Moore v. Martin

14 A.2d 482, 125 N.J.L. 189, 1940 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 17, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 482 (Moore v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Martin, 14 A.2d 482, 125 N.J.L. 189, 1940 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 107 (N.J. 1940).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

The question here is whether an inter vivos gift of property, by the testator to his son, was made “in contemplation of death” within the intendment of section 1 of chapter 228 of the laws of 1909, as amended by chapter 90 of the laws of 1935 (Pamph. L. 1909, p. 325; Pamph. L. 1935, p. 264; now B. 8. 1937, 54:34-1), and is consequently a taxable transfer.

The testator died on August 3d, 1937. He was then the senior member of the firm of Eobert Moore & Co., cotton merchants and brokers of the city of New York. He had been associated with this firm for about sixty years. The donee was his only child. The son entered the firm as a junior member in 1924. The gift in litigation was made on June 27th, 1935. It consisted of a transfer by testator of $60,000 of his capital account in the firm to that of his son. In the federal gift tax return made by the donor at the time, he certified that “a transfer of funds was made to my son * * * to provide capital for business 6/27/35 — $60,000.”

*191 Some three weeks before this transfer, the donor made his will, leaving his estate (with the exception of a few general legacies) to his wife and son in equal shares, and providing that the son’s share should “be paid and transferred to him as soon as conveniently may be after” the testator’s demise; and the Prerogative Court, in sustaining a succession tax assessment made by the State Tax Commissioner, concluded that “the natural inference” to be drawn from the evidence “is that after making the will,” the testator “determined to transfer this much of his property to his son immediately instead of waiting for the transfer which he had provided should occur at his death under his will; that it was made as the result of a considered choice between testamentary transfer and present transfer; that it was therefore a transfer made with the intent and purpose that it should be in the place and stead of a testamentary final disposition of that much of his estate, and hence was a transfer made in contemplation of death * * We do not entertain this view.

While the testator was in his seventy-ninth year when the gift was made, his health was unusually good for a man of his age. He was very active in business and the ordinary pursuits of life; and there is nothing to suggest awareness of mortal disease, or apprehension of death in the near future. His physician testified that his “organic condition was good, no high blood pressure, no heart leakage, no severe arterio sclerosis or hardening of the arteries and pretty good circulation for a man of his years, verjg very good.” His was a family of singular longevity. His father died in his ninety-fifth year; and the deceased was survived by three brothers all beyond seventy-five years of age. He continued his customary business and other activities until ten days before his death. There had been no discernible physical or mental impairment. The cause of death was bronchial pneumonia; and the attending physician certified that a contributing cause was “chronic arthritis — 1934.” The physician testified, however, that this latter statement was a “typographical error,” and that, as regards the onset of the chronic arthritic condition, the word “indefinitely” should be substituted for “1934.”

*192 While the gift was large, it was the last of a series of substantial gifts by the father to his son over a period of years: 1918 — $15,000; 1924^-$25,000; 1926 — $10,000; 1927 — $20,000; 1928-31 — $16,437; and 1932 — $5,700.

All these gifts, except the one made in 1918, were effected, as was the gift under consideration, by transfers of credit on the books of the firm. The gifts of $25,000 (in 1924) and $5,700 (in 1932) were made to enable the son to buy memberships in the New York Cotton Exchange and the National Raw Silk Exchange, respectively.

As we read his unreported conclusions, the learned vice-ordinary considered these as decisive circumstances: The donor’s age; the making of the will and gift a “few months after” a “flare-up” of a condition of arthritis in existence “some fifteen to twenty years * * * which spasmodically caused a swelling in his hands and feet;” the devise of the bulk of his' estate to his wife and son in equal shares, with a provision that the son’s share should be paid as soon as convenient after his death; the gift was made to his only child, “a natural recipient of his estate at his death,” and “consisted of more than one-quarter of decedent’s capital interest in a firm he had served for sixty years,” and “constituted approximately twenty-one per cent., or over one-fifth, of his total assets.”

Granting that it “is doubtless true” that “a concurrent motive for the transfer” was “to increase the capital interest” of the donor’s son “who was then assuming a more active and responsible part in the firm’s affairs,” the vice-ordinary nevertheless concluded that “the controlling cause for the making of the gift was “contemplation of death’ — the desire to make a disposition of his estate in lieu, pro tanto, of the testamentary disposition he had shortly before provided.” It was held that, while there was “substantial evidence to support” the commissioner’s finding that the transfer was made “in contemplation of death,” and it was not the province of the Prerogative Court “to substitute its judgment on this question of fact for that of the commissioner” (we express no opinion as to this), the finding ““is supported by the clear weight of the evidence.”

*193 Unlike the ease of Perry v. Martin, 125 N. J. L. 46, there rests upon the respondent here, since the transfer was not made within two years prior to the death of the donor, the onus of establishing by evidence that it was made “in contemplation of death,” i. e., that it was motivated by those considerations which lead to testamentary disposition of property; and in our view this burden has not been sustained.

The motive is the determinative. The inducement is a fact in issue; and the particular state of mind requisite to the imposition of the transfer tax must of necessity be the subject of some external manifestation that meets the legal standard of proof. What purport to be the indicia of a mental state are ofttimes but seeming and illusive; and care is to be taken that the things relied upon as a revelation of motive are not distorted beyond their real significance. The law will not pronounce a definitive judgment as to what lies in the mind and breast of the donor upon outward tokens that are equivocal.

It may well be that “contemplation of death” in the statutory sense was the impelling cause of the transfer, but the evidence does not bring that hypothesis within the realm of probability. To hold that it does, in our view, is to indulge in surmise and conjecture. The law does not proceed upon mere possibilities in inferring a state of mind from proven .facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 482, 125 N.J.L. 189, 1940 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-martin-nj-1940.