The provisions of subdivision 5 of the tax law of the State of
New York, which became a law April 16, 1897, are not in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, nor of Section 10
of Article I of the Constitution.
The opinion in
Carpenter v.
Pennsylvania, 17 How. 466, although decided before
the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution,
correctly defines the limits of jurisdiction between the state and
the federal governments in respect to the control of the estates of
decedents, both as they were regarded before the adoption of the
Fourteenth Amendment, and have since been regarded.
The holding of the Court of Appeals of New York that it was the
execution of the power of appointment which subjected grantees
under it to the transfer tax is binding upon this Court.
The Court of Appeals did not err when it held that a transfer or
succession tax, not being a direct tax upon property, but a charge
upon a privilege, exercised or enjoyed under the laws of the state,
does not, when imposed in cases where the property passing consists
of securities exempt by statute, impair the obligation of a
contract within the meaning of the Constitution of the United
States.
The view of the Court of Appeals in this case must be accepted
by this Court as an accurate statement of the law of the state.
David Dows, Sr., a citizen and resident of the City and State of
New York, died March 30, 1890, leaving a last will and testament,
which was duly admitted to probate by the Surrogate's Court of New
York County on April 14, 1890. The will provided that the legal
title to the property mentioned and described in the sixth clause
thereof should vest in the executors' names as trustees during the
lifetime of testator's son, David Dows, Jr., with power to manage
and control the same, and with the duty to pay the net income
therefrom the said David Dows, Jr. The will further provided that,
upon the death of David Dows, Jr., the property should vest
absolutely and at once in such of his children him surviving and
the issue of his deceased children as he should by his last
will
Page 183 U. S. 279
and testament designate and appoint, and in such manner and upon
such terms as he might legally impose. In and by the eighth clause
or paragraph of his said will, David Dows, Sr., devised and
bequeathed the legal title to his residuary estate to his executors
as trustees, to hold and manage the same, one-eighth part in trust
during the lifetime of testator's widow and one eighth in trust for
each of testator's seven children, one of whom was the said David
Dows, Jr. It was made the duty of the trustees to pay over the net
income to the respective persons named during their respective
lives, and it was provided that, upon the death of each of said
persons, the said one-eighth part of the residuary estate, with any
accumulations and profits, should vest absolutely and at once in
such of his or her children, or the issue of such children, as he
or she might by his or her last will and testament designate and
appoint, and in such manner and upon such terms as he or she may
legally impose. It was provided in both the sixth and eighth
clauses that, if the legatee for life shall die intestate. then the
property should vest absolutely and at once in his or her children
surviving, share and share alike.
David Dows, Junior, died January 13, 1899, leaving a last will
and testament, which was duly admitted to probate by the
Surrogate's Court of Westchester County, New York, by the third
paragraph or clause whereof, in the exercise of the power of
appointment given him in his father's will, he provided that the
property mentioned and described in the said sixth and eighth
clauses of the will of David Dows, Sr., should vest upon his death
in his three children, David, Robert, and Kenneth, in a manner
therein described.
On October 31, 1900, Bird S. Coler, Comptroller of the City of
New York, and Theodore P. Gilman, comptroller of the State of New
York, filed a petition in the Surrogate's Court of New York County
in which, after reciting the foregoing facts, they alleged that the
transfer of funds and property of which David Dows, Junior, had the
life use, and over which he had exercised the power of appointment
given him in his father's will, was taxable, and they therefore
prayed for the appointment of a transfer tax appraiser, in order
that the transfer tax
Page 183 U. S. 280
might be duly assessed and imposed. Thereupon Charles K. Lexow
was so appointed, and on January 31, 1901, after having given
notice to the said comptrollers and to the executors and trustees
of the last will of David Dows, Senior, and to the executors of the
last will of David Dows, Junior, and to the guardians of the minor
children of David Dows, Junior, the appraiser filed in the
surrogate's office a report of his valuation of the interests of
the three sons of David Dows, Junior, under the respective wills of
their father and grandfather. Certain exceptions to this report
were filed on behalf of the executors and guardians, the nature of
which will hereafter appear. Thereafter, on February 15, 1901, the
surrogate, on the basis of the report of the said appraiser,
assessed a transfer tax of upwards of $7,000 against each of the
respective interests of the three sons of David Dows, Junior. The
exceptions to the appraiser's report and to the assessment were, on
March 6, 1901, after argument by counsel, overruled, and the
surrogate entered the following order and judgment:
"It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said report and order
so appealed from be, and they are hereby, affirmed, and that the
date when the transfers now taxed were effected was January 13,
1899, that date being fixed because it was the date of the death of
David Dows, Junior, the donee of the power contained in the will of
David Dows, Senior."
An appeal was taken from the order and decree of the surrogate
to the appellate division of the Supreme Court of New York, and by
that court, on March 22, 1901, the order of the surrogate was
affirmed. On appeal duly taken, the Court of Appeals of the State
of New York, on May 17, 1901, affirmed the order and judgment of
the appellate division of the supreme court, and the judgment of
the said Court of Appeals and the record of the proceedings were
remitted into the Surrogate's Court of New York, to be enforced
according to law, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals was, on
May 28, 1901, made the judgment and order of the Surrogate's Court.
And on June 13, 1901, a writ of error to that judgment was allowed,
and the cause was brought to this Court.
Page 183 U. S. 281
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the case of a so-called transfer tax imposed under the
laws of the State of New York. The various contentions of the
plaintiffs in error, attacking the validity of the tax, were
overruled by the courts of the state, and the cause is now before
us on the general proposition that, by the proceedings the
plaintiffs in error, or those whom they represent as trustees and
guardians, have been deprived of the equal protection of the laws
of the State of New York, their privileges and immunities as
citizens of the United States have been abridged, and their
property taken without due process of law in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and
likewise, as to a portion of the property affected, in violation of
Section 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the United
States.
The first question presented arises out of subdivision 5 of
section 220 of the tax law of the State of New York, which reads as
follows:
"5. Whenever any person or corporation shall exercise a power of
appointment derived from any disposition of property, made either
before or after the passage of this act, such appointment, when
made, shall be deemed a transfer taxable, under the provisions of
this act, in the same manner as though the property to which such
appointment relates belonged absolutely to the donee of such power,
and had been bequeathed or devised by such donee by will, and
whenever any person or corporation possessing such a power of
appointment so derived shall omit or fail to exercise the same
within the time provided therefor, in whole or in part, a transfer
taxable under the provisions of this act shall be deemed to take
place to the extent of such omissions or failure, in the same
manner as
Page 183 U. S. 282
though the persons or corporations thereby becoming entitled to
the possession or enjoyment of the property to which such power
related had succeeded thereto by a will of the donee of the power
failing to exercise such power, taking effect at the time of such
omission or failure."
This enactment became a law on April 16, 1897. David Dows,
Senior, died March 30, 1890, leaving a will containing a power of
appointment to his son, David Dows, Junior, which will was duly
admitted to probate by the Surrogate's Court on April 14, 1890.
David Dows, Junior, died on January 13, 1899, leaving a will in
which he exercised the power of appointment given him in the will
of his father, and apportioned the property which was the subject
of the power among his three sons, who are represented in this
litigation by the plaintiff in error.
It is claimed that, under the law of the State of New York as it
stood at the time of his death in 1890, David Dows, Senior, had a
legal right to transfer, by will, his property, or any interest
therein, to his grandchildren, without any diminution or impairment
then imposed by the law of the state upon the exercise of that
right; that his said grandchildren acquired vested rights in the
property so transferred, and that the subsequent law, whose terms
have been above transcribed, operates to diminish and impair those
vested rights. In other words, it is claimed that it is not
competent for the state, by a subsequent enactment, to exact a
price or charge for a privilege lawfully exercised in 1890, and to
thus take from the grandchildren a portion of the very property the
full right to which had vested in them many years before.
We here meet, in the first place, the question of the
construction of the will of David Dows, Senior. Under and by virtue
of that will, did the property whose transfer is taxed pass to and
become vested in the grandchildren, or did the property not become
vested in them until and by virtue of the will of David Dows,
Junior, exercising the power of appointment? The answer to be given
to this question must, of course, be that furnished us by the Court
of Appeals in this case.
Matter of Dows, 167 N.Y. 227:
"Whatever be the technical source of title of a grantee
under
Page 183 U. S. 283
a power of appointment, it cannot be denied that, in reality and
substance, it is the execution of the power that gives to the
grantee the property passing under it. The will of Dows, Senior,
gave his son a power of appointment to be exercised only in a
particular manner, to-wit, by last will and testament. If, as said
by the Supreme Court of the United States, the right to take
property by devise is not an inherent or natural right, but a
privilege accorded by the state, which it may tax or charge for, it
follows that the rights of a testator to make a will or
testamentary instrument is equally a privilege, and equally subject
to the taxing power of the state. When David Dows, Senior, devised
this property to the appointees under the will of his son, he
necessarily subjected it to the charge that the state might impose
on the privilege accorded to the son of making a will. That charge
is the same in character as if it had been laid on the inheritance
of the estate of the son himself -- that is, for the privilege of
succeeding to property under a will."
It will be perceived that, in putting this construction upon the
will of David Dows, Senior, the Court of Appeals not merely
construed the words of the will, but, by implication, applied to
the case the provisions of the subdivision 5 of section 220 under
which the transfer tax in question was imposed, and thus construed
that tax law and affirmed its validity.
While it is settled law that this Court will follow the
construction put by the state courts upon wills devising property
situated within the state, and while it is also true that we adopt
the construction of its own statutes by the state courts, a
question may remain whether the statute, as so construed, imports a
violation of any of the rights secured by applicable provisions of
the Constitution of the United States. And such is the contention
here.
This Court has no authority to revise the statutes of New York
upon any grounds of justice, policy, or consistency to its own
Constitution. Such questions are concluded by the decision of the
legislative and judicial authorities of the state.
In
Carpenter v.
Pennsylvania, 17 How. 456, the question arose as to
the validity, in its federal aspect, of a law of the State of
Pennsylvania imposing an inheritance tax on personal
Page 183 U. S. 284
property which had passed into the possession of an executor
before the passage of the act, and which was held by him for the
purpose of distribution among the legatees, who were collateral
relatives to the decedent. The act was held valid by the supreme
court of the state, and was brought up to this Court by a writ of
error, where it was contended that such an act was in its nature an
ex post facto law, which took the property of an
individual to the use of the state because of a fact which had
occurred prior to the passage of the law, and also that the law, in
its retroactive effect, impaired the obligation of a contract, in
that it was alleged to absolve the executor from his contract,
implied in law, to pay over the legacies to those entitled to them,
just to the extent that the law required him to pay to the state.
The opinion of the Court, delivered by Mr. Justice Campbell, was in
part as follows:
"The validity of the act as affecting successions to open after
its enactment is not contested; nor is the authority of the state
to levy taxes upon personal property belonging to its citizens, but
situated beyond its limits, denied. But the complaint is that the
application of the act of 1826 by that of 1850 to a succession
already in the course of settlement, and which had been
appropriated by the last will of decedent, involved an arbitrary
change of the existing laws of inheritance to the extent of this
tax, in the sequestration of that amount for the uses of the state;
that the rights of the residuary legatees were vested at the death
of the testator, and from that time those persons were
nonresidents, and the property taxed was also beyond the state, and
that the state has employed its power over the executor and the
property within its borders to accomplish a measure of wrong and
injustice; that the act contains the imposition of a forfeiture or
penalty, and is
ex post facto."
"It is in some sense true that the rights of donees under a will
are vested at the death of the testator, and that the acts of
administration which follow are conservatory means directed by the
state to ascertain those rights, and to accomplish an effective
translation of the dominion of the decedent to the objects of his
bounty, and the legislation adopted with any other aim than this
would justify criticism, and perhaps censure.
Page 183 U. S. 285
But, until the period for distribution arrives, the law of the
decedent's domicil attaches to the property, and all other
jurisdictions refer to the place of the domicil as that, where the
distribution should be made. The will of the testator is proven
there, and his executor receives his authority to collect the
property by the recognition of the legal tribunals of that place.
The personal estate, so far as it has a determinate owner, belongs
to the executor thus constituted. The rights of the donee are
subordinate to the conditions, formalities, and administrative
control prescribed by the state in the interests of public order,
and are only irrevocably established upon its abdication of this
control at the period of distribution. If the state, during this
period of administration and control by its tribunals and their
appointees, think fit to impose a tax upon the property, there is
no obstacle in the Constitution and laws of the United States to
prevent it.
Ennis v. Smith, 14 How. 400.
. . ."
"The act of 1850, in enlarging the operation of the act of 1826
and by extending the language of that act beyond its legal import,
is retrospective in its form; but its practical agency is to
subject to assessment property liable to taxation, to answer an
existing exigency of the state, and to be collected in the course
of future administration, and the language retrospective is of no
importance except to describe the property to be included in the
assessment. And, as the Supreme Court [of Pennsylvania] has well
said, 'in establishing its peculiar interpretation, it [the
legislature] has only done indirectly what it was competent to do
directly.' But if the act of 1850 involved a change in the law of
succession, and could be regarded as a civil regulation for the
division of the estates of unmarried persons having no lineal
heirs, and not as a fiscal imposition, this Court could not
pronounce it to be an
ex post facto law within the tenth
section of the first article of the Constitution. The debates in
the federal convention upon the Constitution show that the terms
'ex
post facto laws' were understood in a restricted sense
relating to criminal cases only, and that the description of
Blackstone of such laws was referred to for their meaning. 3
Madison Papers 1399, 1450, 1579. This signification was adopted in
this Court shortly after its organization, in opinions
Page 183 U. S. 286
carefully prepared, and has been repeatedly announced since that
time.
Calder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 386;
Fletcher
v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87;
33 U. S.
8 Pet. 88,
36 U. S. 11 Pet. 421."
It is true that this case was decided before the adoption of the
Fourteenth Amendment, but we think it correctly defines the limits
of jurisdiction between the state and federal governments in
respect to the control of the estates of decedents, both as they
were regarded before and have been regarded since the adoption of
the Fourteenth Amendment. It has never been held that it was the
purpose or function of that amendment to change the systems and
policies of the states in regard to the devolution of estates, or
to the extent of the taxing power over them.
In
In re Kemmler, 136 U. S. 436, it
was stated by the present CHIEF JUSTICE that --
"The Fourteenth Amendment did not radically change the whole
theory of the relations of the state and federal governments to
each other, and of both governments to the people. The same person
may be at the same time a citizen of the United States and a
citizen of a state. Protection to life, liberty, and property rests
primarily with the states, and the amendment furnishes an
additional guaranty against any encroachment by the states upon
those fundamental rights which belong to citizenship, and which the
state governments were created to secure. The privileges and
immunities of citizens of the United States, as distinguished from
the privileges and immunities of citizens of the states, are indeed
protected by it, but those are privileges and immunities arising
out of the nature and essential character of the national
government, and granted or secured by the Constitution of the
United States.
United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S.
542;
Slaughter House Cases, 16
Wall. 36."
It was said in
De Vaughn v. Hutchinson, 165 U.
S. 566, that
"it is a principle firmly established that to the law of the
state in which the land is situated we must look for the rules
which govern its descent, alienation, and transfer, and for the
effect and construction of wills and other conveyances."
In
Clarke v. Clarke, 178 U. S. 186, the
proposition was again announced as one requiring only to be stated
that the law of
Page 183 U. S. 287
a state in which land is situated controls and governs its
transmission by will, or its passage in case of intestacy, and that
in this Court, the local law of a state is the law of that state,
as announced by its court of last resort.
In
Magoun v. Illinois Trust Co., 170 U.
S. 283, the validity of a law of the State of Illinois
imposing a legacy and inheritance tax, the rate progressing by the
amount of the beneficial interest acquired, was assailed in the
courts of Illinois as being in violation of the Constitution of
that state requiring equal and uniform taxation. The state court
having decided that the progressive feature did not violate the
Constitution of that state, the case came to this Court upon the
contention that the establishment of a progressive rate was a
denial both of due process of law and of the equal protection of
the laws within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution. But these contentions were held by this Court to be
untenable.
See likewise Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S.
41, and
Plummer v. Coler, 178 U.
S. 115, wherein were considered the nature of
inheritance tax laws and the extent of the powers of the states and
of Congress in imposing and regulating them.
In the light of the principles thus established, we are unable
to see in this legislation of the State of New York, as construed
by its highest court, any infringement of the salutary provisions
of the Fourteenth Amendment. There are involved no arbitrary or
unequal regulations prescribing different rates of taxation on
property or persons in the same condition. The provisions of the
law extend alike to all estates that descend or devolve upon the
death of those who once owned them. The moneys raised by the
taxation are applied to the lawful uses of the state, in which the
legatees have the same interests with the other citizens. Nor is it
claimed that the amount or rate of the taxation is excessive to the
extent of confiscation.
But it is further urged that the tax law of the State of New
York, section 221, expressly exempts from taxation or charge all
real estate passing to lineal descendants by descent or devise, and
all such descendants so taking title to real estate from ancestors,
and it is said that, under the interpretation of this law by the
courts of the State of New York, all property which
Page 183 U. S. 288
was real estate at the time of the death of the person owning it
continues, as to the lineal descendants, to be real estate, and is
therefore exempt from taxation, though such descendants may not
enter into possession and enjoyment of the property until years
after the death of the ancestor who owned it, and the property in
the meantime has been converted into cash or securities.
It is true that the property described in the sixth paragraph of
the will of David Dows, Senior, was real estate, but under the
powers conferred in the will of David Dows, Senior, the trustees
had converted the real estate, and held the proceeds as personal
property, before the death of David Dows, Junior, and it was this
personal property which became vested in the grandchildren under
the exercise of the power of appointment. The Court of Appeals held
that it was the execution of the power of appointment which
subjected grantees under it to the transfer tax. This conclusion is
binding upon this Court insofar as it involves a construction of
the will and of the statute. Nor are we able to perceive that
thereby the plaintiffs in error were deprived of any rights under
the federal Constitution. The rule of law laid down by the New York
courts is applicable to all alike, and even if the view of the
Court of Appeals respecting the question was wrong, it was an error
which we have no power to review.
Another objection made to the judgment of the Court of Appeals
affirming the surrogate's order is that the tax imposed upon
transfers made under a power of appointment is a tax upon property,
and not on the right of succession, and that, as a portion of the
fund was invested in incorporated companies liable to taxation on
their own capital, and in certain bonds of the State of New York,
and in bonds of the City of New York exempt by statute from
taxation, such exemption formed part of the contract under which
said securities were purchased, and the tax imposed and the
proceedings to enforce it were in violation of Section 10 of
Article I of the Constitution of the United States forbidding the
states to pass laws impairing the obligation of contracts.
The Court of Appeals overruled the proposition that the
Page 183 U. S. 289
transfer tax in question was a tax upon property, and not upon
the right of succession, and held that, when David Dows, Senior,
devised this property to the appointees under the will of his son,
he necessarily subjected it to the charge that the state might
impose on the privilege accorded to the son of making a will, and
that the charge is the same in character as if it had been laid on
the inheritance of the estate of the son himself -- that is, for
the privilege of succeeding to property under a will.
In reaching this conclusion, the Court of Appeals cited not only
various New York cases, but several decisions of this Court, the
principles of which were thought to be applicable.
Magoun v.
Illinois Trust Co., 170 U. S. 283;
Plummer v. Coler, 178 U. S. 115;
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41;
Murdock v. Ward, 178 U. S. 139.
We think it unnecessary to enter upon another discussion of a
subject so recently considered in the cases just cited, and that it
is sufficient to say that, in our opinion, the Court of Appeals did
not err when it held that a transfer or succession tax, not being a
direct tax upon property, but a charge upon a privilege exercised
or enjoyed under the law of the state, does not, when imposed in
cases where the property passing consists of securities exempt by
statute, impair the obligation of a contract within the meaning of
the Constitution of the United States.
A further contention is made that the legatees or devisees of
the remainders created by the will of David Dows, Junior, are not
legally subject to taxation until the precedent estates terminate
and the remainders vest in possession.
The Court of Appeals held that the doctrine invoked had no
application to the remainders given to the sons of David Dows,
Junior; that they are absolute, and not subject to be divested, or
to fail in any contingency whatever; that, by statute they are
alienable, devisable, descendible, and if the property were real
estate, they could be sold on execution against their owners; that,
by the aid of the table of annuities, upon the faith of which large
sums are constantly distributed by the courts, the present value of
these remainders is capable of ready
Page 183 U. S. 290
computation, and that therefore they are subject to present
taxation.
These views of the Court of Appeals must be accepted by us as
accurate statements of the law of the state, and though it is
claimed in the brief of counsel for the plaintiffs in error that
such a construction of the transfer tax law brings it into conflict
with the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United
States, we are unable to approve such a contention. The subject
dealt with is one of state law expounded by state courts. The laws
and the construction put upon them apply equally to all persons in
a like situation, and cannot be regarded as conflicting with the
provisions of the federal Constitution.
Magoun v. Illinois
Trust Co., 170 U. S. 283.
Other contentions made in the brief of counsel for the
plaintiffs in error seem, so far as our jurisdiction is concerned,
to be phases of those heretofore considered, and thereby disposed
of.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals of the State of New York
affirming the judgment of the Surrogate's Court of New York County
is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN concurs in the result.