20 F. Cas. 296 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1879
Ransom, plaintiff in error, bought and paid for a iiouse and lot in the city of New York which he caused to be conveyed to his wife upon the understanding that she should make her will devising the property to him in case she died before he did. Pursuant to this understanding she made her will, and died February 20, 1866. This suit is brought to recover a succession tax of six per cent, on the value of the property claimed to be due under the internal revenue act of 1SG4, upon this devolution of title. Section 127 of the act of 1864 (13 Stat. 2S7) provides that every past or future disposition of real estate by will, by reason whereof any person shall become beneficially entitled in possession or expectancy to any real estate or the income thereof upon the death of any person dying after the passage of the act, shall be deemed to confer on the person entitled by reason of such disposition a succession, etc. Clearly this is such a case. The legal title to the property and the ownership were in the wife when she died. But for the will this title and ownership would have passed to her heirs without any rights in the husband that could have been enforced against them at law or in equity. The fact that the will was made on account of an agreement to that effect by the wife when she took her title rendered it none the less an instrument creating a beneficial interest in the husband on her death, and that, under the statute, is the succession