RILEY ET AL., EXECUTORS, v. NEW YORK TRUST CO., ADMINISTRATOR, ET AL.
No. 81
Supreme Court of the United States
February 16, 1942
315 U.S. 343
Argued December 16, 1941.
Mr. Mortimer M. Kassell for the State Tax Commission of New York, as amicus curiae, by special leave of Court.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
Coca-Cola International Corporation, incorporated in Delaware, filed a bill of interpleader in a Delaware Court of Chancery against Julian Riley and Hughes Spalding, petitioners here, the Executors of Mrs. Julia M. Hungerford, with letters testamentary issued by the Court of Ordinary of Fulton County, Georgia, and against The New York Trust Company, the respondent, a New York corporation, as temporary administrator (afterward administrator c. t. a.) of the same decedent, appointed by the Surrogate‘s Court for New York County, New York.
The Georgia executors and the New York administrator each claim the right to have transferred to them, in their representative capacity, stock in the Coca-Cola Corporation now on its books in the name of the decedent. The outstanding certificates are in Georgia, in the hands of the Georgia executors. The parties are agreed, and it
The Georgia executors assert that original domiciliary probate of Mrs. Hungerford‘s will in solemn form was obtained by them in Georgia, with all beneficiaries and heirs at law of testatrix, including her husband, Robert Hungerford, actual parties by personal service. These, it is conceded, were all the parties under the law of Georgia entitled to be heard on the probate of the will. The respondent administrator c. t. a. was not a party. The record of probate includes a determination by special finding, over the objection of the caveator, the husband, that the testatrix was domiciled in Georgia. The special finding was specifically approved as an essential fact to determine the jurisdiction of the Court of Ordinary by the highest court of Georgia in its affirmance of the probate. Hungerford v. Spalding, 183 Ga. 547, 189 S. E. 2.
These facts were alleged by petitioners in their statement of claim to the stock filed below in response to the decree of interpleader. Exemplified copies of the probate record of the several Georgia courts were pleaded and proven, as were the applicable Georgia statutes governing domiciliary probate. From the facts alleged, petitioners inferred the conclusive establishment of the place for domiciliary distribution against “all persons,” and prayed the issue to them of new certificates. An offer was made to pay all Delaware taxes or charges on the stock. At the trial, petitioners relied upon
Respondent admitted that all parties entitled under the law of Georgia to be heard in opposition to probate were actually before the Georgia courts. It denied that Mrs. Hungerford was domiciled in Georgia or that the Georgia judgment of domicile and probate was binding on it, and averred testatrix‘s domicile at death was New York. It further averred that there were New York creditors of the estate interested in the proper and lawful administration of the estate, and that New York had certain claims for inheritance and estate taxes. Its own subsequent appointment by the Surrogate‘s Court of New York County, New York, on the suggestion of testatrix‘s husband and the State Tax Commission, was pleaded with applicable provisions of New York probate and estate tax law. By stipulation it was established that petitioners and the heirs and beneficiaries of testatrix, except her husband, who was an actual party, were notified of the New York proceedings for probate only by publication or substituted service of the citation in Georgia, and did not appear. As a domiciliary administrator c. t. a., the respondent prayed the issue to it of new certificates for the stock in controversy.
The trial court concluded from the evidence adduced at the hearings that the testatrix was domiciled in Georgia. It was therefore, as the court stated, unnecessary for it to consider the binding effect of the Georgia judgment.2 The Supreme Court of Delaware reversed this finding of fact, determined that New York was testatrix‘s domicile and denied petitioners’ contention that
The constitutional effect of the Georgia decree on a claim in his own name in another state by a party to the Georgia proceedings is not here involved.3 The question we are to decide is whether this Georgia judgment on domicile conclusively establishes the right of the Georgia executors to demand delivery to them of personal assets of their testatrix which another state is willing to surrender to the domiciliary personal representative,4 when another representative, appointed by a third state, asserts a similar domiciliary right. For the purpose of this review, the conclusion of Delaware that the testatrix was in fact domiciled in New York is accepted. The answer to the question lies in the extent to which
This clause of the Constitution brings to our Union a useful means for ending litigation. Matters once decided between adverse parties in any state or territory are at rest. Were it not for this full faith and credit provision,
The Constitution does not require, M‘Elmoyle v. Cohen, 13 Peters 312, 328; Milwaukee County v. White Co., 296 U.S. 268, 276, nor does Delaware provide, that the judgments of Georgia have the force of those of her own courts. A suit in Delaware must precede any local remedy on the Georgia judgment. Subject to the Constitutional requirements, Delaware‘s decisions are based on Delaware jurisprudence. Her sovereignty determines personal and property rights within her territory. Subject to Constitutional limitations, it was her prerogative to distribute the property located in Delaware or to direct its transmission to the domiciliary representative of the deceased. Iowa v. Slimmer, 248 U.S. 115, 121. The full faith and credit clause allows Delaware, in disposing of local assets, to determine the question of domicile anew for any inter-
We note, but need not discuss at length, the respondent‘s contention that our application of Georgia law is limited to the statutes, decisions and usages of that state pleaded or proven in the Delaware proceedings,8 and that
In 1899 the Superior Court clearly stated the rule: “It is a general rule of law that whenever a foreign statute is relied upon it must be pleaded, and this court will not take judicial notice of the laws of our sister states or of a foreign country.” Thomas v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 1 Pennewill 593, 596, 42 A. 987, 988. This rule has been quite strictly applied in subsequent cases. Wolf v. Keagy, 3 W. W. Harr. 362, 136 A. 520 (Super. Ct. 1927); Mackenzie Oil Co. v. Omar Oil & Gas. Co., 4 W. W. Harr. 435, 154 A. 883 (Super. Ct. 1929); Nye Odorless Incinerator Corp. v. Felton, 5 W. W. Harr. 236, 162 A. 504 (Super. Ct. 1931); Royal Ins. Co. v. Simon, 20 Del. Ch. 297, 174 A. 444 (1934); Holland v. Universal Life Co., 7 W. W. Harr. 39, 180 A. 328 (Super. Ct. 1935); Silverman v. National Assets Corp., 12 A. 2d 389 (Del. Ch. 1940).
By
It seems quite obvious that the administrator c. t. a. appears in Delaware as an agency of the State of New York, and not as the alter ego of the beneficiaries of the Hungerford estate. In its answer to the petitioners’ statement of claim, it established its status by alleging
A state is interested primarily not in the payment of particular creditors, nor in the succession of heirs or beneficiaries, as such, but in the administration of the property of its citizens, wherever located, and that of strangers within its boundaries. In a society where inheritance is an important social concept, the managing of decedents’ property is a sovereign right which may not be readily frustrated.
Georgia and New York might each assert its right to administer the estates of its domiciliaries to protect its sovereign interests, and Delaware was free to decide for itself which claimant is entitled to receive the portion of Mrs. Hungerford‘s personalty within Delaware‘s borders.
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE:
I concur upon the single ground that the New York administrator was not bound by the Georgia judgment. He was not a party to the Georgia proceedings, nor was he represented by any of those who were parties. As administrator appointed under the New York statutes, he
It is unnecessary to consider the other questions discussed by the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON concur in this opinion.
Notes
“On the brief filed by the solicitor for the claimant there are quotations from
A will is admitted to original domiciliary probate in state A. Thereafter an ancillary proceeding is commenced in state B based upon the domiciliary determination of A. At that point a beneficiary, a stranger to the proceeding in A, appears and asserts that the decedent was domiciled in B. The determination of domicile by state A will not be recognized by state B, but state B will take evidence and redetermine the issue of domicile. Estate of Clark, 148 Cal. 108, 82 P. 760; Holyoke v. Estate of Holyoke, 110 Me. 469, 87 A. 40 (semble); In re Mauldin‘s Estate, 69 Mont. 132, 220 P. 1102 (semble); Strathmann v. Kinkelaar, 105 Okla. 290, 233 P. 215 (semble); Richards v. Huff, 146 Okla. 108, 293 P. 1028; cf. Estate of Reynolds, 217 Cal. 557, 20 P. 2d 323; In re Coppock‘s Estate, 72 Mont. 431, 234 P. 258; Matter of Gifford, 279 N. Y. 470, 18 N. E. 2d 663; McEwen v. McEwen, 50 N. Dak. 662, 197 N. W. 862. Contra, Corrigan v. Jones, 14 Colo. 311, 23 P. 913; Kurtz v. Stenger, 169 Md. 554, 182 A. 456.
If the objector was privy to the proceeding in state A, state B will not redetermine the issue of domicile. Willetts’ Appeal, 50 Conn. 330; Torrey v. Bruner, 60 Fla. 365, 53 So. 337; Loewenthal v. Mandell, 125 Fla. 685, 170 So. 169; Succession of Gaines, 45 La. Ann. 1237, 14 So. 233.
Where the proceeding in state B is by a stranger to the proceedings for original domiciliary probate in state A upon the theory that the domicile is actually B, state B will determine domicile for itself. Scripps v. Wayne Probate Judge, 131 Mich. 265, 90 N. W. 1061; In re Crane‘s Estate, 205 Mich. 673, 172 N. W. 584; Pusey‘s Estate, 321 Pa. 248, 184 A. 844; see Matter of Horton, 217 N. Y. 363, 371, 111 N. E. 1066, 1068.
Where the person seeking to establish domicile in state B, and to have original domiciliary probate there, was a party to the proceeding in state A, state B will not redetermine domicile. Hopper v. Nicholas, 106 Ohio 292, 140 N. E. 186; cf. Thomas v. Morrisett, 76 Ga. 384; In re Fischer, 118 N. J. Eq. 599, 180 A. 633.
