Tilford v. Dickinson

75 A. 574, 79 N.J.L. 302, 50 Vroom 302, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 28, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 A. 574 (Tilford v. Dickinson) 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
Tilford v. Dickinson, 75 A. 574, 79 N.J.L. 302, 50 Vroom 302, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 147 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

Reed, J.

Wesley H. Tilford died on March 9th, 1909, while a resident of the State of New York. He died possessed of personalty worth $11,626,897.98, of which $7,601,962.50 was composed of shares of stock of certain corporations incorporated under the laws of New Jersey.

The decedent left a will, of which he appointed Henry M. Tilford sole executor. The will was probated, and letters testamentary were issued in the State of New York. By this will the testator bequeathed to certain collateral relatives legacies amounting to $4,150,000. The-residue went to brothers and sisters of the decedent, one of the brothers being the executor and the prosecutor of this writ. By the will, the [303]*303executor was authorized either to sell and convert the properly or any of it, and pay .the legacies out of the proceeds, or to transfer the securities themselves to the legatees in payment of the legacies.

The executor has paid the collateral inheritance tax due to the State of Mew York. The executor has elected to pay the $4,150,000 legacies to the collateral legatees, out of that portion of the estate which does not comprise shares of stock in Mew Jersey corporations, with the exception of eight hundred and forty-one shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company, which he has used to assist in paying the legacies to the collateral legatees. The remainder of the estate, including all the shares of stock of the Mew Jersey corporations (except the eight hundred and forty-one shares of Standard Oil Company stock already mentioned), the executor has elected to transfer to himself as residuary legatee, he being a brother of the testator, and to another brother and to a sister, who arc also legatees.

The register of the Prerogative Court appointed an appraiser to determine the testator’s estate. The appraiser fixed the value of the stock of the Mew Jersey corporations at' the sum of $7,601,962.50, but made a deduction from the value of the stock of these corporations in the ratio provided for by the act of 1909 (Pamph. L., p. 236), and fixed the tax at $138,378.52, this being calculated upon the reduced valuation, 'under the statute, of $2,767,570.47.

There is no contest respecting the imposition of a collateral inheritance tax upon the value of the eight hundred and forty-one shares of Standard Oil Company stock, which was used by the executor in ihe payment of the collateral legatees. The contest is in respect to the remainder of the stock of the Yew Jersey corporations, devoted by the executor to the payment of legacies to persons exempt from taxation under our statute, the question being whether this property is exempt, although the property so used had its situs in this state at the death of the decedent.

The question of the taxability of this property arises under the act of 1894 (Pamph, L., p. 318), as amended by section [304]*3041 of the act of 1906. Pamph. L., p. 432. The amended section reads thus: “A tax shall be and hereby is imposed upon the transfer of any property, real or personal, of the value of $500 or over, or, of anj^ interest thereon, or income therefrom, in trust or otherwise, to persons or corporations in the following cases:

“First. Where the transfer is by will or by the intestate laws of this state from any person dying seized or possessed of property while a resident of this state.
“Second. When the transfer is by will or intestate law of property within the state, and the decedent was a non-resident of the state at the time of his death.
“All property passing to * * * a father, mother, husband, wife, child, brother or sister, or lineal descendant born in lawful wedlock, or the wife or widow of a son, or the husband of a daughter, shall be exempt from the payment of taxes under this act, but no other exemption of any kind shall be allowed.”

The prosecutor insists that the property in this state which was by the New York executor turned into the residuum of the estate, is exempt from taxation, because it passed to a brother and sister of the decedent.

In the argument addressed to the court upon this point much stress was laid upon the construction placed by the New York Court of Appeals upon their statute of 1887 in the case of the Matter of James, 144 N. Y. 6; The statute so construed was an amendment of a previous New York act of 1885, which latter act by the construction put upon it in the case of In re Fusion, 113 Id. 174, did not impose in clear terms taxes upon the transfer by will of property in New York owned by a decedent domiciled elsewhere.

The amended act of 1887 was designed to include such transfers made by the will of a non-resident testator of property within the State of New York. The amended act provided “That all property which shall pass by will or by intestate laws of this state from any person who might die seized or possessed of same while a resident of this state at the time of .death, which property or any part thereof shall [305]*305be ■within this state, shall he and is subject to a tax of five per cent, on every $100 of olear market value of such property.”

Tliis statute was construed, as already remarked, In re James, supra,. The question therein involved was identical with the question presently propounded. A decedent domiciled in Great Britain left property there, as well as in the State of New York. He gave legacies to collateral relatives, and left the residue of his estate to his two brothers. The executor paid the collateral legacies out of' the property situated in Great Britain, leaving the property situated in Yew York to go into the residuary estate, and thus to decedent’s brothers. The Yew York court held that the devotion of the Yew York property to the payment of decedent’s brothers, who were in the exempt class under the Yew York statute, rendered that property immune from the imposition of collateral tax under the Yew York statute. In the opinion delivered in that case it was said: “If the executor determines to pay the Jegacies from the British estate, the American estate is thereby freed from the burden of a special tax, the imposition of which depends upon the fact of the succession by the legatee to some property which is within the state, if the American estate is appropriated to persons who arc within the excepted degrees of relationship to the testator. the right to claim the tax from the executor is gone.” The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has announced a different view in respect to the power of an executor- to so appropriate property as to affect the taxability of the transfers under the Massachusetts statute. That statute provides “that all property * * * which shall pass by will * * * by deed, grant, sale or gift, made or intended to be made to take effect in possession or enjoyment after the death of the grantor * * * shall be subject to a tax of five per cent, of its value.”

In Hooper v. Bradford, 178 Mass. 95, it was held that taxes under the above statute were to be assessed on the value of testator’s property at the time of his death, and that income therefrom arising thereafter but before distribution of his estate, was not to be included in the tax value. It was [306]*306said that the words of the statute meant value of the property at the time it passed, and that it |rassed and become vested at the death of the testator.

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Related

Estate of Lansing v. State
6 N.J. Tax 137 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1983)
Sanchez v. Bowers
70 F.2d 715 (Second Circuit, 1934)
In re Estate of Sanford
188 Iowa 833 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 574, 79 N.J.L. 302, 50 Vroom 302, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tilford-v-dickinson-nj-1910.