Scott, J.:
This is an appeal by the State Comptroller from an order of one of the surrogates of New York county finally assessing the tax payable under the Transfer Tax Law upon the estate of the above named decedent.
The question raised by the appeal has to do with the valuation to be placed upon five hundred shares of stock in the corporation of Chas. Cory & Son, Inc., which were owned by the testator at his death, and which were transferred by his executor to the appellant John M. Cory at an arbitrary valuation agreed upon by said decedent and said John M. Cory during the lifetime of the former.
The aforesaid decedent and John M. Cory were brothers and until May, 1913, were equal partners in a business conducted under the firm name of Chas. Cory & Son, which had come to them from their father. In May, 1913, they organized a corporation under the same name with 1,000 shares of stock of which 500 shares were issued to each.
[873]*873On September 12, 1913, they entered into a mutual agreement as follows: “Now, therefore, in consideration of One Dollar and other valuable considerations by each of the parties hereto in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the parties hereto do agree, each with the other, that upon the death of either of the parties to this agreement, the other of said parties shall have the option to purchase from the executors of the one so dying, all shares of stock owned by the party to this agreement so dying at the time of his decease, in said corporation of Charles Cory & Son, Incorporated, at the price of Sixty Dollars per share, and the parties hereto respectively agree, each with the other, that upon the death of either of them’the survivor will purchase the stock of the one so dying from his executors and pay therefor, said price of Sixty Dollars per share. ”
On the same day the brothers executed identical wills. Charles Cory died on November 25, 1914, leaving the will executed by him as aforesaid, and still owning the 500 shares of stock in the above mentioned corporation. He left two sisters and the above-mentioned brother John M. Cory. By paragraph 2 of his will he gave all of his property, after payment of debts and funeral expenses to his said sisters and brother “to be divided among them equally share and share alike.” As to his stock in the corporation of Chas. Cory & Son, Inc., he provided as follows: “ Third. I hereby reaffirm the agreement made between my brother John M. Cory and myself, to the sale to him by my executors of any and all shares of stock in the corporation of Charles Cory & Son, Incorporated, which I may own at the time of my decease and direct and instruct my executors hereinafter named to carry out the terms of said agreement. And I further direct my said executors to allow my said brother, credit on his share in my residuary estate for any and all moneys, which, under the terms of said agreement, shall be payable by him to my executors, to the extent of the amount of his share or interest in my said estate, and I authorize my said executors to accept and receive in lieu of such payment, a receipt or acquittance to them, as such executors, for so much of the said moneys as may be payable by him to them under said agreement, to the extent of the [874]*874moneys which he may be entitled to receive on the distribution of my said estate.”
The shares were thereupon • transferred to John M. Cory at the price fixed by the aforesaid agreement of sixty dollars per share.
The appraiser reported that the fair market value of said shares was $103,400, which valuation is not questioned on this appeal. The surrogate, however, on appeal, reduced the value to $30,000, the sum fixed by the aforesaid agreement. The shares appear to have been of substantially the same value when the aforesaid agreement was made and when the decedent died.
The result of the surrogate’s decision is that property owned by the decedent at the time of his death and then worth over $100,000, and which after his death was transferred to his brother, has been taxed at a valuation of only $30,000. This is claimed by the respondent to be the necessary result of the ante-mortem contract made bebween the two brothers.
Subdivision 4 of section 220 of the Transfer Tax Act imposes a tax upon the' “ transfer * * * by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift * * * intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after * * * death. ” (Tax Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 60; Laws of 1909, chap. 62], §220, subd. 4, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 732.)
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Scott, J.:
This is an appeal by the State Comptroller from an order of one of the surrogates of New York county finally assessing the tax payable under the Transfer Tax Law upon the estate of the above named decedent.
The question raised by the appeal has to do with the valuation to be placed upon five hundred shares of stock in the corporation of Chas. Cory & Son, Inc., which were owned by the testator at his death, and which were transferred by his executor to the appellant John M. Cory at an arbitrary valuation agreed upon by said decedent and said John M. Cory during the lifetime of the former.
The aforesaid decedent and John M. Cory were brothers and until May, 1913, were equal partners in a business conducted under the firm name of Chas. Cory & Son, which had come to them from their father. In May, 1913, they organized a corporation under the same name with 1,000 shares of stock of which 500 shares were issued to each.
[873]*873On September 12, 1913, they entered into a mutual agreement as follows: “Now, therefore, in consideration of One Dollar and other valuable considerations by each of the parties hereto in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the parties hereto do agree, each with the other, that upon the death of either of the parties to this agreement, the other of said parties shall have the option to purchase from the executors of the one so dying, all shares of stock owned by the party to this agreement so dying at the time of his decease, in said corporation of Charles Cory & Son, Incorporated, at the price of Sixty Dollars per share, and the parties hereto respectively agree, each with the other, that upon the death of either of them’the survivor will purchase the stock of the one so dying from his executors and pay therefor, said price of Sixty Dollars per share. ”
On the same day the brothers executed identical wills. Charles Cory died on November 25, 1914, leaving the will executed by him as aforesaid, and still owning the 500 shares of stock in the above mentioned corporation. He left two sisters and the above-mentioned brother John M. Cory. By paragraph 2 of his will he gave all of his property, after payment of debts and funeral expenses to his said sisters and brother “to be divided among them equally share and share alike.” As to his stock in the corporation of Chas. Cory & Son, Inc., he provided as follows: “ Third. I hereby reaffirm the agreement made between my brother John M. Cory and myself, to the sale to him by my executors of any and all shares of stock in the corporation of Charles Cory & Son, Incorporated, which I may own at the time of my decease and direct and instruct my executors hereinafter named to carry out the terms of said agreement. And I further direct my said executors to allow my said brother, credit on his share in my residuary estate for any and all moneys, which, under the terms of said agreement, shall be payable by him to my executors, to the extent of the amount of his share or interest in my said estate, and I authorize my said executors to accept and receive in lieu of such payment, a receipt or acquittance to them, as such executors, for so much of the said moneys as may be payable by him to them under said agreement, to the extent of the [874]*874moneys which he may be entitled to receive on the distribution of my said estate.”
The shares were thereupon • transferred to John M. Cory at the price fixed by the aforesaid agreement of sixty dollars per share.
The appraiser reported that the fair market value of said shares was $103,400, which valuation is not questioned on this appeal. The surrogate, however, on appeal, reduced the value to $30,000, the sum fixed by the aforesaid agreement. The shares appear to have been of substantially the same value when the aforesaid agreement was made and when the decedent died.
The result of the surrogate’s decision is that property owned by the decedent at the time of his death and then worth over $100,000, and which after his death was transferred to his brother, has been taxed at a valuation of only $30,000. This is claimed by the respondent to be the necessary result of the ante-mortem contract made bebween the two brothers.
Subdivision 4 of section 220 of the Transfer Tax Act imposes a tax upon the' “ transfer * * * by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift * * * intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after * * * death. ” (Tax Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 60; Laws of 1909, chap. 62], §220, subd. 4, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 732.)
In my opinion the will executed by Charles Cory is significant, and yet unless carefully considered is likely to be misleading. By the 2d paragraph of his will Charles Cory purported to divide his estate equally between his two sisters and his brother, but by the 3d paragraph he, in effect, created an inequality by providing that there should be transferred to the brother, at the arbitrary valuation of $30,000, stock of the true value of $103,400. The effect of this 3d paragraph was as if he had in terms directed that the stock which he held in Chas. Cory & Son, Inc., should, for the purpose of dis[877]*877tribution, be valued at $60 per share and should be delivered to his brother at that valuation as a part of his distributive share in the estate. This of course he had a perfect right to do so far as his legatees were concerned, ■ but the result would have been, and in fact was, so far as the State was concerned, that by the contract and will read together John M. Cory received in possession and enjoyment after his brother’s death stock worth upwards of $100,000. In other words, for the purpose of distribution, the testator might put any arbitrary value he chose upon the stock, but for the purpose of assessment for taxation under the Transfer Tax Law, the stock is to be appraised at its real value, and it is unimportant under the statute that the sale of the stock to John M. Cory at the arbitrary valuation was provided for by an ante-mortem bargain or contract, since the transfer by virtue of that contract was clearly “intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after ” the brother’s death. To apply any other rule to a case like the present would open the door to unlimited devices to avoid the payment of transfer taxes. My conclusion is that the stock in question should be appraised for the purpose of the transfer tax at its fair market value at the time of the testator’s death.
The order, in so far as appealed from, is, therefore, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellant payable out of the estate, and the matter remitted to the Surrogate’s Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin and Smith, JJ., concurred; Page, J., dissented.
Since amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 664, and Laws of 1916, chap. 323.— [Rep.