William A. Seaver died in 1883, leaving a will which was admitted to probate by the surrogate of Westchester county, who issued letters testamentary thereunder to the Metropolitan Trust Company. The will contained the following provision:
“ Eleventh. It is also my will and I, William A. Seaver, direct my executors to apply to the use of Olive M. Seaver, widow of my brother Lucas Seaver, during her life the interest or income of ten thousand dollars, which sum of ten thousand dollars must be set apart for the object stated as hereinafter directed, and I give to the said Olive M. Seaver the absolute power of disposing, giving and bequeathing the said sum of ten thousand dollars by last will and testament in such manner as she may think proper.”
Olive died in 1899, being at the titáe a resident of Erie county. She léft a will-in which she exercised the said power of appointment in favor of her son Luke. The will was admitted to probate by the surrogate of Erie county, and in proceedings before him? at *285which the Comptroller appeared, the fund was appraised at less than $10,000 and paid over to Luke. The decree contained a clause : “ It appearing from the appraiser’s report that the value of the personal property is under ten thousand ($10,000) and within the exceptions and limitations, I find that the estate is not taxable.”
Subsequently the State Comptroller instituted the present proceeding before the surrogate of Westchester county, asking the appointment of a transfer tax appraiser to assess and fix the value of said transfer and the tax thereon. An appraiser was appointed, who reported that the title to the fund passed directly from the testator, William A. Seaver, to Luke, a nephew, and as the fund was more than $500, that a transfer tax was due, under section 220 of the Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 908) as amended by chapter 284 of the Laws of 1897. On a-ppeal the surrogate reversed the award, holding that he had no jurisdiction on the ground that the Surrogate’s Court of Erie county was the only court having jurisdiction-of the proceedings. From that decree the Comptroller appeals.
Thus we have two questions presented for our decision : First, whether for the purposes and within the meaning of section 220 the itle passed under the will instead of under the power, and, second, whether the decree of the ■ surrogate of the county of Erie is res adjudicada upon the People.
Section 220 of the Tax Law provides that “ 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.” The words clearly imply that the transfer tax is due upon and by reason of the exercise of the appointment and when and where it is made,
I do not mean to intimate that the actual title to the fund for other than taxing purposes was derived from the mother. The contrary proposition is true. But section 220 explicitly declares that it is the exercise and not the creation of a power of appointment which effects the transfer upon which the tax is enforced. Hence the fund must, for taxing purposes, be regarded as having passed from mother *286to son, and the case is governed by section 221 and not by section 220. This is the rule laid down in Matter of Vanderbilt (163 N. Y. 597); Matter of Dows (167 id. 227); Matter of Potter (51 ’ App. Div. 212).
Secondly. The surrogate of Erie county had jurisdiction of the subject-matter under section 229 of the Tax Law, and his decree is conclusive against the Comptroller, who appeared and participated in the proceedings.
For both or either reason thus stated, the decree of the surrogate should be affirmed, with costs to each respondent.
All concurred..
Decree of the Surrogate’s Court Of Westchester county affirmed, with costs to each respondent.