Crosby v. Charlestown

95 A. 1043, 78 N.H. 39, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 2, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 95 A. 1043 (Crosby v. Charlestown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosby v. Charlestown, 95 A. 1043, 78 N.H. 39, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 13 (N.H. 1915).

Opinion

*41 Parsons, C. J.

It is in effect conceded by the plaintiffs that the property oí the deceased represented by the stocks, bonds, and notes had been properly taxed to her, before her death, at her domicile in Charlestown. While the securities were in fact held on deposit in Minnesota and were not actually in this state, the property represented by them, or her proprietary right to have and enjoy the beneficial use of them, inhered in the place of her domicile. Por the purpose of taxation, her property right in such intangible property had its situs where she had her domicile, and not where the documentary evidence of it happened to be. This proposition is so well established that it is not open to serious disputation. Bullock v. Guilford, 59 Vt. 516; People v. Smith, 88 N. Y. 576; Commonwealth v. Williams, 102 Va. 778; Commonwealth v. Peebles, 134 Ky. 121; State v. Mortgage Co., 76 Minn. 155; Mackay v. San Francisco, 113 Cal. 392; State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds, 15 Wall. 300, 324; Kirkland v. Hotchkiss, 100 U. S. 491. In some of the cases it is held that intangibles in a state other than that of the owner are taxable at the place of their actual location when they are there for use in business and not merely for deposit. But it is unnecessary to consider that exception to the general rule in this case, for the stocks, bonds, and notes of Miss Gilson were in Minnesota for safe keeping merely. They were, therefore, taxable at her domicile in this state as property whose situs was there.

The tax of which the plaintiffs complain was assessed April 1, 1913, after Miss Gilson’s death, and was assessed against her estate. No administration had been granted in this state, and the tax was assessed under the statutory provision for the contingency that at the taxing time there was no representative of the estate. P. S., c. 56, s. 26; Kent v. Exeter, 68 N. H. 469, 470. A similar provision appears in the Massachusetts law. Mass. G. S. (1860), c. 11, s. 12; Dallinger v. Rapello, 14 Fed. Rep. 32. The question in the case cited related to a tax assessed against an executor after his appointment; and Judge Gray says of the provision of the Massachusetts statute similar to that under which the present tax was imposed: “The provision . . . permitting the tax, before the appointment of an executor or administrator, to be assessed generally to the estate of the deceased where he last dwelt, appears to have been intended to prevent the personal property from escaping taxation altogether before such appointment, and not to extend the liability of the executor or administrator for taxes assessed after his appointment.” The other Massachusetts cases relied upon (Putnam *42 v. Middleborough, 209 Mass. 456; Gray v. Lenox, 215 Mass. 598) are upon similar facts, the question being what property was held by the executors so as to be properly taxable against them in Massachusetts. No tax has been assessed against the plaintiffs.

Their argument appears to be, that on the day of the assessment of the tax they held the legal title to all of Miss Gilson’s estate, and being non-residents, no tax could properly be assessed against the property that had been hers. They contend, citing Commonwealth v. Williams, 102 Va. 778, — 1 Ann. Cas. 434: “ 1. Certificates of stock, bonds, and other evidences of indebtedness, being mere symbols of a property which consists of the intangible, incorporeal right of the creditor to demand of his debtors performance of their obligations, are taxable in the state where the owner thereof resides, no matter where the actual situs of such evidences of debt may be. 2. After the death of the owner of intangible personal property, its situs for the purposes of taxation is the residence or domicile of the executor-in whom is the legal title thereto, although the actual situs of the evidences of such property may be elsewhere.” Conceding this to be a correct statement of the law, the question is: Does it appear from the facts found that the plaintiffs, as executors of Miss Gilson, had the legal title to any of the property taxed? They base their claim upon the fact that they are named as executors in her will.

While by the English law an executor could do many, indeed most, acts pertaining to his office, except maintaining and defending suits, before proof of the will or obtaining letters testamentary (2 Bl. Com. *507), in most of the American states he has no such legitimate authority before probate. 2 Red. Wills 13. Not only is the executor here forbidden to intermeddle with the estate of the decedent until he has given bond to the judge, one condition of which must be the payment of legacy and succession taxes, but he is not to “be considered as having that trust” until after filing such bond. P. S., c. 188, ss. 12, 13, 14; Laws 1907, c. 86. In this case, not being residents the plaintiffs could not claim the appointment as of right and could not be appointed unless in the opinion of the court other circumstances rendered the appointment proper (P. S., c. 188, s. 4; Pickering v. Pendexter, 46 N. H. 69, 71), nor unless found suitable by the probate court. P. S., c. 188, s. 3; Carr v. Corning, 73 N. H. 362. Although an executor named in the will has sufficient interest to maintain an appeal from a decree of the probate court disallowing the will (Shirley v. Healds, 34 N. H. 407), these statu *43 tory provisions make it clear that before grant of administration to him he has no control over the estate, and the court are forbidden to consider him as having the trust. Having no control of the property and riot to be considered as executor, he cannot be held to be the owner for the purposes of taxation. The executor as well as the administrator, by force of the statute, obtains his title from the grant of administration. Kent v. Exeter, 68 N. H. 469, 470. In the execution of his trust it appears to be immaterial whether he calls himself executor or administrator. Finney v. Barnes, 97 Mass. 401; Sheldón v. Smith, 97 Mass. 34. Either term means the personal representative of the deceased. Trethewey v. Helyar, L. R. 4 Ch. Div. 53; P. S., c. 188, s. 1.

Miss Gilson, the testatrix, an inhabitant of Charlestown in this state, died at Charlestown on September 14, 1912. It was the duty of the executors named in the will to cause her will to be proved in the probate court of Sullivan county within thirty days. P. S., c. 187, ss. 2, 3.

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Bluebook (online)
95 A. 1043, 78 N.H. 39, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-charlestown-nh-1915.