of the safe continued as theretofore, and defendant did nothing to interfere with his removing any of the valuables contained therein, and gave no notice of any kind to the State Comptroller.
After Sage’s death, Osborne, who became one of his executors, continued to look after his loans, and from time to time, as required, took away securities which had been pledged to Sage, but none of the securities belonging to Sage personally were removed, save as some of them may have been contained in a tin box in which some of Osborne’s securities or some of the pledged securities were kept, which tin box was taken by Osborne to his office for use in the business of the day, and was returned at the end of the day with Sage’s individual securities intact.
At a date suiting his earliest convenience a representative of the State Comptroller visited the safe in company with a representative of the Sage estate and inspected all of the contents belonging to Sage. Proceedings to fix the transfer tax on the Sage estate were duly begun and concluded, and the tax was duly paid in full.
Section 227 of the Tax Law (as amd. supra) contains the following: “bio safe deposit company * * * having in possession or under control securities, deposits, or other assets belonging to or standing in the name of a decedent * * * including the shares of the capital stock of, or other interests in, the safe deposit company * * * making the delivery or transfer herein provided, shall deliver or transfer the same to the execm tors, administrators or legal representatives of said decedent, or to the survivor or survivors when held in the joint names of a decedent and one or more persons, or upon their order or request, unless notice of the time and place of such intended delivery or transfer be served upon the State Comptroller at least ten days prior to said delivery or transfer; nor shall any such safe
There are several grounds upon which we might affirm the judgment appealed from, but we prefer to put our decision on the broad ground that the statute does not cover any such situation as the evidence discloses in this case. It is not necessary for us to resort to the rule of strict construction, applicable to statutes under which penalties are sought to be enforced, for in no legal sense can the defendant be said to have had “ possession ” or “ control ” of any of Sage’s securities. In a limited sense, it had the custody of such securities because of the relation which it occupied to the safe in which they were contained. Having neither “ possession ” nor “ control ” of the securities, the statute imposed no duty whatsoever upon the defendant, nor could it have obeyed the statute without invading the legal rights of its customer. The relation between the defendant and its customer, whether in this case he be regarded as Osborne and Sage jointly or severally, may have some elements comparable to those in a case of bailment, but the legal status of the parties seems to me to bear a closer analogy to that arising from the relation which exists between tenants of a general office building and the landlord thereof, who keeps within his control and under his care and protection the common means of access to the building and to the suites of offices therein, but as to which, subject to any regulations that may have been established by the landlord, the rights of the tenant are exclusive.
So far as I can see, the defendant in this case had no more
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.