In re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Green

18 Mills Surr. 527, 99 Misc. 582, 164 N.Y.S. 1063
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 Mills Surr. 527 (In re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Green) 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 Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Green, 18 Mills Surr. 527, 99 Misc. 582, 164 N.Y.S. 1063 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

Upon the petition of Edward H. R. Green, to whom letters testamentary upon the estate of the decedent were granted by the Probate Court of the district of Westminster, state of Vermont, an appraiser was appointed by the surrogate to appraise the property of the decedent in accordance with the provisions of the Tax Law of this state. The executor alleged in his petition that the decedent v?as a resident of Bellows Falls, in the state of Vermont. This allegation was controverted by the state comptroller of the state of Yew York. Witnesses were then produced before the appraiser and examined on behalf of the estate. An issue of residence having been thus raised, the usual stipulation was entered into between the executor and the state comptroller, to the effect that the testimony taken before the appraiser should be used by the surrogate in determining the question of decedent’s residence, in the same manner and to the same effect as if such testimony were taken before him. The issue is accordingly now before me for adjudication.

Evidence given before the appraiser on appraisals for tax purposes is generally informal in character, and the common-law rules of evidence, appropriate on trials by jury, are not strictly applied, and, indeed, in legal theory, have little application to such proceedings or inquisitions conducted by appraisers. But when a controverted issue of domicil or residence arises in the first instance, and the evidence is taken before the appraiser only for convenience and then certified to the sumo-gate for his 'decision thereon, the ordinary rules of evidence as applied in equity and in the courts of the surrogates are applicable, and the surrogate must consider objections and exceptions interposed by counsel. In this matter I find no substantial error, or no error which makes it imperative that the proceeding should be remitted to the appraiser for further action in conformity with the evidential rules of judicial procedure. I 'shall notice, but the one objection made in behalf of the state to the reception of the affidavit of the executor, verified ^November 1, 1916. This objection is followed by a motion to [529]*529strike the affidavit from the record. Such motion is resisted by counsel for the executor, who concedes in his printed reply-brief that the affidavit is not evidence per se. This concession, I think, obviates any necessity for judicial action. The affidavit was filed according to the usual practice on appraisals, and is, when controverted, in the nature of a pleading or statement of the positions assumed by the executor. In this instance the affidavit raises or presents constitutional objections which the executor is entitled to have remain in the record. It should not be stricken out, but as evidence it will be disregarded, the executor having subsequently appeared before the appraiser and given his testimony viva voce. It is his testimony, not his affidavit, "which is now to be regarded as evidence in this proceeding.

On the hearing before the appraiser on the issue of residence witnesses were called and sworn and documents were introduced. The outline of the testimonial evidence may for convenience be summed up as follows: Hetty H. R. Green, the “ decedent,” as she is improperly termed under the taxing act, was born on November 22, 1834, at New Bedford, Mass., where her father then resided. The record before me does not disclose where the decedent resided from the date of her birth until immediately before the date of her marriage. It appears, however, that her father had acquired a house in this city of New York in the early part of 1867 and that he was living here at that time, and the decedent then lived with him. On July 11, 1867, she was married to Mr. Edward H. Green. Mr. Green was born at Bellows Falls, Yt.; he was in adult life engaged in business in Manila for some years prior to his marriage and resided there during his absence in the East, although he retained his home at Bellows Falls, Yt. YThere he resided at the moment of marriage I shall consider later. Shortly after his marriage to the decedent they went to Europe and remained there for about eight years. Their children were born abroad. While in Europe Mr. Green sold his dwelling house at Bellows Falls. When Mr. Green and the decedent returned from [530]*530Europe in 1875 they proceeded to the home of Mr. Green’s mother at Bellows Falls and remained there during the summer. Between 1875 and 1879 the decedent and her husband stayed in lodgings or hotels while they were at Bellows Falls. In 1879 Mr. Green purchased an ancestral house at Bellows Falls.known as the “ Tucker House,” and thereafter he and the decedent regularly spent their summers there. Mr. Green died on March 19, 1902. His estate was administered in Bellows Falls as the estate of a resident of Vermont. The record does show that Mr. Green and the decedent, from the time when the house known as the “ Tucker House ” at Bellows Falls was purchased by Mr. Green in 1879 until the date of his death, spent their summers at Bellows Falls. Mr. Green in fact died in the “ Tucker House” at Bellows Falls. After his death the decedent continued to go to Bellows Falls each summer, except her last. The “ Tucker House ” at Bellows Falls was not occupied during the winter, and when decedent went there in summer she opened the house and stayed in it during the daytime, but she did not at all times sleep in it when alone. For some years prior to 1909 decedent and her daughter, Mrs. Matthew Astor Wilks, lived together, but the record does not show where. Between 1909 and 1916 the decedent passed much time at various boarding houses or hotels or in visiting friends in the city of Hew York and also much time at Hoboken, H. J. She ■did not own a residence here, nor did she lease any apartment here by the year. In the boarding houses at which she stayed she usually passed under an assumed name so as to protect her privacy from invasion. She paid taxes on personal property in the village of Bellows Falls for the years 1910' to 1915, inclusive. After her demise her will was admitted to probate in the Probate Court of the district of Westminster, Vermont, ■as a will of a resident of that state. In numerous documents executed by her during the years 1912, 1913, 1914 and 1915 decedent described herself as “Hetty H. R. Green, widow, of Bellows Falls, Windham County, Vermont.” For some purpose, probably to shorten the inquiry before the appraisers, [531]*531counsel for the executor conceded certain facts accepted by the counsel for the state comptroller as accurate. It was so conceded for the purpose of this proceeding that from 1902 to the date of decedent’s death in July, 1916, she spent the greater part of each year in New York city or in Hoboken, N. J.; that subsequent to 1909 she spent from four to six weeks in each year at Bellows Falls; that the period of time during which she lived in Hoboken, N. J., each year did not exceed six months; that she did not rent an apartment by the year or for any definite period of time, and th'at she lived the remainder of each year at boarding houses in New York city. It is also conceded that from 1902 until the date of her death the city of New York was the center of her business activities; that even while she occupied a room in Hoboken she came to New York city every day for business purposes, and that dxiring this period she had one or more safe deposit boxes in New York city and kept large deposits of cash in New York banks. The twenty-four months immediately prior to her death she spent approxi-.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Mills Surr. 527, 99 Misc. 582, 164 N.Y.S. 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-transfer-tax-upon-the-estate-of-green-nysurct-1917.