after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
In the disposition of -this case we are somewhat embarrassed by our ignorance of the reasons which controlled the decision of the highest court of the State- The opinion of the surro
After the'death of Mr. Tilt, his will was admitted to probate by the surrogate of Morris County, New Jersey, who by law had jurisdiction to do this if the testator resided in the county at the time of his death. The petition for probate described the testator as “late of the township of, Roxbury, in said county,” and the letters testamentary granted on May 23, 1900, by the surrogate described him as “ late of the county .of Morris, deceased.” An order was made fixing a time within which creditors must prove claims against the estate. On the expiration of this time a further order was made, that all creditors who had neglected tó bring in their claims and demands should “be forever barred from their action therefor against the executors of said deceased.” Succession taxes, imposed by the law of New Jersey and the law of the United
That reexamination, however, must be confined to the single question whether by the assessment of the tax full faith and credit has been denied to the judicial proceeding of the State of New-Jersey in violation of Article IV, section 1, of the Constitution. In the consideration of this question, the first inquiry which presents itself is whether the adjudication of the New Jersey court, that Tilt was at the time of his death a resident of New Jersey, was conclusive • upon the State of New York,.- a stranger to the proceedings. -If it was that is the end of the case, because then New York could not take the first step necessary to bring the estate within the provision of the tax law of that State. But upon principle and authority that adjudication, though essential to the assumption of jurisdiction to grant letters testamentary, was neither conclusive on the question of domicil, nor even evidence of it in a collateral proceeding.
Thormann
v.
Frame,
But assuming that the New York court had the right to determine, and determined rightly, the domicil of the deceased, what then? The grievance here is not the finding that Mr. Tilt died a resident of New York. It is the assessment, based upon that finding, of a transfer tax upon the legacies-contained in- his will. The real question in the case is whether the assessment of that tax by the State of New York is consistent with the full faith and credit required by the Constitution to be given to the judicial proceedings of another State. After the will had been allowed and letters testamentary had been issued by the New Jersey surrogate, the executors-named in the will took possession of all the personal property of the testator (the real property not being concerned in this litigation) and began to administer it in accordance with the terms of the will and under the direction of the court. That property, appraised at about one million dollars, consisted of bank deposits almost entirely in New Jersey banks, life insurance policies, a few small mortgages, notes and accounts receivable, furniture, horses and carriages, and (constituting more than eight-tenths of the whole of the personal estate) stock in New Jersey corporations. A limit of time' was fixed for the presentation of claims against the estate, at the expiration of which it was decreed that all creditors who had neglected to bring in their demands should be barred from any action thereon against the executors. What was then done appears in an affidavit of a witness, which was agreed by counsel in
Thus executors appointed by .a court having upon the face of the record authority to make the appointment, had accounted for the property which had come into their hands to the court having jurisdiction under the laws of the State to pass on the accounts, and, without knowledge of any claim by the State of New York, had, by the direction of the court acting within its jurisdiction, paid out the whole estate to those who were entitled to it by the will. All that was done by the executors, and all that was received by the beneficiaries in- the disposition of the estate, was done and received by orders of court, duly entered in the- course of judicial proceedings. For the purpose of enabling the executors to distribute the estate with safety to themselves, in accordance with a common practice in the settlement of the estate of deceased persons, and. under authority conferred by the laws of the State, the court, prior to the distribution, had decreed that all those who had neglected to bring in their claims should be “forever barred from their action therefor against the executors of the deceased.” Upon these facts does the assessment of this
When the owners of property die, that property, under the conditions and restrictions of the law applicable, is transmitted to their successors named by their wills or by the laws regulating inheritance in cases of intestacy. For a suitable time it is essential that the property should remain under the control of the State, until' all just charges against it can be discovered and paid, and those entitled to it as new owners can be ascertained. It is in the public interest that the property should come under the control of the new-owners, after such delays only as will afford opportunity for investigation and hearing to guard against mistake, injustice, or fraud. It is the duty of the sovereign to provide a tribunal, under whose direction the just demands against the estate may be determined- and paid, the succession decreed, and the estate devolved to those who are found to be entitled to it. Sometimes this duty is
In respect to the settlement of the successions to property on death the. States of the Union are sovereign and may give to their judicial proceedings such conclusive effect, subject (to 'the requirements of due process of law and to any other constitutional limitation which may be applicable.
When,' therefore,- we come to consider what faith and credit must be given- to these judicial proceedings of New Jersey, we must first ascertain what effect that State attaches to them. The statute enacted to carry into effect the constitutional provision provided that they should have in any court within the United States such faith and credit "as they have by law and usage in the courts of the States from which they are taken.” Act of May 26, 1790, now sec. 905, Rev. Stat. They can have no,greater or less or other effect in other courts than in those of their own State.
Cheever
v.
Wilson,
Up to this point it has been assumed that the New Jersey court had jurisdiction to probate the will and administer the estate, and what has been said upon the effect of the judicial proceedings, has been based upon that assumption. When,' however, full faith and credit is demanded for a judgment in the courts of other States, an inquiry into the jurisdiction is always permitted, and if it be shown that the proceedings relied upon were without the jurisdiction of the court, they need not be respected.
Thompson
v.
Whitman,
18 Wall.
457; Thormann
v.
Frame,
The defendant in error, acting upon this well-settled rule, might have attacked the jurisdiction of the New Jersey courts, and thus brought forward for consideration many important questions which, in the view we take of the case, need not evén be átated. But there was no attempt, except in argument here, to deny the right of the New Jersey court to act upon the paper writing purporting to-dispose of the estate of Tilt, and by admitting it to probate to convert it into an operative will.' It is true that, as a basis of assessing transfer taxes, it was proved that Tilt was a resident of. New York at the time óf his death, a fact which would be relevant to the question of jurisdiction.’ But that fact was not proved or used.for the purpose' of invalidating the proceedings taken in probating the will and administering the estate. On the contrary, the taxes were based upon the provisions of the instrument, which derived all its authenticity as a will and all its capacity to transmit property' from the judicial proceedings in New Jersey. It appears conclusively from the action taken in the New York Surrogates’ Court that there was no attempt to declare the New Jérsey proceedings void because they were taken without jurisdiction. In the appraiser’s report it is said that the deceased had left a-will “which was duly admitted to probate in,
It is quite obvious that what was done here was the assessment by one State of taxes upon transfers of personal property, taking effect under the laws of another State, entirely regardless of the situs of the property transferred. This suggests grave constitutional questions, which we cannot consider because they were not properly and seasonably raised in the court below.
For the foregoing reasons we think that the judgment below denied to the New Jersey proceedings the full faith and credit to which they were entitled by the Constitution and laws of the United States, and accordingly it is
Reversed.
