Matter of Estate of Wolfe

33 N.E. 156, 137 N.Y. 205, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 406, 92 Sickels 205, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 677
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 156 (Matter of Estate of Wolfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Estate of Wolfe, 33 N.E. 156, 137 N.Y. 205, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 406, 92 Sickels 205, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 677 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Gray, J.

Catharine L. Wolfe died in the month of April, 1887, leaving a last will, by which, among other dispositions of her estate, she bequeathed a legacy of $350,000 to the rector, etc., of Grace church, in Mew York city, in trust for the benefit of that church, and another legacy to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in said city, of her collection of paintings, of the appraised value of $148,025, and of the sum of $200,000 in money for the preservation and increase of that collection. In June, 1887, her executors applied to the surrogate of Mew York county for the appointment of an appraiser, under the provisions of chapter 483 of the Laws of 1885, known as the Collateral Inheritance Tax Act, in order to ascertain the amount of the tax upon her various legacies. Such an appointment was made, and, upon the coming in of his report appraising the value of the decedent’s property, the surrogate made an order confirming the report and assessing the tax upon *210 various legacies; but he reserved the question of the liability to taxation of property of the estate disposed of in certain clauses, which included these bequests, for further consideration and fixed a future day for hearing thereupon. Copies of the appraiser’s report and of the surrogate’s order were thereafter served upon the comptroller of the city. Upon the return day, fixed by the order for the hearing upon the question reserved, neither the comptroller nor the district attorney appeared, and thereafter and on October the 29th, 1887, the surrogate made a decree reciting the proceedings had, etc., and adjudging, among other tilings, that the legacies in question here were exempt from taxation under the act. On May the 31st, 1888, the executors, relying upon said decree, paid over the legacies in full to the respective legatees. On October the 15th, 1890, and possibly, if not probably, moved thereto by our decisions in Catlin’s case (113 N. Y. 134) and Sherrill's case (121 N. Y. 701), the district attorney of Hew York, by direction of the comptroller, filed his petition and instituted the present proceeding for the assessment and collection of a tax under the act. The legatees and appellants here pleaded the previous decision and decree of the surrogate as an adjudication of the matter and their payment of the legacies under the decree, which had remained unappealed from and was in full force, and, further, set up the non-liability of the legacies to taxation. The surrogate held the proceedings valid and decided that a tax was due and should be paid. His decision was affirmed at the General Term ; where it was held that the legacies were not exempt and, with respect to the prior adjudication, the present decree was upheld on the ground that in the prior proceeding the surrogate had no authority to determine the question that a party is not liable to taxation; except in a proceeding initiated by the district attorney. The theory of the determination, upon the latter point, in the Surrogate’s Court had been that, under the act, the comptroller of the city was a necessary party to the proceedings, and, for the lack of notice to him, upon the previous proceeding, the comptroller was not bound by the decision then made. The General Term in *211 their opinion, however, do not agree in that construction of the act and hold that it is entirely discretionary with the surrogate as to what notice shall be given and to whom. In sustaining the decree, they proceed, as to this point, upon the proposition that, until such a proceeding is instituted as is provided for under Sections 16 and 1Y, the act has not provided any way by which the issue of an exemption from taxation can be presented.

As I read the provisions of this act, I think we must differ with the conclusions below and that the proper construction of this act makes of the surrogate the assessing and taxing officer and, as such, the representative of the state for purposes relating to the appraisement and taxation of property. I think it is very clear that the legislature lias provided, as the General Term opinion in fact concedes, that the surrogate might proceed with the assessment of the tax without notice to any state official. The difficulty encountered by the learned justices below is in their failure to give full effect to the provisions of § 13 of the act. Section 13, so far as it is material, reads as follows, viz.: In order to fix the value of property of persons, whose estate shall be subject to the payment of said tax, the surrogate * * * shall appoint some competent person as appraiser, whose duty it shall be forthwith to give notice to all persons known to have, or to claim, an interest in such property and to such persons as the surrogate may by order direct, etc., to appraise the same at its fair market value and make a report thereof in writing to said surrogate * * * and from this report the said swi'rogate shall forthwith assess a/ndfix the then cash value of all estates * * * a/nd the tax to which the same is liable, etc.” By section 15 it is provided that the Surrogate’s Court * * * shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine all questions in relation to the tax, etc.” When we read all of the provisions of this act, it is perfectly apparent that a special system of taxation was created for the benefit of the state, with all the necessary machinery for its working; the control with respect to which was vested in the Surrogate’s Court, with a jurisdiction exclusive in its nature. In *212 the assessment of a tax upon property passing by will, or by the intestate law, the responsibility is imposed by the law upon the surrogate. He acts for the state and he is commanded to assess and fix the tax to which the property is liable. To comply with the command in section 13 of the act, in that respect, he must, necessarily, determine the question of liability to taxation, inasmuch as if no such liability exists he is Without jurisdiction in the matter. When the machinery of this system of taxation is set in motion, under section 13 of the act, whether upon the application of interested parties, or Upon his own motion, the surrogate, by force of its provisions, is at once invested with the office and the functions of an assessor for the state, whose duty it is to assess for its use a tax; and in whom, not only by virtue of the office, but by the further provisions of section 15, inheres the authority, and upon whom rests the obligation, to determine the question of whether the property of the decedent, which passes to others, is subject or liable to taxation by the state. He must decide whether the property is taxable, for that fact lies at the foundation of his jurisdiction and is of the essence of his right to proceed with the assessment. Hot all the property of decedents may be subject to the tax imposed by the first section, and what property shall be assessed for taxation is left, by the thirteenth section, for the surrogate to determine. To quote again the language, he “ shall assess and fix the cash values of all the estates, etc., and the tax to which the same is liable,” and this direction to assess involves the necessity, as well as the power, to determine the question of liability; as much as it does in the case of assessors of taxes in the general scheme of taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 156, 137 N.Y. 205, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 406, 92 Sickels 205, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-estate-of-wolfe-ny-1893.