In re the Estate of Miles

158 Misc. 398, 287 N.Y.S. 30, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1062
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 Misc. 398 (In re the Estate of Miles) 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 Miles, 158 Misc. 398, 287 N.Y.S. 30, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1062 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Feely, S.

Testator died August 2, 1907; and on February 17, 1908, the tax on the transfer of his estate was partly fixed by order of this court in accord with his last will whereby he gave his widow the use of all his property for her lifetime, with the right to consume as much of the principal as she might see fit. She had become forty-five years of age on July 28, 1895, according to the tax deposition filed in the William Crowner estate. Her fife use at fifty-seven on $131,883.82 was found to be then presently worth $64,087; and a tax of one per cent, imposed by the order aforesaid, was duly paid.

The remainder of the estate, if any, was given by the will to the members of a class of such generally described relatives of testator as might outlive his widow; and the tax order further declared that The interest of the remainderman has not been taxed at the present time, but the taxation of said interest is held in abeyance until the falling in of the life estate on account of the provision in the testator’s will that the life tenant may use ás much of the principal as she sees fit.” This reservation in the order used the singular form, remainderman, ” whereas the appraiser in his report had used the plural.

At the widow’s death on January 23, 1934, the administrator with the will annexed had on hand the sum of $39,727.66. Originally, this estate had a net value of $131,883.82. Undoubtedly, a tax can now be collected from the remaindermen as such. The question is whether there can also be a tax collected now from the estate on the amount of the widow’s invasion of corpus — the difference between the two figures last mentioned — $92,056.16.

The administrator c. t. a. brought the matter on in the form of a petition, filed November 4, 1935, and a notice of motion for an order determining the amount of transfer tax presently payable in this estate. The State opposes the claim that only the remainder, $39,727.66, is now taxable as such. On stipulation in open court [400]*400the issue was submitted as if it were an appeal from a pro forma order. Can the transfer of the amount of the invasion be taxed now?

The difficulty is to reconstruct now the transfer tax law and practice of 1908, because the statutes and the practice thereunder have gone through various stages of development, from the Collateral Inheritance Act of 1885 (See Matter of Cager, 111 N. Y. 343), up to the plan of ultimate readjustment under the Transfer Tax Law, as amended in 1911, and applied, for example, as in Matter of Bloss (100 Misc. 643) and Matter of Jones (151 id. 859). The practice of 1908 appears to have been to tax the right to life use at its full value; and reserve the taxation of the remainder to abide the event. Whether this can be construed to indicate an intention, at that stage, to abandon the tax in respect of the invasion is the instant question to be determined.

At that time the statute authorized a bond for deferred payment, and also composition of a tax; and for nine years before (Laws of 1899, chap. 76) section 230 of the Tax Law had provided, with respect to estates upon contingencies for the present collection of tax at the highest rate ” possible, with a right to claim the return of any difference by reason of ultimate exemption or less rate. The possibility of claiming a refund in the end appears not to have been then utilized; and so remained dormant until 1911 when this section 230 was amended (Laws of 1911, chap. 800) by adding the provision as to.a temporary order.”

Even then it seems not to have been practically realized that these provisions applied to the case of invasion by a life beneficiary, until Surrogate Fowler held in 1916, in Matter of Neher (95 Misc. 68), that the widow’s life estate was presently taxable; and that a tax at the highest rate could be reserved by a temporary order on the value of the principal which the widow also had the right to consume. In 1917 Surrogate Ostrander observed in Matter of Bloss (supra), that section 230 was apparently in conflict with the provisions of section 222 to the effect that undeterminable future estates should be taxed at the time the persons entitled should come into actual possession but he reluctantly concluded the rule had already become established in 1902 for the “ immediate taxing of such transfer.” It was rather a matter of assuring payment by reserving, under a temporary order, enough to meet fully the tax incident on the event as it might prove to be in the end. In the interim the taxpayer was given the benefit of any doubt or delay which arose out of the practical difficulty of forecasting and computing the values of the variable and indefinite rights involved in a gift of life use with a power of consuming [401]*401corpus. The consumption of corpus would cause income to cease; and the frustrated future income might be argued to be something which could not fairly be taxed. The decisions were not in accord on the taxation of such cases, although the statute (Tax Law, § 230, as amd. by Laws of 1905, chap. 368) then, as now, declared that such estates which were subject to be divested by the act or omission of the legatee should be taxed “ as if there were no possibility of such divesting.”

There appears to have been some doubt as to corpus by reason, perhaps, of the property aspect being more conspicuous than the transfer of the right to it; for no one could foretell how much of the property would be consumed; and until it had been actually used up, taxing it in advance as having been used did not seem fair; and the amount of the remainder, if any, had to be measured ultimately by the extent of the invasion. For all that, it was still possible for the life beneficiary to confine herself to income for almost all of her life and in the last year dispose of the entire corpus; but as a matter of law, even if she consumed the whole corpus in the first year and thus destroyed future income as such, still the right to income had, under the statute, initial value, and the acceptance of the transfer of a full Ufe use as of the time of its transfer at testator’s death was enough, in the theory of the taxation of the transfer by the State, to warrant the State in taking toll of the transfer, regardless of the outcome.

However, in that stage of tax experience, a middle course was directed by the Comptroller to be taken, apparently under section 222 of the Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1905, chap. 368), namely, to tax the full value of the life use, and reserve the tax on the remainder for future determination. So, on May 19, 1913, the following opinion was given out by the Comptroller: “ In the appraisal of estates where the widow is given a life estate in certain property, with power to use a part or all of the corpus of the fund * * * with remainder to the decedent’s son, your practice in appraising the value of the interest of the widow as though it was a life estate only and holding the taxation of the remainder in abeyance until the death of the life tenant, is correct, and I do not believe the amendment to section 230 of the Tax Law, by chapter 800 of the Laws of 1911, providing for the entry of a ‘ temporary ’ order affects the practice in this respect.” (2 State Dept. Rep. [1st Series] 503.) On the result of that attitude, Mr. Gleason, a sometime counsel to the State Comptroller, made this comment: “Under this method it is obvious that if the life tenant uses part or all of the principal, part of the estate will escape [402]

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Related

In re the Transfer Tax On the Estate of Miles
248 A.D. 849 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
158 Misc. 398, 287 N.Y.S. 30, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-miles-nysurct-1936.