In re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Schmoll

191 A.D. 435, 181 N.Y.S. 542, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4735
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 9, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 191 A.D. 435 (In re the Transfer Tax Upon the Estate of Schmoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York 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 Schmoll, 191 A.D. 435, 181 N.Y.S. 542, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4735 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

This appeal is by the children and executors of Edmund Schmoll, deceased, from the order of the surrogate of New York county affirming the order of said surrogate fixing and assessing the tax upon certain transfers of decedent’s property pursuant to the law relating to taxable transfers of property.

Decedent died a resident of the city of New York ón December 20, 1917. At the time of his death he was a citizen of Switzerland. Decedent left a will which was duly admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court of New York county whereby he gave one-half of his property to his wife, Emma Schmoll, and one-half to his children, subject to certain life interests. Proceedings were instituted for the appraisal of decedent’s estate under the act with relation to taxable transfers of property, and the appraiser placed the value of decedent’s estate at $1,238,736 and reported that two-thirds of decedent’s estate passed to his widow under and by virtue of an ante-nuptial agreement entered into between decedent and his prospective wife, and that said two-thirds which the widow received was exempt from the payment of a transfer tax in the State of New York.

Decedent left him surviving three children, and the appraiser valued the interest of each of said children in their father’s estate at $132,637.36, and reported that said children’s interests were taxable under the statute. Thereupon an order was entered assessing a tax upon the shares of said children. The children have brought this appeal in which they are joined by the executors of the estate.

The decedent was married at Paris, France, on November 30, 1891. At that time both decedent and his intended wife were citizens of Switzerland, and the marriage was solemnized [437]*437in Paris in accordance with the Swiss law. Prior to the marriage the decedent and his prospective wife, the latter assisted and authorized by her guardian, entered into an agreement in writing which recited that the intended husband and wife adopted as the basis of their union the system of universal community of property as establishéd by the legislation of the Canton of Basel City, Switzerland, the birthplace of the intended husband, save as modified by the marriage agreement. At that time Basel City was and still is one of the cantons of the Confederation of Switzerland, and as such has an independent body of municipal law regulating marriage and marriage contracts and the foundation and distribution of property, real and personal. Such law relative to the financial relation of married persons, of inheritances and gifts, provided, by article 1, that during the marriage there exists between the spouses, by law, common property; and by article 2 it is provided that the fortune of the spouses, whether brought by them into the married relation or received during the pendency thereof, through inheritance or gift, or earned, constitutes common property. By article 13 of said law it is provided that in the absence of a contract of marriage, two-thirds of the common fortune belongs to the surviving spouse on the death of the other, and one-third thereof belongs to the heirs of the deceased spouse. By article 14 said law provided that the manner of division might be altered by means of the marriage contract, but subject to the limitation that there should fall to the descendants of deceased spouses not less than either one-third of the common fortune; or that fortune which was brought into the married relation by the deceased spouse; that fortune inherited by him during the existence of the marriage, together with one-third of the fortune earned. By article 17 it is provided that marriage contracts may be executed only before the marriage takes place; that such contracts must be in writing, and unless executed by and before a notary, be exhibited before the marriage to a notary, who shall certify upon the instrument the times of such exhibition. Such contracts were réquired to be signed by the intended spouses and by two male witnesses of full age. It was further provided by article 17 that such contracts of marriage could not be altered or canceled during [438]*438the existence of the marriage, not even with the mutual consent of the spouses.”

The marriage contract executed by the parties conformed to all the requirements of the said law of Basel City, Switzerland. The contract recited that the intended husband, Edmund Schmoll, declared that he would contribute to the marriage as a part of the common property of the marriage relation to be assumed by the parties, 142,000 francs, of which 12,000 consisted of his personal effects, and 130,000 francs comprised his interest in the partnership known as Schmoll fils ” at Basel City, Switzerland. The intended wife, by the ante-nuptial agreement, declared that she would contribute to the marriage as common property her own personal clothes, effects, and movable property, valued at 5,000 francs; also the sum of 30,000 francs in cash, forming her personal estate, and the further sum of 20,000 francs in cash to be settled upon her upon the day of her marriage by her mother as an advancement of inheritance out of the donor’s estate. The total amount thus to be contributed by the intended wife was 55,000 francs. It was further provided by article 5 of the ante-nuptial agreement as follows:

“ Article 5. If at the time of the decease of either the husband or the wife there should exist some children or descendants from this marriage, the division between the survivor and the children or descendants shall be regulated as follows:
u 1. If the husband, Mr. Edmund Schmoll, comes to die before his wife, the latter- will be entitled to two-thirds of the whole of the common estate of husband and wife as it stands on the date of the decease of the predeceased and the children or descendants to one-third, the whole according to the provisions of the legislation of the Canton of Basel City in case no stipulations to the contrary should be made by marriage contract.”

Said, ante-nuptial agreement was executed in due form by the parties thereto, the contributions were made as therein provided, and said agreement was in full force and effect at the time of the decedent’s death.

Upwards of twelve years since, the decedent and his wife same to America, where they resided until decedent’s death [439]*439on December 30, 1917, but both husband and wife, however, always remained citizens of Switzerland. Decedent’s widow disregarded the provisions of her husband’s will for her benefit, and, under the ante-nuptial agreement, claimed two-thirds . of his property. The Comptroller conceded that she was entitled thereto by virtue of said agreement. Admitting that by virtue of the terms of said agreement, which, under the law of Switzerland, could not be modified by any act of the parties, either testamentary or otherwise, the two-thirds of her husband’s property went to the widow and was riot hable to taxation under the act in relation to taxable transfers of property, the Comptroller conceded and the surrogate held that the transfer to the widow of decedent was upon good consideration, was not donative, and, .therefore, non-taxable under the act. (See 108 Misc. Rep. 492.) I think the surrogate properly held that the share of decedent’s estate received by the widow was not subject to tax. The case of Matter of Vanderbilt, recently decided in this court (184 App. Div. 661, and affirmed by the Court of Appeals, 226 N. Y. 638) seems to be conclusive authority in support of the surrogate’s action in this respect.

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191 A.D. 435, 181 N.Y.S. 542, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-transfer-tax-upon-the-estate-of-schmoll-nyappdiv-1920.