In re the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Slosson

168 A.D. 891, 152 N.Y.S. 690

This text of 168 A.D. 891 (In re the Transfer Tax upon the Estate of Slosson) 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 Slosson, 168 A.D. 891, 152 N.Y.S. 690 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Laughlin, J. (dissenting):

The principal point of law presented for decision by this appeal is whether the remaindermen of a trust fund who, on the failure of the life beneficiary to exercise a power of appointment with respect to it, take under the will of the testator who created the trust, are deprived of taking under his will by the exercise of the power of appointment in such manner that part of the fund is appointed to pay the debts of the life beneficiary, and the remainder is left to them in precisely the same shares they would take under the will creating the trust and are obliged to take under the exercise of the power of appointment, thus subjecting their interests to the transfer tax to which they would be subject if taken under the will creating the trust. The appellants, other than the executor, are the children of Josephine Slosson. Her father, Peter Hay lor, executed a last will and testament on the 17th day of September. 1872, and died on the twenty-seventh day of Hovember thereafter. His will was duly admitted to probate on the 16th day of December, 1872. Under the 7th paragraph of his will, and a codicil thereto, among other things a trust was created in a fund of $100,000, and the income thereof was given to his daughter Josephine for life. The will provided that upon her death his executor should pay over and dispose of the corpus of the trust as she by “her last will and testament or writing [892]*892in the nature thereof shall devise, bequeath or direct, and in default of such last will and testament” the executors were directed “to pay over the same to those who by law would be entitled to receive the same ” had she “ died intestate seized or possessed thereof, in * * * her own right.” Josephine Slosson, by her will, devised and bequeathed $5,000 of the trust fund, over which she was given a power of appointment, to her husband absolutely, but he predeceased her. She also devised and bequeathed $17,000 of it to her executors in trust to pay the income to her husband during life, with the remainder to her issue surviving him “ in equal share, per stirpes and not per capita and she further bequeathed $500 of the trust fund to one Margaret Gilleese. She then directed that her funeral expenses and all her just debts should be paid out of the trust fund, and she devised and bequeathed the balance of it to her issue, her surviving, “in equal shares per stirpes/” and she directed that should her husband or Margaret Gilleese not survive her, the moneys bequeathed to them, or for their benefit, should be applied toward the payment of her funeral expenses and debts, and that the balance should go to her issue in equal shares per stirpes. She further authorized and directed the trustee of the trust fund either to make the payments specified or to pay over the trust funds to' her executors for the purposes specified in her will, as already stated. She then bequeathed and devised her own property, and gave some of it to or for the benefit of her children. It is not. questioned but that the exercise of the power of appointment by Josephine Slosson effectively disposed of $500 of the trust fund to Margaret Gilleese, and further disposed of sufficient thereof to pay her funeral expenses and just debts, which aggregated approximately $85,000. Her children, the appellants, claim the balance of the trust fund by virtue of the will of then' grandfather. They timely notified the sole trustee of then grandfather’s will, who was also the executor of their mother’s estate, that they elected to take under the will of their grandfather and not by virtue of the exercise of the power of appointment by their mother. It appears by the affidavit of the executor of Josephine Slosson, deceased, who, as already observed, at the time of her death was the sole trustee under the will of her father, made in this proceeding for the determination of the transfer tax upon her estate, that she left personal property of the value of about $800, but no real estate in this State, and that the value of the trust estate of which she was the life beneficiary was $92,961.38, and that the three children of Josephine Slosson had elected to take under the will of their grandfather instead of under the exercise of the power of appointment by their mother. The transfer tax appraiser reported that the value of the estate of Josephine Slosson on the day of her death was $94,116.73, which included $93,261.38 as the value of the corpus of the trust of which she was the life beneficiary under her father’s will. From this amount he deducted $2,417.18 for funeral expenses and expenses of administration and commissions, and reported this as “Leaving a net estate of which decedent died possessed of” $91,699.55, which he found to be the total value of the property “passing upon the death of decedent.” It appeared [893]*893before him by the affidavit of the executor that Josephine Slosson owed lawful debts aggregating $24,841.13, but no deduction was made therefor from the amount of the taxable estate. The appraiser assessed and reported the amount of the transfer tax on the bequests for the payment of debts and on the remainder of the estate which the appellants take. In these respects the learned surrogate sustained the report of the appraiser. It is contended by the learned counsel for the State Comptroller that if the appellants who are the children of Josephine Slosson had the right of election to take under their grandfather’s will they have failed to exercise it and have waived them right to do so. That contention has no merit. Their right to accept bequests and devises of them mother’s own property without jeopardizing their right to take the remainder of the trust fund, not otherwise disposed of by the exercise of the power of appointment, under the will of them grandfather is sustained by Matter of Lansing (182 N. Y. 238). The other theory on which waiver or estoppel is claimed is equally untenable. It is that the children interposed no objection to the trustee’s turning over the trust fund to himself as executor and charging commissions in each capacity. There is no evidence in the record to sustain this contention other than the affidavit of the trustee and executor, which tends to show that he claimed to have so turned over the fund and that he assumed so to charge for commissions. If the appellants were entitled to receive the remainder from the trustee they would not lose such rights by omitting to insist on receiving it from him in that capacity rather than as executor of their mother’s will, and their acquiescence, if they did acquiesce in his charging commissions in both capacities, when he knew that they had elected to take under the will of their grandfather, does not preclude them from disavowing the exercise of the power of appointment, in so far as it purports to have been exercised for them in a manner to give them only what they took under their grandfather’s will without the aid of the will by which the power of appointment was exercised. It appears that one of the appellants paid some of her mother’s debts and was reimbursed therefor from the trust fund which the trustee claims to have been previously paid over to himself as executor. On the theory of the appellants, the remainder of the trust fund not appointed to others by their mother belonged to them, and if so, they could use it to pay the debts of them mother, or permit the executor to deduct and retain any amount for commissions or for any other or no purpose if they liked. The fact that the grandchildren are not named and may not have been born when the will creating the trust was made is urged as a further obstacle to their taking under the will of them grandfather.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A.D. 891, 152 N.Y.S. 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-transfer-tax-upon-the-estate-of-slosson-nyappdiv-1915.