Baer v. Graves

148 Misc. 641, 266 N.Y.S. 733, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1334
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 Misc. 641 (Baer v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baer v. Graves, 148 Misc. 641, 266 N.Y.S. 733, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1334 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Schenck, J.

This is an application for a peremptory mandamus order directing the Tax Commission to determine that a transfer tax amounting to the sum of $415.91 be refunded.

[642]*642The cfecedent, a resident of the State of Illinois, died on the 28th day of January, 1927. On the 25th day of March, 1927, the sum of $415.91 transfer tax was paid to the State of New York, that being the tax assessed upon the transfer of 220 shares of common stock of the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation. This stock was owned by decedent at the time of his death.

The Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation was a New York corporation. The assessment was made pursuant to article 10-A of the Tax Law, which imposed a transfer tax upon a transfer by a non-resident of stock in a corporation organized under the laws of this State.

In 1925, the Transfer Tax Laws of this State were amended with respect to non-residents in two important particulars. The Legislature by chapter 143 of the Laws of 1925 adopted the flat rate plan which imposed upon non-residents a flat rate upon the gross amount of the taxable property within the State. The Legislature also adopted provisions for reciprocity in its inheritance taxation. It exempted from the New York inheritance tax the property of non-residents whose States of residence granted similar exemptions to estates of New York residents.

Section 248-f of article 10-A of the 1925 statute provided that whenever the Tax Commission shall determine that any tax collected under the provision of that article has been erroneously collected, the amount so determined should be refunded without interest out of the funds in the custody of the Comptroller to the credit of such taxes. (City Bank Farmers’ Trust Co. v. New York Central R. R. Co., 253 N. Y. 49.)

Article 10-A was declared unconstitutional in Smith v. Loughman (245 N. Y. 486; certiorari denied, 275 U. S. 560).

It was there held that article 10-A violated article IV, section 2, of the Federal Constitution, because, in many instances, the rate of the tax was higher for non-residents than for residents, and thus there was a hostile discrimination, contrary to the declaration of the Constitution that the citizens of each State shall be entitled to the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States.

Smith v. Loughman was decided in 1927. The Tax Commission then took the position, upon the advice of the Attorney-General (1927 Report, p. 247), that transfers by residents and non-residents .were thereafter to be taxed under the rates that had been enforced before the revision of the statute. The Attorney-General said: “ Prior to the enactment of Chapter 143 of [the Laws of] 1925 the Transfer Tax Law of this State was Tax Law, article 10, applicable both to resident and nonresident estates. The main purpose [643]*643of the 1925 amendment is clear upon an examination of the amending bill (Assembly print numbers 858, 1414; Senate 608, 1927) and is further attested by your recommendations for the amendment (1924 Report of State Tax Commission, pages 19-21). That purpose was to provide a different measure of tax, known as the Matthews flat-rate plan, as against nonresident estates, together with different methods of assessment and collection, and to retain . the former tax for resident estates only.

“ To effectuate that main purpose former article 10 was amended by appropriate retitling to indicate that it applied to resident estates only, and by striking out certain provisions peculiarly applicable to nonresident estates. With a few minor exceptions all the changes were clearly related to the main purpose of amendment. Two sections of the former article were repealed, clearly in pursuance of the main purpose. Its setting having thus been prepared, the new tax provision for nonresident estates was enacted as article 10-a.

The recent decision of the Court of Appeals proclaims that the amendment, as to its main purpose, proceeded upon a principle that brings it into collision with the Constitution. Accepting that decision as your present rule of administration, I advise you that not only does article 10-a fail, but also so much more of Chapter 143 of 1925 as was incidental and subservient to the main purpose of enacting article 10-a, including the provisions amending article 10 by making it inapplicable to nonresident estates. Article Í0 as it existed before amendment, and continuing except as amended in pursuance of separate and constitutionally valid purposes, remains, as the law of this State, imposing a death tax upon devolutions from nonresident decedents.”

The Tax Commission took the position that the reciprocity provisions of the 1929 statute were invalid because of the unconstitutionality of the rate provision. The following statement was made by the Tax Commission under date of August 4, 1927:

Reciprocal Relations with Other States.
Perhaps the most regrettable result of the decision is the disturbance of the reciprocity plan under which twenty-two states have joined in an agreement whereby as among them multiple taxation of intangible personal property of non-resident decedents is ehminated. The conclusion seems 'inescapable that the decision is broad enough to render Chapter 143 of the laws of 1925 invalid in its entirety and this carries with it the provisions for reciprocal death tax exemptions. Unfortunately residents of New'York, for a time at least, will find themselves again enmeshed in the per- " [644]*644nicious multiple death tax network, and it is with great reluctance that the tax commission is impelled to deny reciprocity to the estates of residents of the twenty-one other jurisdictions with which New York has been working in accord.”

Later, in 1930, the Court of Appeals, in City Bank Farmers’ Trust Co. v. New York Central R. R. Co. (253 N. Y. 49), held that the reciprocity provisions of the 1925 Act were valid.

These provisions are not involved here.

In 1928 the Legislature, by chapter 330 of the Laws of 1928, re-enacted article 10-A of the 1925 act, with amendments designed to remove the constitutional objections as to discriminatory rates against non-residents. The reciprocity provisions were also amended.

By the 1928 statute, article 10-A, as re-enacted and amended, was made retroactive to July 1, 1926, and the tax thereunder was declared to be in lieu and instead of the tax imposed upon transfers by non-residents, under the 1925 article 10-A.

The Court of Appeals has held that the retroactive taxing feature of the 1928 act is invalid, but the procedural provisions are not, and that the taxing features of the 1925 act were revived. (Matter of Nash v. Lynch, 226 App. Div. 421; affd., 253 N. Y. 564.) (See, also, Matter of Caulfield, 136 Misc. 685.)

Section 248-f of article 10-A of the act of 1928 contained a similar provision to the 1925 act as follows: Whenever the tax commission shall determine that any tax collected under the provisions of this article has been erroneously collected, the amount so determined shall be refunded, without interest, out of the funds in the custody of the comptroller to the credit of such taxes.”

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Related

In re Hastings
165 Misc. 211 (New York County Courts, 1937)
People ex rel. Bankers Trust Co. v. Graves
152 Misc. 531 (New York Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
148 Misc. 641, 266 N.Y.S. 733, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baer-v-graves-nysupct-1933.