Martin v. Bird

8 A.2d 333, 126 N.J. Eq. 206, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 30
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 333 (Martin v. Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Bird, 8 A.2d 333, 126 N.J. Eq. 206, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 30 (N.J. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Eliza A. Vanderbeek died testate, in this state, on October 6th, 1912. The present respondents are the executors under her will. Transfer inheritance tax was duly assessed in respect of the estate of the said decedent; and included in this assessment were items as follows:

$390.48 on devise to Andrew M. Vanderbeek, due immediately.

$282.29 on devise to Fleda Russell Swift, due immediately.

$220.43 on devise to First Baptist Church, due on death of a life tenant.

$109.55 on devise to Vanderbeek Shotwell, due on death of a life tenant.

$109.54 on devise to Stella Shotwell, due on death of a life tenant.

$109.54 on devise to Marion S. Wood, due on death of a life tenant.

The said life tenants having thereafter died, and none of the said taxes having ever been paid, the present proceeding was instituted by the state tax commissioner against the said executors, under section 21 of the said statute (P.L. 1909, c.228), to obtain order or decree against them for the payment by them, either personally or out of any property of the decedent, of the amounts due upon said taxes.

Affidavits in response were filed by respondents, setting forth facts relied upon as constituting adequate defense. That defense is substantially as follows:

That decedent's personal estate was insufficient for the payment of debts and the executors took proceedings in the orphans court for the sale of the real estate to pay debts; that bill was thereupon filed in chancery, (Shotwell v. Vanderbeek,Docket 37, p. 27), by some of the beneficiaries under decedent's will, alleging that many of the alleged debts of the estate were not valid claims, that the executors were colluding *Page 208 with other defendants to obtain fraudulently a sale of the said real estate, praying that the further settlement of the estate and of the accounts of the executors be taken over by the court of chancery, and that the executors be restrained from proceeding to obtain the said order to sell lands; that interim restraint was imposed by the court of chancery; that subsequently in that chancery suit it was, with the agreement of all parties, ordered that the settlement of the estate and of the accounts of the said executors be removed from the orphans court and taken over by the court of chancery and the proceedings to sell lands for the payment of debts be permanently restrained; that the said executors thereupon filed their account in the court of chancery, to which account exceptions were filed; that thereafter by agreement of all parties, decree was entered allowing the account as amended, which showed a deficiency of $302.68 required for the payment of debts; that this sum of $302.68 was paid by certain of the beneficiaries (presumably to the creditors or to the executors for the creditors);

That in the meanwhile the same complainants in the suit aforesaid, had also filed bill in chancery (Shotwell v. Swift,Docket 36, p. 27) for partition of the decedent's real estate; that the executors were not made parties to that suit; that that suit resulted in decree for sale in partition, sale and confirmation, the property being sold to Belle V. Shotwell and Vanderbeek Shotwell for $41,600, and in a subsequent order of distribution of said proceeds of sale, to wit, $13,672.97 to the said complainants in partition and the like sum to Fleda R. Swift, and the same to Andrew M. Vanderbeek;

That at the time (June 18th, 1917) of the entry of decree allowing the account, in the first mentioned chancery suit, the executors had no knowledge of the assessment of any transfer inheritance tax against the estate of the decedent; that if they had had such knowledge they would have informed the beneficiaries who supplied the deficiency required to pay debts, and the said beneficiaries would have provided the moneys to pay said tax.

It is not perceived that there is anything, in these facts thus presented, which constitutes a valid defense to the order *Page 209 or decree sought by the tax commissioner. The determination in this case is indicated and controlled by the determination in the case of the similar proceeding in this court in Bugbee v. VanCleve, 100 N.J. Eq. 263, 134 Atl. Rep. 646. In that case decree was entered against the executor, personally for the amount of the tax unpaid, with interest and costs, notwithstanding that the provision of the statute in force at the time of death of the decedent in that case — P.L. 1894, c. CCX, p. 318, § 1 — was simply that the executors "shall be liable" for the payment of any and all such taxes until the same shall have been paid. In the present case the statute which applies is P.L. 1909, c. 228,p. 325, (as amended by P.L. 1912, c. 226), and the language of the second paragraph of item "Fourth," in section 1, is that the executors "shall be personally liable * * *." (The same is true under the present statute, — R.S. 1937, 54:35-2.)

It is true that in the Van Cleve Case, supra, the ordinary, in holding that the executor was personally liable, adds "provided of course that he had assets sufficient to pay and discharge the tax;" and it is upon that that the present respondents chiefly rely, — pointing out the fact that the real estate was specifically devised and did not (nor did the proceeds of sale) come to their hands, and that the personalty which came to their hands was insufficient to pay the debts of decedent.

That quoted statement, however, was dictum, — no such issue being actually decided or involved in that case; and while it is undoubtedly sound as to the essential principle which it reflects, it was not as carefully phrased as it undoubtedly would have been if the issue presented in the instant case had occurred to the mind of the court.

Unquestionably it was not the intent of the legislature that executors and administrators should be personally liable for the payment of the tax if they had no means or power of accomplishing the payment of such tax out of the assets of the decedent, — and the statute should be so construed. But the legislative language is direct, unambiguous and specifies no exception; and it is therefore impossible to conclude that it was intended that the executors or administrators should *Page 210 be absolved from liability, simply because no assets of the decedent sufficient to pay the tax actually came to their hands, — inasmuch as section 8 of the statute gives them "full power to sell so much of the property of the decedent as will enable them to pay said tax." If there was real estate of the decedent which might have been sold by the executors and thereby sufficient funds obtained by them to have paid the tax, — and concededly such was the fact in the instant case, — they cannot escape the liability imposed by the statute, merely because they did not take such proceedings to sell and hence, by reason of their own default and neglect, they did not in fact have sufficient assets of the decedent come into their hands to enable them to pay the tax.

It is argued on behalf of respondents that they did endeavor to have the lands sold to obtain moneys sufficient to pay the debts and the tax, but were prevented from so doing by the restraint of the decree in chancery; but such is obviously not the fact.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 333, 126 N.J. Eq. 206, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-bird-njsuperctappdiv-1939.