In Re the Appraisal Under the Transfer Tax Act of the Trust Estate Held for the Life of O'Berry

72 N.E. 109, 179 N.Y. 285, 17 Bedell 285, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1097
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 109 (In Re the Appraisal Under the Transfer Tax Act of the Trust Estate Held for the Life of O'Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Appraisal Under the Transfer Tax Act of the Trust Estate Held for the Life of O'Berry, 72 N.E. 109, 179 N.Y. 285, 17 Bedell 285, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1097 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The petitioner, Mary J. Iiowey, acquired a vested remainder in the estate of Loftis Wood under the provisions of his will, admitted to probate May 6,1884. A transfer tax was imposed upon this remainder in a proceeding by .the trustees under the will and the tax was adjusted upon the *287 remainder at $1,172.88 and paid to the comptroller for the slate December 7, 1901. Subsequently this court held that a transfer tax upon remainders vested prior to the passage of the law taxing such interests was void as in conflict with the Constitution. (Matter of Pell, 171 N. Y. 48.)

By section 225 of the law under which the tax was imposed, as amended by chapter 382 of the Laws of 1900 and chapter 173 of the Laws of 1901, the comptroller was required to refund taxes of this character after the surrogate had reversed the order under which it was collected. In this case the surrogate has reversed his original order and directed the comptroller to refund the tax so paid with interest. The Appellate Division has affirmed the order and ' the comptroller has appealed to this court, but only from that part of the order which requires the payment of interest, and hence the only question presented by the appeal is whether that part of the order which requires the payment of interest is erroneous.

The tax in question was imposed and collected by the state under color of a law that was absolutely void. It was a void tax and not merely voidable for some irregularity or error, and had no support except an unconstitutional statute. Such a law is simply void. It confers no rights, imposes no duties, confers no power, and in legal contemplation is as inoperative, for any purpose, as if it had never been passed. (Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U. S. 425; Matter of Brenner, 170 N. Y. 185, 194.) So that the only question before us is whether the comptroller, having received the money without right and used it for the purposes of the state under a promise to refund it, was properly charged by the court with interest.

The only contention on the part of the state is that, since the statute providing for refunding taxes in such eases makes no mention of interest, the order to that extent was made without legal authority, and, therefore, is erroneous.

The general law for the assessment and collection of taxes upon real and personal property provides that, in case of payment of an illegal or excessive tax, subsequently corrected by the courts, it shall be repaid to the taxpayer with interest. *288 (§ 256.) This would seem to express the general policy of the state as to the refunding of taxes improperly collected. But it is said that this rule does not apply to taxes upon transfers, since the very section directing such taxes to be refunded, when the order imposing them is reversed, is silent as to interest, and being silent no interest can be allowed. If this contention be correct it follows that the state, when restoring illegal or excessive taxes to the living taxpayer, must pay interest, but when doing justice to the estates of the dead or to the widow and children of the dead, no interest can be allowed. This anomaly is produced, as it seems to me, by exaggerating the importance of the word interest in the one statute and its omission in the other. In this case the state has promised to refund the tax, that is, to make the party good who paid it-The state, having received the money without right, and having retained and used it, is bound to make the party good just as an individual would be under like circumstances. The obligation to refund money received and retained without' right implies and carries with it the right to interest. Whenever money has been received by a party which ex ceguo et bono ought to be refunded the right to interest follows, as matter of course. (Barr v. Haseldon, 10 Rich. Eq. 53.)

In the Scrimgeour case the surrogate, under the same statute, reversed the order imposing the tax, as he did in this case, and directed that it be refunded with interest. That, order was affirmed at the Appellate Division (80 App. Div. 388) and in this court (175 N. Y. 507).

The case of Woerz v. Schumacher (161 N. Y. 530) is quite in point. The' only question in that case was the right to interest under a written agreement, which, like the statute in this case, made no mention of interest, but one party agreed to reimburse the other for certain outlays. It was held that the obligation to reimburse carried with it ex vi termini the right to interest on the sums paid. The discussion in that case shows that there are many cases in which interest is properly ally wed other than those cases embraced within the general rule; that is to say, cases where interest is given by *289 express contract or as damages. The doctrine of that case is decisive of the case at bar unless there is some difference or distinction between an obligation to reimburse a party for •outlays and an obligation to refund money received and retained without right. If such a distinction exists, I am not able to perceive it. If the parties now before ns were to he reversed and the case was one where Mrs. Ilovrey had received and retained the money of the state without right and was sued to recover it, and the con¡4 had charged her with interest, I venture to say that this court would not think of disturbing the judgment simply because she had been charged with interest. When the state assumes an obligation to return money collected under an unconstitutional law the obligation is subject to the same construction as all like obligations of private parties. Indeed, the obligations of the state are often measured by even broader rules of justice and honor than are applied to private persons.

The rule in this respect was well stated in the early case of People ex rel. Bank of Monroe v. Canal Commissioners (5 Denio, 401) as follows :

“ The state as such, is not liable to pay cither principal or interest, as it cannot he sued by a citizen, and of course cannot be compelled to pay any debt. But where questions of public indebtedness come before the judicial tribunals through the agency of public officers over whom the court has jurisdiction, they do not hesitate to dispose of them upon the same legal and equitable principles which govern judicial decisions as between individuals. They apply the settled rules of law to such cases, and adjudicate upon the payment of both principal and interest in the same manner as in other cases. It is only in such cases that the judicial tribunals can direct the payment of a public debt, and there is no reason why in directing such payment, the public agents should not be directed to do as ample justice as an individual would be required to do. Hence, if the question of the liability of the State to the payment of a claim for damages comes properly before a judicial tribunal, whether so brought by the public officer or the other *290

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72 N.E. 109, 179 N.Y. 285, 17 Bedell 285, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-appraisal-under-the-transfer-tax-act-of-the-trust-estate-held-for-ny-1904.