In re Adjust the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Morgan

16 Mills Surr. 504, 95 Misc. 451, 159 N.Y.S. 105
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Mills Surr. 504 (In re Adjust the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Adjust the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Morgan, 16 Mills Surr. 504, 95 Misc. 451, 159 N.Y.S. 105 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Fowler, S. —

This is a proceeding under the Transfer Tax Law to appraise the property of the decedent and to assess a tax upon its transfer under her will. The executors contend that the decedent’s last legal residence or domicile was in Washington, D. C., and consequently that the transfer of her intangible property in this State is not subject to a transfer tax imposed by this State. The state comptroller, on the other hand, contends that the decedent had her last residence or domicile in this State, and consequently that the transfer of her personal property, wherever situated, is subject to a transfer tax imposed by this State. Testimony was taken before the transfer tax appraiser upon the question of decedent’s last residence or domicile, and the state comptroller and the executors have stipulated that such testimony, may be considered by the [505]*505surrogate in determining the question put at issue in the same manner and with the same' effect as if the witnesses had appeared before me.

Let me remark at the outset that this matter involves propositions of some nicety, and that in so far as the application of legal principles to controverted facts is concerned the cause is not free from difficulty. It involves the last domicile, or the last legal “ residence ” rather, of a widow. The legal domicile of a woman is oftentimes a more complicated question than that of a man who votes and exercises all the prerogatives and rights of a citizen in a particular State or territory.

By reasort of the “ due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, and because of the fact that State laws do not operate beyond the precincts of its' territory, a State is disqualified from levying taxes on property out of its jurisdiction. The right to tax depending as it does upon the actual or constructive presence of property within a particular" .State, it follows that an owner of personal property, now domiciled or residing within this State, cannot be made liable for a tax on such personalty as in law follows his person to his foreign residence or domicile. (Dewey v. Des Moines, 173 U. S. 193 ; Corry v. Baltimore, 196 id. 466.) The principle “ mobilia sequuntur personam33 is as binding on the State as it is on the courts of the State. The exceptions to this principle are limited and do not arise here. Judge Coolet remarks, tersely, in substance, that where the State affords no protection, there is no equivalent received by the nonresident and no basis for taxation. (1 Cooley Tax. 84.) This statement is recognized in this jurisdiction. In Dorwin v. Strickland (57 N. Y. 492), it was held that the assessors had no jurisdiction to assess a nonresident. Thus residence, constructive or actual, or protection, are 'the bases of all taxation of personal property by a State of the Dnion.

The adjudications in the State of New York in reference to [506]*506domicile and legal residence are not many. In some directions the law of this State bearing on domicile and residence may be affirmed not to be explored. In other words-, it is still in vacuo, or waiting to be filled np by the usual judicial processes of analogy and induction.. The ultimate and usual reservoir — the old common law-—hypothetically in force in ¡New York, and continued as part of our State jurisprudence by constitutional limitation, does not, in any complete measure, fill the void, as prior to our independence of the crown the old common law itself was not very explicit or complete on such- questions as are suggested by the -technical terms “ domicile ” and “ residence.” It is only in-the modern English cases, which are of course no authority here, however respectfully we may regard their reasoning, that we find the common law relating to domicile and residence tolerably complete. In England of late years the legal contentions, whether a particular legal domicile is in England, or in Scotland, or in England or in India, or in England or the colonies, as the case may be, have been frequent and well considered. But as before remarked these adjudications are devoid of authority in this jurisdiction.

In most of the cases in this court involving an issue of domicile or residence, domicile or residence is- treated as a mere question of fact. But such issues of fact nearly always involve the application of legal principles, sometimes extremely nice in character. It would 'have much facilitated the surrogate of this county had our own law on this head been more complete and better settled' than it is.

When it appears that a person has exchanged a domicile of origin or of established choice for a new one in proceedings by the sovereign of the old domicile against that person, it is held that the onus of making out a new domicile is on the person or his representatives and not on the State. A once established domicile, either of origin or of choice, is presumed to be permanent in the absence of proofs to the contrary. (Matter of [507]*507Robitaille, 78 Misc. Rep. 108, 110.) While this is undoubtedly an accurate proposition of law, yet, for the reasons already stated, it is a rule of procedure only, that is, a rule of going forward. On the whole issue of residence or domicile the onus is on the State to show by a preponderance of evidence that the individual is amenable to the tax levied. In other words, a mere sojourner, or one in Hiñere, or one merely in this jurisdiction for the time being, is not compelled to show by a preponderance of proofs as against the State that he or she is not a resident. The burden on the whole case is always in the last resort on the actor in any legal proceeding. The State, when actor, is no exception. In any form of free government the rights of the individual are not to be unduly jeopardized, by presumptions in favor of the sovereign.

But, as already said, the State of New York has the abstract power and right to tax under our Federal and State laws all those who are actually residing cmimo manendi within its jurisdiction, and also the right to tax those who are not residents to the extent of property in receipt of its protection in some form. The second justification for the imposition of a tax is not, however, involved in this proceeding. When actual residence is the ground of the imposition of a tax the power to tax ceases at any moment residence ceases. As the publicist Wheaton, quoting a judicial utterance, observes: “ The character that is gained by residence ceases by nonresidence. It is an adventitious character and no longer adheres to one from the moment he puts himself in motion tona fide to quit the country sine animo revertendi.” In these days every person sui juris is at liberty to change his domicile or residence whenever he pleases. (Matter of Newcomb, 192 N. Y. 238, 252 ; Matter of Robitaille, 78 Misc. Rep. 108, 112.) The moment legal residence ceases the State’s right to tax on the basis of residency also ceases, no matter how inconvenient and apparently unjust it may seem: to the taxing agents of the State, or to the quasi informers who, I [508]*508believe, act for the State in. most of these exceptional cases on a contingent basis.

But in this matter it appears that Mrs. Morgan’s residence in the city and county of ¡New York had not ceased at the time of her death. Her mere intention to have her legal domicile in Washington, ¡D. 0., perhaps did not conflict with her actual residence in this county. (Matter of Newcomb, 192 N. Y.

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Related

In Re Estate of Harkness
169 P. 78 (California Supreme Court, 1917)
In re the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Norton
17 Mills Surr. 220 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1916)

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16 Mills Surr. 504, 95 Misc. 451, 159 N.Y.S. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adjust-the-transfer-tax-upon-the-estate-of-morgan-nysurct-1916.