In Re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Hoffman

38 N.E. 311, 143 N.Y. 327, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 245, 98 Sickels 327, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 952
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 311 (In Re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Hoffman) 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 Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Hoffman, 38 N.E. 311, 143 N.Y. 327, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 245, 98 Sickels 327, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 952 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Finch, J.

In construing the Inheritance Tax Law as it stood prior to the act of 1892, we had occasion to decide that it imposed a tax upon the right of succession to the property of the testator or. intestate which vested in the successors severally and in their respective shares or proportions, and not upon the property or estate of the decedent. The shares received, in the hands of the recipients, were the measures of the right which was subjected to assessment, and the imposed tax could be enforced personally against the successor charged.

One effect of this construction manifested itself when a question arose over the provision which limited the assessment to estates of five hundred dollars or over. The inquiry was, what estate was meant; whether the aggregate estate passing/nr/n the testator or intestate, or the particular share passing to the sue *330 cessor. We solved that problem in two cases. (In Matter of Cager, 111 N. Y. 344; In Matter of Howe, 112 id. 100.) In the first of these Judge Huger said, somewhat curtly, that the tax was upon the individual, but in the second Judge Dan-forth explained that the scope of the enactment was to tax shares passing to their recipients; and the word “ estate,”' to which the limitation of five hundred dollars was attached, must necessarily mean the estate received by the particular successor, and not that of the testator or intestate upon which as such and in the aggregate no tax was imposed.

The precise nature of the succession tax grew to be a very important subject of investigation when questions arose over property situated without the state, and led to some differences of opinion. In Matter of Estate of Swift,(137 N. Y. 77), Judge Gray expressed his own doubts as to the true nature of the tax, but declared the judgment of the court to be that it is a tax on the right of succession under a will, or by devolution in case of intestacy; and the doctrine was confirmed and followed in the opinion of Judge Bartlett, dealing with a legacy given to the United States. The general doctrine must, therefore, be deemed settled in this court unless it has been changed by the act of 1892.

Before that was passed, the scope of the statute had been extended by including within its operation not only shares and interests passing to collaterals, but also those passing to lineals; although as to the lattei the rate of taxation was lessened, and a limitation imposed applying the tax only where the property exceeded in value the sum of ten thousand dollars. This provision raised the same question 'as to lineals which had previously been determined as to collaterals, viz., which property was meant; whether that passing from the decedent, or that passing to the particular successor. Of course, it was determined in the same way, and, by general consent scarcely needing adjudication, was held to mean the specific share passing to the successor. It was thus possible for a testator to avert the tax by reducing intended legacies of ten thousand dollars to lineals to a sum slightly below that amount.

*331 The act of 1892 was a revision of the whole law on the subject. It was passed with knowledge of our decisions and in view of our construction, and was obviously intended in some respects to compel on our part different conclusions. I do not think there was any such purpose so far as our general doctrine as to the nature of the tax is concerned. There are some changes of phraseology in the more important sections, but I think it remains true that the tax is one upon the right of succession, levied upon successors in respect to the shares to which they succeed, and not upon the decedent’s estate as. such.

The question first presented on this appeal, relating to a life-estate bequeathed to the mother of the testatrix, and valued at less than ten thousand dollars, must be decided, as it always has been in similar cases hitherto, in favor of the legatee, unless in that respect the law of 1892 has changed the necessary, interpretation. But I think it has, and that such result was directly and consciously intended by the legislature. I put little reliance upon changes of phrase which do not necessarily indicate a change of legislative intent, but I am unable to understand the entirely new provision of section 22, unless its purpose is to compel a change of our previous construction, and require us to attach the limitation of ten thousand dollars-of value to the estate of the decedent, and not to the several and particular estate passing to the successor. The material language of the section is this: “ The words estate ’ and 1 property,’ as used in this act, shall be taken to mean the-property or interest therein of the testator, intestate, grantor, bargainer or vendor, passing or transferred to those not specifically exempted from the provisions of this act, and not as the property or interest therein passing or transferred to-individual legatees, devisees, heirs, next of kin, grantees,, donees or vendees. * * * The word ‘ transfer,’ as used in this act, shall be taken to include the passing of property, or any interest therein, in possession or enjoyment, present or future, by inheritance, descent, devise, bequest, grant, deed,, bargain, sale or gift in the manner herein prescribed.” It will *332 be observed that the idea of the lawmaker is explained by declaring not only what the words “ estate ” and “ property,” as used in the act, shall mean, but also what they shall not mean; and the negation isa denial in terms of the precise construction which this court had previously adopted in determining what was meant by the word “ estate,” when used ambiguously and without qualifying words, as it was used in connection with limitations of value.

I recall that I have somewhere spoken of the danger of legal definitions, because almost always certain to prove incomplete and inaccurate, and those referred to are now relied upon and used to overturn and utterly reverse the whole scope and theory of the act as described in our decisions : for the appellant claims that by force of those definitions the tax is no longer upon the shares of individuals or their right of succession, but upon the property of the decedent in the hands of his executors or administrators. It would have been easy to have said that if such a reversal of our theory of the tax had been intended; but all through the act it is persistently declared that the tax is imposed, not upon the property of the decedent, but upon the transfer of that property to persons not exempt from taxation. It was useless, upon this point, to define the word “ estate,” for it does not appear at all in the first two sections which impose the tax. But the definition of the word “property” as being the aggregate transfer to the aggregated taxable transferees, cannot be applied to those sections generally without involving the statute in contradictions and utter confusion: for the aggregate transfer is clearly not taxed as such ; it is constantly distributed into the separate transfers bearing different rates of taxation, chargeable severally against the several transferees, each made personally liable for his own tax, and that to be collected by executors and administrators severally and in due proportions out of the shares of each.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 311, 143 N.Y. 327, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 245, 98 Sickels 327, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-transfer-tax-upon-the-estate-of-hoffman-ny-1894.