The relators were originally assessed for the year 1884 in the sum of $650,000 for personal estate held by them as executors, etc., of George A. Osgood, deceased. In February, 1884, they made application to the respondents for a correction of the assessment and demanded that the same should be canceled.
In support of the application an affidavit was submitted in which it was stated that in December, 1883, they had accounted to the surrogate of this county and that a decree had been made upon such accounting, and that prior to the 31st of December, 1883, in accordance with a decree of the surrogate, the entire estate of the deceased was paid over to the persons entitled to it with the exception of the sum of $484,268.61, which remained deposited in trust companies and banks, in accordance with a provision of the decree mentioned, as follows: “ It is further adjudged that the residue of the said estate remain in the hands of the said executor and executrix subject to the further order of this court, reserved for the payment of disputed and other claims and the further expenses of administration.”
It was also stated in the affidavit that -the debts presented against the estate exceeded the said sum, which debts, however, rested upon claims contested. The statute provides for the assessment made in this proceeding, but declares that the just debts due from the executor, in his representative character, shall be deducted from the personal property. (2 R. S. [7th ed.], 989, 991.) If the relators desired' to avail themselves of the right to have the just debts deducted from the amount of the personal property subject to taxation, it was their duty undoubtedly to have presented facts which would have justified such deduction. (People ex rel. Western R. R. Co. v. Assessors of Albany, 40 N. Y., 160.)
It is contended on behalf of the respondents that the affidavit submitted to the tax commissioners does not meet the requirement; in other words it does not show that the just debts exceed the .amount of the property in their possession, or indeed what is the amount of the just debts if any exist. It simply states that the debts have been presented against the estate. No liability for any of the claims presented is admitted or asserted. Although this view is technically correct, yet it does not commend itself to the -consideration of the court. The sum mentioned in the decree of *508the surrogate is oue which is wholly in custodia legis, subject to the further order of the court. It is not, therefore, any longer under the immediate control of the executors, and whether it would be necessarily appropriated to the payment of claims established against the estate does not appear and cannot be made known until after the requisite investigation of their validity and that of each of them shall have been made and the result declared. The statute should have a reasonable construction. If the sum reserved by the surrogate (and which we must assume to have been reserved upon proper evidence warranting such reservation) is due to the creditors of the estate, then the taxes were improperly imposed. If not, then they were properly imposed upon the whole amount if it shall remain intact, or on such an amount of it as may exist after the payment of the debts.
It is thought, therefore, that the commissioners should review their taxation and place it upon the whole sum mentioned, in case it shall not be diminished by the payment of just debts out of it, and upon such sum as may remain after the payment of existing debts by due process of law, if any be so ascertained to exist.
Daniels, J.:No debts whatever were proven by the affidavit or otherwise to exist against the fund, reserved only to meet the contingency of asserted but contested claims -being established as debts. In the end the fund may not be reduced to the extent of a single dollar by either of these claims. No probability that either will be established as a liability against the estate has been shown. Until that has been done it cannot be held that any just debts remain to be deducted.
As the facts appeared. the assessment seems to have been in accordance with what the statute has required, and it should be affirmed.