MacKay v. City & County of San Francisco

61 P. 383, 128 Cal. 678, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 665
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1870.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 61 P. 383 (MacKay v. City & County of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKay v. City & County of San Francisco, 61 P. 383, 128 Cal. 678, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 665 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This is an appeal from .a judgment in favor of defendants and from an order denying the plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial. The action was brought to recover twenty-eight thousand four hundred .and forty-five dollars taxes paid by plaintiff under protest and claimed to have been illegally assessed. Theresa Fair died testate in September, 1891, being at said time a resident of the city and county of San Francisco, and leaving a will in which plaintiffs were named as executors and trustees. In October, 1891, the will was admitted to probate in the city and county of San Francisco, and plaintiffs appointed executors thereof. Among the assets of the estate were certain bonds of the Southern Pacific Bailroad Company of Arizona, and certain other bonds of the West Shore *681 Bailroad Company of Hew York, of the aggregate value of one million two hundred and eighty-two thousand dollars. In August, 1894, .the administration of the estate was closed and a decree of final distribution entered, whereby the said bonds, with certain other real and personal property, were distributed to plaintiffs as trustees, under and in pursuance to the terms of the will. At the time the decree of distribution was made Mackay was and has continued to be .a resident of the state of Hevada, but has lived and transacted business during the greater part of the time in Hew York City, while Dey was and is a resident of the city and county of San Francisco. The bonds were, at the time they were assessed, and have since been kept in Hew York City, in the American Exchange Bank, deposited in the joint names of plaintiffs as trustees. The trust estate consists of other real and personal property situate and kept in California. The beneficiaries under the trust reside in Hew York, and the interest upon the bonds, as well as the principal, is payable in that city.

The assessor of the city and county of San Francisco assessed the bonds as being property owned by and in the possession of plaintiffs, as trustees, on the first Monday in March, 1895. The question to be here determined is the situs of the bonds for the purposes of taxation.

The bonds are evidences of indebtedness due or to become due from the Arizona corporation and the Hew York corporation to the plaintiffs as trustees and as the legal owners thereof. The weight of authority is that a debt so due or to become due should be taxed at the place of residence of the creditor or owner, and that the situs of the debt is that of its owner, and that it is not property in the state of the debtor. (Burroughs on Taxation, sec. 41; San Francisco v. Lux, 64 Cal. 484; State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds, 15 Wall. 320.) The ruléis well stated by Mr. Justice Field with his usual clearness in the latter case, and is thus, given: “But debts owing by corporations, like debts owing by individuals, are not property of the debtors in any sense; they are obligations of the debtors, and only possess value in the hands of the creditors. With them they are property, and in their hands they may be taxed. To call debts property of the debtors is simply to misuse terms. All the .property there *682 can be in the nature of things in debts of corporations belongs to the creditors to whom they are payable, and follows their domicile, wherever that may be. The debts have no locality separate from the parties to whom they are due.”

Judge Cooley, in his work on Taxation, second edition, page 372, says: “The general rule that personalty is to be assessed to the owner where he has. his domicile has been mentioned. This .rule is applicable to bonds and other choses in action, though the debtor resides out of the state, and though they are secured by mortgage on lands out of the state.”

In Mackay v. San Francisco, 113 Cal. 397, these plaintiffs, as executors of the will of Theresa Fair, deceased, contended that the bonds upon which the taxes were levied in this case, or a portion of them, were not property within the state, and not taxable to the estate of Theresa Fair, deceased. But it was held that the bonds had their situs in San Francisco, and were there taxable. The court said: “The bonds in question were held here. Their situs was the city and county of San Francisco. They could not be taxed in Arizona, where the property mortgaged to secure them is situated.” In that case the court followed the general rule sustained by the weight of authority. The rule is, that the personal property of decedents is taxed at the domicile of the decedent. As said by law-writers: “During the settlement of the estate it must have a situs somewhere, and none so appropriate as where the decedent lived.” In fact, the appellants seem to agree with what has thus far been said, for in their brief they use this language: “When Theresa Fair died these bonds had their situs within the state, because she had been a resident, and it is not now questioned that they continued to be liable to taxation in the state during the administration of the estate.”

The discussion is, therefore, narrowed to the proposition as to whether the same rule applies to plaintiffs as trustees after the estate had been closed and the property distributed to them as such trustees. If the property had been distributed directly to the heirs and possession given to them, they being nonresidents of the state and the bonds being out of the state, there would be no doubt but that the state of California could no longer tax it. But here we have the property which during the lifetime of Mrs. Fair had its situs in San Francisco. After her death *683 its situs continued here during administration until August, 1894. Did its situs then change? It is conceded that plaintiffs were appointed trustees under the will of Mrs. Fair, and the decree distributed the property to them as such trustees. The plaintiffs therefore, as trustees, were the owners of the legal title to the .property at the time of the assessment.

The general rule is, that personal property in the hands of a trustee is to be assessed to him. at his place of domicile. (Cooley on Taxation, 3d ed., 375; Burroughs on Taxation, 224.)

The reason given is that the trustees are the representatives of the .fund, and the fund contributes to the support of the state through the trustees. The property under this rule could not be assessed to the plaintiffs in San Francisco, because that is the place of domicile of only one of them. It could not be assessed to them in Nevada, because that is the place of domicile of only one of them. The property is not in California nor in Nevada, but, being intangible personal property, is said by defendants to follow the person of the owner. If it follows the person of the owner, it could not, as matter of law, be said to follow the person of the plaintiff who resides in California and to forsake and refuse to follow the person of the plaintiff who resides in Nevada. It follows one as much as the other, and its situs is that of the place of domicile of its owners. Therefore, on the first Monday of .March, 1895, the plaintiff Mackay was a resident of Nevada and was the owner of an undivided one-half of the bonds, and, neither the property nor the owner being within the jurisdiction of the state, the assessment, as to ’Mackay’s interest, was void. The language of the constitution is: “All property in the state .... shall be taxed in proportion to its value.”

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Bluebook (online)
61 P. 383, 128 Cal. 678, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackay-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1900.