In re the Estate of Cohen

150 Misc. 17, 269 N.Y.S. 263, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1068
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 Misc. 17 (In re the Estate of Cohen) 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 the Estate of Cohen, 150 Misc. 17, 269 N.Y.S. 263, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1068 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The present proceeding amounts, in substance, to a reargument of the effect, so far as the Transfer Tax Law is concerned, of a gift of a trust remainder to a cemetery corporation for perpetual care of the testator’s burial plot.

By the first item of his will testator provided:

I. I will, order and direct that all of my just debts and funeral expenses be paid out of my estate as soon as conveniently may be after my decease, authorizing and directing that my executors cause a suitable marker for my grave to be installed at an expense not to exceed Two hundred and fifty (250.00) Dollars.”

The remainder of the estate was erected into a trust for the lives of his wife and son with a provision that, if the wife predeceased the son, $1,000 of the principal of the trust should be paid to Macphaela Cemetery Association on her death and $3,000 additional on the subsequent death of the son, but if the son predeceased the wife, the entire $4,000 should be paid on her death. The purpose of the gifts was stated in the following language: The said sums to be held by said Macphaela Cemetery Association in trust to apply the net income thereof to the perpetual care and embellishment of my burial plot and the graves and.monuments therein in its Cemetery, my said plot being known as Lot No. 27.”

The testator died on January 4, 1926, leaving a gross estate of $31,773.34, from which the transfer tax appraiser has deducted debts of $158.04 and administration expenses, excluding executors’ commissions, of $1,639.44, in which were included $445.30 for the undertaker and $250 for a grave marker as directed by the will, giving an aggregate of funeral expenses of $695.30 as allowed deductions.

The appraiser originally reported as taxable the above-noted provision for payment to the cemetery association. An appeal was taken to the surrogate from this determination but was not made the subject of any particularly spirited contest and was sustained, the matter being remitted to the appraiser for elimination of this item of tax. This decision was made on November 27, 1931.

[19]*19At a considerably later time a motion for reargument was made by the State Tax Commission, which motion was denied by decision dated November 16, 1932, solely on procedural grounds, it being pointed out that since the time to appeal from the order of remission had long since expired, the proper practice to bring the matter on for rehearing would be for the Tax Commission to appeal to the surrogate from the proforma order to be entered upon the appraiser’s revised report. This has now been accomplished, wherefore the entire subject-matter of the controversy is presently before the court for decision.

The argument in favor of exemption assumes a dual aspect, first, on the ground that the amount directed to be paid to the cemetery association being to a charitable ” or benevolent ” corporation is not taxable by reason of the phraseology of the first sentence of section 221 of the Tax Law; and, second, that it is exempt as a part of the funeral expenses of the decedent.

Approaching a consideration of the former contention, it is unquestionable that testamentary directions for payments related to the obsequies of the deceased are deemed to be for charitable and benevolent uses,” according to the express language of section 13-a of the Personal Property Law (Matter of Arnolt, 127 Misc. 579, 586; Matter of Beck, 130 id. 765, 766; Matter of Blasius, 134 id. 753, 755), and it would seem prima facie to be a logical conclusion that a corporation which receives a bequest for a charitable use is a charitable ” corporation. Indeed, in Matter of Braasch (206 App. Div. 96), where testatrix gave $3,000 to the Lutheran Cemetery for the care of her burial plot, the court held (at p. 101) that this u must be included among the bequests to charitable corporations.”

The fallacy in this position in the present connection, however, lies in the obvious fact that cemetery corporations were not included in the legislative connotation of the term charitable,” as used in section 221 of the Tax Law. This appears from the fact that express provision respecting the extent of the exemption to a cemetery corporation is made in the second sentence of the section, in which it is enacted that such an association is exempt from tax only to the extent of “ personal property other than money or securities,” obviously. placing it in a category other than that occupied by the general " charitable ” organizations, referred to in the first sentence. Whereas, therefore, it seems obvious that a gift for the upkeep of a burial plot is to be classed as charitable in certain connections, as, for example, in a detérmination under section 17 of the Decedent Estate Law, it is not such a charitable organization as is given unlimited tax exemption under section 221 of the Tax Law.

[20]*20Approaching now the second phase of the controversy, there remains for consideration the question as to whether or not a direction for payment such as was here made can receive exemption in whole or in part as a funeral expense.

It is, of course, primary that the only interests which are taxable under the Transfer Tax Law are those portions of the estate which pass to the distributees in beneficial enjoyment from the net estate of the decedent. In arriving at the net distributable estate, one of the first, if not the very first, deductions which is made from the gross assets coming into the hands of the fiduciary is for the funeral expenses of the decedent. (Surr. Ct. Act, § 216; Matter of Brooks, Foley, S., 119 Misc. 738, 741; affd., 212 App. Div. 868; Matter of Millward, 6 Misc. 425, 428; Matter of Phelps, 118 id. 405, 406; Matter of Ogden, 103 id. 529, 532; Matter of Smith, 137 id. 107, 110.) (See, also, Matter of Computation of Transfer Tax, etc., 33 N. Y. St. Dept. Rep. 22, 26.) Personal property does not pass directly

from the deceased to his legatee or next of kin, but all such legatee or next of kin takes is what may be coming to him from the estate on its distribution after settlement. The amount represented by the expenditures of the administrator or the expense of administration never passes to the legatee or next of kin, and, therefore, is not subject to the tax.” (Matter of Gihon, 169 N. Y. 443, 445.) (See, also, Matter of Westurn, 152 id. 93,103.) Upon any sum, therefore, actually paid or properly payable from the gross estate as a deductible expense, the State is entitled to receive no tax.

A preliminary consideration in the discussion arises, therefore, as to what sorts of payments are properly deductible in this connection. Allowance has been made by the appraiser for the actual undertaking services, in the sum of $445.30, and for a marker for the grave of the decedent to the extent of the $250 directed by him; the testator also directed that upon the deaths of both his wife and son a sum of the then value of $4,000, the present worth of which has not been determined, should be used for the perpetual care of his cemetery plot. Is his desire in this regard to be gratified in a manner similar to that in which the Tax Commission concedes his related wish for the $250 marker is to be satisfied? In other words, is his wish for the upkeep and maintenance of his burial plot to be included as a proper funeral expense?

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150 Misc. 17, 269 N.Y.S. 263, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-cohen-nysurct-1934.