In re the Estate of Rothfeld

163 Misc. 11, 296 N.Y.S. 320, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1283
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 Misc. 11 (In re the Estate of Rothfeld) 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 Rothfeld, 163 Misc. 11, 296 N.Y.S. 320, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1283 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The present appeal by the State Tax Commission from the pro forma order fixing the estate tax presents an interesting question of some general importance which, if the memoranda of both litigants are to be credited, has never previously been made the subject of direct adjudication. Unlike many other tax questions which have engaged the attention of the courts since the new law took effect in 1930 (Laws of 1930, chap. 710), only indirect light on the proper solution is obtainable from Federal decisions, since the particular provision, the meaning of which is here involved, namely, section 249-q, has no exact parallel in the similar United States statute.

[12]*12The question, in brief, concerns the right of the estate to an exemption with respect to a testamentary gift to the widow of the decedent where her right to the continuation of the benefit is expressly conditioned on her failure to remarry.

A preliminary objection has been interposed to the hearing of the appeal on the ground that the notice thereof is defective. So far as pertinent, this states its grounds to be: That an error was made in granting a personal exemption of $20,000 to the widow herein, whereas said widow was not entitled to any exemption for the reason that the life estate in the residuary for her life or until her remarriage, was a contingency which might defeat the said life estate, and that no exemption can be permitted under the Tax Law unless there is fixity and finality in the vesting of the interest of the person claiming the said exemption, and of the amount thereof.”

It is, of course, patent that the grounds of appeal as stated do not possess absolute and meticulous accuracy since the tax under this law is one imposed upon the estate as such (Tax Law, § 249-n) and not on any individual beneficiary thereof (Matter of Weiden, 144 Misc. 854, 857, 858; revd. on other grounds, 263 N. Y. 107), wherefore any credits (§ 249-o) or exemptions (§ 249-q) allowed are credits or exemptions to the estate and not to the individual, as was the case under the former Transfer Tax Law, which imposed a tax on the right of inheritance of each particular beneficiary.

By reason, however, of the provisions of section 124 of the Decedent Estate Law requiring an equitable apportionment of taxes assessed against the estate to the several recipients of its distributable assets, the difference between the two varieties of laws has in this respect become substantially negligible in operation, with the result in the present instance that the stated basis of the appeal recites the practical effect of the ruling to which the complaint is addressed.

There is consequently no conceivable inference of prejudice possible in the slight misstatement of the notice, and the respondent, in his brief, admits this fact with commendable candor. In view of these facts, the immaterial misdescription of the notice must be disregarded. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 105; Rosenberg v. General Realty Service, Inc., 259 N. Y. 123, 125.)

Approaching a consideration of the merits of the appeal, it may be noted that the decedent died on March 14, 1935, and that his will was admitted to probate on the sixteenth of the following April. By its fourth item it erected a trust of the entire residuary estate, valued by the appraiser at $61,014.13, directing that its [13]*13income be paid to my wife, Minnie Rothfeld for and during the term of her natural life or until she shall remarry(Italics not in original.)

The appraiser ascertained from the Superintendent of Insurance that the value of an unconditioned life estate in the specified total of the residue of the estate, at the age which the widow had attained at the date of death, was $24,519 and against this gift and the other benefits received by her as a result of the death, allowed an exemption of $20,000 pursuant to the provisions of section 249-q of the Tax Law. The grievance of the State Tax Commission arises from the allowance of this exemption.

The primary purpose of the enactment of the present Estate Tax Law was to substitute a definite immediately ascertainable impost upon the privilege of transmission of property on death, for the previous system which postponed final fixation where gifts were dependent on presently unascertainable conditions or contingencies, until after the eventuation of such contingencies and conditions had made the actual devolution ascertainable. This is not only wholly patent from, a comparative study of the two systems but was made the subject of express comment by the Commission to Investigate Defects in the Laws of Estates (Legis. Doc. 1930, No. 69, see particularly°p. 65 et seq. and p. 195 et seq.), on the recommendation of which the new system received legislative approval. (Matter of Person, 147 Misc. 398, 399.)

As the estate tax is one which is imposed upon the privilege of the decedent to direct the devolution of his assets on death, and not, as was the transfer tax, on the right of the successor in interest to receive (Matter of Davison, 137 Misc. 852, 859; affd., 236 App. Div. 684; Matter of Burroughs, 137 Misc. 844, 848; Matter of Lauder-dale, 150 id. 214, 216), it follows as a logical matter that prima facie all property thus beneficially transmitted by the decedent is subject to the specified impost and this is the preliminary statement of the law, included in its first section following the definition of the terms thereinafter employed. (Tax Law, § 249-n.)

It may be observed parenthetically that this diversity of basis of tax is of vital importance for recollection, since it alters the location of burden of proof in many respects from its position under the Transfer Tax Law. There, the tax being imposed on the benefit received by the individual recipient, made necessary a demonstration by the taxing authority of the fact and value of such benefit as a condition to its taxability.

Prom the amount of the estate tax thus prima facie payable as a result of the calculations under section 249-n, certain subsequent sections, namely, sections 249-o and 249-q, authorize specified [14]*14deductions which are respectively denominated “ credits ” and exemptions,” which in certain enumerated situations permit the deductions from the tax expressly and unequivocally imposed in the ordinary case by section 249-n of sums expressly specified or computable in a prescribed manner.

Since the exception to the usual rule of taxability of all beneficially transmitted assets is permitted only in these strictly limited situations, the burden of proof is inevitably imposed upon the person asserting that his case comes within the excepted enumeration, to demonstrate that fact. (Matter of Mead, 145 Misc. 893, 896, 897.)

This is particularly obvious in respect to the credits against tax,” authorized by section 249-o which permits a deduction from the tax ordinarily payable as a result of the computations under section 249-n, of certain sums actually paid as death taxes to other States.

It is, however, no less apparent under section 249-q. This section does not direct that the value of property passing to persons bearing the stated relationships to the decedent shall be excluded from the figure of the net estate upon which the prima facie tax is assessable under section 249-n. On the contrary, all

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Bluebook (online)
163 Misc. 11, 296 N.Y.S. 320, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-rothfeld-nysurct-1937.