Manufacturers Trust Co. v. Hackett

170 A. 792, 118 Conn. 101, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 170 A. 792 (Manufacturers Trust Co. v. Hackett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturers Trust Co. v. Hackett, 170 A. 792, 118 Conn. 101, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 14 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

*103 Hinman, J.

This application is brought, under § 1405 of the General Statutes, by the executors of the will of Lizzie T. Smith who died testate on March 14th, 1931, a resident of and domiciled in Stamford, Connecticut, since 1919. By her will the Chatham Phoenix National Bank and George W. Brown, both of New York City, were appointed executors. The bank subsequently merged with the Manufacturers Trust Company of New York, and the latter was substituted as a party plaintiff. The inventory filed by the executors listed, among other assets, four mortgage bonds owned by the decedent and secured by real estate situated in New York, aggregating $47,500, which, with other securities belonging to the decedent, were and had been throughout the period of the residence of the decedent in Connecticut physically in the State of New York in the hands of an agent. These mortgages had never been listed by the decedent in her tax lists filed in Stamford, and no tax was ever paid by her upon these mortgages either to the town of Stamford or to the State of Connecticut. On June 5th, 1933, the tax commissioner assessed a tax on these mortgages in the amount of $3600, from which assessment this appeal is taken. Other facts stipulated for the purposes of the reservation will be stated hereafter. The questions upon which advice is desired are: (1) Is the tax on untaxed property, as applied to these mortgages, a taking of property without due process or equal protection of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States? (2) Were these mortgages subject to taxation by the town of Stamford or by the State of Connecticut during the lifetime of the decedent?

The statute under which the assessment was made is Chapter 78 of the General Statutes, 1930. Under it, “property which has not been subject to a town or *104 city or state tax during the year preceding the death of the decedent, is liable to a tax of two per centum of its appraised inventory value for the five years next preceding the date of death of decedent, provided that a proportionate reduction of this tax may be had by proof that any part of the tax has been paid, or that the decedent did not own any of this property during this period. The pecuniary liability imposed by this [statute] is a penalty in the nature of a tax for an omission to list property for taxation.” Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett, 96 Conn. 361, 365, 114 Atl. 104. The chapter is entitled and the tax is generally known as an “Estate Penalty Tax.” Its validity was considered and sustained in Bankers Trust Co. v. Blodgett, supra, and in Lockwood v. Blodgett, 106 Conn. 525, 138 Atl. 520. In the latter case the decisions of the United States Supreme Court bearing upon the taxing powers of a State with reference to intangible property located in a State other than that of the owner’s domicil were reviewed, and it was held that the limitations of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States are inapplicable to such property, and, in consequence, that certain bonds and mortgages on real estate in the State of New York, owned by a decedent domiciled in Greenwich, were subject to taxation under this statute (then §§ 1189 to 1192 of the General Statutes, 1918), notwithstanding that the bonds and mortgages were physically located in New York in the hands of attorneys who collected the interest and instalments on principal and remitted the same to the owner. In the course of the opinion it was noted (p. 537): “Since the State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds decision [82 U.S. (15 Wall.) 300], which held that intangibles have no situs independent of the domicil of the owner, a number of decisions have established the ‘business situs’ theory, which gives the intangible a *105 situs in a jurisdiction other than that of its owner when it is a part of a business which the owner is there conducting, or the intangible is being so used as to give it a business situs there.” It was held, however (p. 539), that the facts as to the presence in New York of the bonds and mortgages did not give them a business situs there for taxation purposes.

The plaintiffs-appellants concede that if the bonds and mortgages involved in the present case were taxable at the decedent’s domicil, the town of Stamford, no tax having been paid thereon in that town during her lifetime, they are a proper subject for the penalty tax, but contend that, upon the facts stipulated, this property had acquired a business situs rendering it taxable in New York and, if this be found to be so, their further claim is that it was taxable there only and not subject to tax in the place of the owner’s domicil. The problem first to be considered is whether the bonds and mortgages had a business situs in New York.

Apparently it has been found impossible to develop a definite and accurate formula determinative of whether or not the facts in a given ease suffice to bring the property involved within the operation of the business situs doctrine. “Just what will constitute a business situs is not susceptible of precise definition. This ‘business situs* means, it would seem, what the words indicate, i. e., a situs in another state where a nonresident is doing business through an agent, manager or the like, in which business and as part thereof business credits, such as open accounts, notes, mortgages, deposits in banks, etc., are used and come within the protection of the State. The question arises in connection with various business transactions conducted by a person or corporation, generally through an agent, in another State; but the most common application of the rule is where a resident of one State has an agent in *106 another State who loans money of the nonresident, more or less as a regular business, and takes care of the collections and reinvestments, in which case the notes, mortgages, etc., taken by the agent are held to be subject to taxation although the owner is a nonresident.” 2 Cooley, Taxation (4th Ed.) § 465; Lockwood v. Blodgett, supra, p. 538. “Thus, where an agent within the State, representing a nonresident' principal, is clothed with power and authority to and does create credits or loan money for his principal within the State, the agent holding an actual and effective control over the business, retaining in his own possession within the State the evidences of such debts, or procuring their return to him when due for collection and return or reinvestment, the course of business being general and amounting more or less to a permanent business, then the State may by legislation separate the situs of such property for taxation from the domicil of the owner, and give it a situs within the State for purposes of taxation.” 26 R. C. L., “Taxation,” § 250; 61 C. J., “Taxation,” § 217.

Cases involving, directly or indirectly, this doctrine have been numerous, although they usually have pertained to a tax assessed by or in the State of the claimed business situs,

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 792, 118 Conn. 101, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-trust-co-v-hackett-conn-1934.