Opinion
Argued October 4, 1923
Decided November 20, 1923
A. Welles Stump and Charles A. Curtin for appellant. Otto Henschel for respondent.
On March 20, 1921, Patrick J. Dunn, a resident of Bronx county, departed this life leaving him surviving his widow, Lena Dunn, the petitioner, respondent herein. In February, 1919, and February, 1920, the deceased and his wife acquired by purchase title to parcels of land as tenants by the entirety. In the present proceeding under the Transfer Tax Law the value of the estate passing to the widow, respondent, was fixed by the appraiser at $45,413.43 to which was added the value of the interest of the widow in the personalty. The report of the appraiser was confirmed. The widow, respondent, appealed from the order of confirmation to the Surrogate's Court, and that court reversed the order of the surrogate, ordered a re-appraisal of the value of the interest of the respondent in the real property acquired in the years 1919-1920 and upon such re-appraisal directed the appraiser to deduct the value of the dower of the respondent from the value of the real property assumed to have been owned by the decedent at the time of his death. Upon appeal to the Appellate Division the order of the Surrogate's Court was affirmed by a non-unanimous decision. From such determination the state tax commission appeals to this court.
Prior to the year 1916 real property held by tenants by the entirety was not subject to the Transfer Tax Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 60) of this state. We may fairly assume that the exemption was due to the fact that the legislature recognized the nature of such an estate, that both tenants were seized of the whole estate and upon the death of one, the survivor acquired no new or additional interest by survivorship. The right of husband and wife to thus acquire and hold property was not an inherent right, but a privilege subject to be repealed, modified or limited by the legislature. While the privilege continued the character of an estate by the entirety precluded the idea of a dower right in such an estate.
In 1916 the legislature for the purpose of providing revenue for the state, presumably aware that personal property held by joint tenants and real property held by tenants by the entirety had been exempted from a tax under the Transfer Tax Law, amended the statute (Laws of 1916, chap. 323, sec. 83), section 220, subdivision 7, to read, so far as material, as follows: "Whenever property is held in the joint names of two or more persons, or as tenants by the entirety, * * * the right of the surviving tenants by the entirety, * * * to the immediate ownership or possession and enjoyment of such property shall be deemed a transfer taxable under the provisions of this chapter in the same manner as though the whole property to which such transfer relates belonged absolutely to the deceased tenant by the entirety * * * and had been bequeathed to the surviving tenant by the entirety, * * * by such deceased tenant by the entirety, * * * by will."
Patrick J. Dunn and his wife in 1915, prior to the amendment of the Tax Law, acquired real estate as tenants by the entirety. Such property was not affected by the amendment of 1916, nor has it been considered in the appraisal made for the reason that under the statute as it then read, the surviving tenant was entitled to the immediate ownership, possession and enjoyment of the property upon the death of the co-tenant.
When in 1919-1920 the parties took title to the two parcels of land in controversy, the amended statute was in force, and their legal status as tenants by the entirety was subject to the limitation that the right of the surviving tenant to the immediate ownership, possession and enjoyment of the property was burdened with a transfer tax which was to be a lien upon the premises paramount to the right of the survivor to the ownership, possession or enjoyment of the property. Considering the nature of the tax imposed and the particular property upon which the same was to be a lien, it is apparent that the legislature intended to impose a transfer tax upon the right of succession to ownership and possession of an estate by the entirety as such, rather than upon any portion of the same.
A dower right which could not exist in respondent as a tenant by the entirety theretofore was not created by the amendatory statute.
The provision for a tax in the same manner as if the deceased had owned the property absolutely and had given it by will to the survivor, assumes capacity to give the whole estate and a will effective to transmit it.
We should be giving the statute a strained and unnatural construction if we were first to impute to the husband the ownership of the whole, and then to detract from his ownership by the imputation to the wife of an unreal life estate in part. The fiction of absolute ownership established by the statute would thus be undone by another fiction, the creation of the court. We think the purpose of the legislature was to charge the tax upon the whole.
The orders should be reversed and the order fixing transfer tax affirmed, with costs in all courts.
CARDOZO, POUND, McLAUGHLIN and CRANE, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, Ch. J., and ANDREWS, J., dissent.
Ordered accordingly.