So far as the federal Constitution is concerned, the power of
the state in respect to taxation is very broad, and includes
exemption of certain classes of property from taxation to which
other property is subjected, and different classes may be taxed by
different methods of procedure without violating the due process
and equal protection provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The provisions in the New York Inheritance Tax Law, c. 713 of
Laws of 1887, amending c. 483 of the Laws of 1887, for taxing
personalty of nonresident decedents who had owned realty in that
state, are not unconstitutional as denying to those interested in
estates of that class of decedents due process or equal protection
of the laws, because no provision is made for taxing personalty of
nonresident decedents who had not owned any realty in New York.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of §§ 1
and 15 of the New York Inheritance Tax Law, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 211 U. S. 481
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented in this case is the validity of a
collateral inheritance tax on certain property bequeathed to
plaintiffs in error by Emily M. Lord, deceased. The testatrix and
her husband had lived for many years at Morristown, New Jersey. She
died there January 18, 1892. At the time of her death, she owned
real estate situate in the State of New York, and certain personal
property on deposit in a safe deposit company in the City of New
York. The inheritance tax was claimed under c. 713 of the Laws of
the State of New York for 1887, entitled, "An Act to Amend Chap.
483 of the Laws of 1885, Entitled,
An Act to Tax Gifts,
Legacies, and Collateral Inheritances in Certain Cases.'"
That act has twenty-six sections. It is sufficient, however, to
refer to a part of § 1 and § 15:
"SEC. 1. After the passage of this act, all property which shall
pass by will or by the intestate laws of this state, from any
person who may die seised or possessed of the same while a resident
of this state, or if such decedent was not a resident of this state
at the time of death, which property, or any part thereof, shall be
within this state, . . . shall be and is
Page 211 U. S. 482
subject to a tax of five dollars on every one hundred dollars of
the clear market value of such property."
"SEC. 15. The surrogate's court in the county in which the real
property is situate of a decedent who was not a resident of the
state, or in the county of which the decedent was a resident at the
time of his death, shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine
all questions in relation to the tax arising under the provisions
of this act, and the surrogate first acquiring jurisdiction
hereunder shall retain the same, to the exclusion of every
other."
It appears that the husband of the testatrix died in Morristown
only ten days before his wife, but, as he owned no real estate
situate in the State of New York, no inheritance tax was collected
from his estate. In claiming the equal protection of the law under
the Fourteenth Amendment, counsel for plaintiffs in error, after
pointing to the discrimination between the two cases, contend that
--
"The act of 1887, insofar as it applied to the property of
nonresidents, was not capable of verbal separation as between
provisions relating to the property of nonresidents who owned land
in the state and provisions relating to the property of
nonresidents who did not own land in the state, nor can the
legislature have intended that it should apply to the former and
not to the latter. Being unconstitutional under the Fourteenth
Amendment as to the property of such nonresidents as did not own
land in New York, in that it takes their property without due
process of law, it was therefore unconstitutional as to the
property of all nonresidents."
Also that--
"The imposition of a tax under the act of 1887 on the property
bequeathed to these plaintiffs in error cannot be made without such
a discrimination as will deny to them the equal protection of the
laws."
We do not understand that the Court of Appeals of the State of
New York has decided that the state has no power to collect an
inheritance tax where the only property belonging
Page 211 U. S. 483
to the decedent situate within the State of New York is
personalty, but simply that no provision has been made for reaching
such a case.
Both parties refer to
In re Embury, 19 App.Div. 214,
which was decided in June, 1897, by the first department, and
affirmed by the Court of Appeals on the authority of the opinion of
the appellate division, 154 N.Y. 746. In that case, it appears from
the opinion in the appellate division that Philip Embury was a
citizen and resident of New Jersey, and died at West Orange, in
that state, after the passage of the act of 1887. He had no real
estate in New York, but only certain personal property. He left a
will, which was duly probated in the county of his residence, and
thereupon the executors withdrew the personal property from New
York to New Jersey, and settled up the estate in accordance with
the terms of the will. The opinion, after referring to § 15 of
the act of 1887, said (pp. 216, 217):
"The statute therefore only conferred on the surrogate
jurisdiction in the case of such nonresident decedents as should
die seised of real estate within the surrogate's county. . . . In
other words, the statute of 1885, as amended by the act of 1887,
declared such of Embury's property as was in New York taxable, but
omitted to give the surrogate's court jurisdiction to impose the
tax -- a situation to which an expression of the Court of Appeals
in
In re Stewart, 131 N.Y. 284, is applicable:"
"It is not enough for the legislature to declare that such
interests are taxable. If no mode is provided for assessing and
collecting the tax, the law is imperfect and cannot, as to such
interests, be executed."
"A tax cannot be legally imposed unless the statute, in addition
to creating the tax, provided for an officer or tribunal who shall
appraise and assess the property on notice to the owner.
Stuart
v. Palmer, 74 N.Y. 188;
Remsen v. Wheeler, 105 N.Y.
575. The principle decided in the cases cited applies to the
transfer tax as well as to assessments for public improvements.
In re McPherson, 104 N.Y. 321. . . . It is apparent,
therefore,
Page 211 U. S. 484
that, when the executors took the deposits and the bank stock
out of the state for distribution, no tax had been imposed upon
such property, and there was no method provided by law by which a
tax could legally be imposed upon it. What they did they had not
only the right, but it was their duty, to do. The legal title to
the property in this state vested in them as the personal
representatives of their testator by force of the laws of New
Jersey.
In re Bronson, 150 N.Y. 1. They were bound to take
possession of it and make distribution according to the decree of
the court having jurisdiction of the estate. Had a tax been imposed
on the property, or had a statute providing for its imposition been
in force, it would have been their duty to have paid it or to have
requested the imposition of the tax, as the case might be, before
removing the property."
Subsequently, the Court of Appeals, in
In re Fitch, 160
N.Y. 87, 90, said, referring to the
Embury case, that
it
"held by an affirmance on the opinion below . . . that, while
the statute declared such of Embury's property to be taxable as was
situated in the City of New York, nevertheless, as it omitted to
authorize the surrogate to impose the tax, the order made by that
officer was without jurisdiction."
Under this condition, an inheritance tax may be collected where
the decedent owns both personal and real property within the State
of New York, and not where the only property belonging to the
decedent situate within the state is personalty. But, though the
operation of the statutes creates a difference, this, even if
intentional, is not of itself sufficient to invalidate the tax. The
power of the state in respect to the matter of taxation is very
broad, at least so far as the federal Constitution is concerned. It
may exempt certain property from taxation while all other is
subjected thereto. It may tax one class of property be one method
of procedure and another by a different method.
Bell's Gap
Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232,
134 U. S. 238;
Pacific Express Company v. Seibert, 142 U.
S. 339;
Merchants' Bank v. Pennsylvania,
167 U. S. 461,
167 U. S.
464;
Page 211 U. S. 485
Travelers' Insurance Company v. Connecticut,
185 U. S. 364;
Michigan Central Railroad v. Powers, 201 U.
S. 245. The right of exemption has been applied to
succession taxes (
Magoun v. Illinois Trust & Savings
Bank, 170 U. S. 283,
170 U. S.
299), in which this Court said:
"Nor do the exemptions of the statute render its operation
unequal within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. The right
to make exemptions is involved in the right to select the subjects
of taxation and apportion the public burdens among them, and must
consequently be understood to exist in the lawmaking power wherever
it has not in terms been taken away. To some extent it must exist
always, for the selection of subjects of taxation is, of itself, an
exemption of what is not selected. Cooley on Taxation 200;
see
also the remarks of Mr. Justice Bradley in
Bell's Gap
Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232."
Indeed, it may be laid down as a general rule that mere
inequalities or exemptions in the matter of state taxation are not
forbidden by the federal Constitution.
There is no error in the rulings of the courts of the State of
New York, and the judgment is
Affirmed.