The decedent died July 9, 1901. By his will he gave to a trust company, to be selected by his executors, a sum of money or securities sufficient to produce a net annual income of $1,000, upon trust to pay. from such income to his daughter the full and clear sum of $1,000 annually. He gave to his daughter power to give and bequeath from and after her death forty-five per cent, of the principal of this fund “ to and among such persons and corporations who may be living or in existence at her death in such sums, shares and proportions, and upon such' lawful trusts as she shall think proper; ” and also to give and bequeath, from and after her death, the residue of said fund, or fifty-five per cent, thereof, to and among any of his descendants “ who may be living at her death in such sums, shares and proportions, and upon such lawful trusts and conditions as she shall think proper.”
The statute applicable to the question presented, and to this estate, is section 230 of the Tax Law, as amended by chapter 76;of the Laws of 1899, to the effect that “ when property is transferred in trust or otherwise, and the rights, interests or estates of the transferees are dependent upon contingencies or conditions, whereby they may be wholly or in part created, der ■ feated, extended or abridged, a tax shall be imposed upon said,' transfer at the highest rate which, on the happening of any of the said contingencies or conditions, would be possible under the provisions of this article, and such tax shall be due and payable forthwith, out of the property transferred.”
Prior to the enactment of this amendment the word “ transfer,” • as used in the Tax Law, had been determined by the courts to have its “ ordinary legal signification, which is that the owner of a thing delivers it to another person with the intent of passing the rights which he has in it to the latter.” Matter of Gould, 156 N. Y. 423, 428. After the passage of the amendment this definition was applied to it in Matter of Vanderbilt, 68 App. Div. 27, and Matter of Howell, 34 Misc. Rep. 432, and resulted in making the amendment inoperative, it being reasoned that a transfer without a transferee was a thing impossible. It was while the decision of the Appellate Division was controlling that the order now being reviewed was made.
The Court of Appeals, by a divided court, reversed the Vanderbilt case (Matter of Vanderbilt, 172 N. Y. 69), and imposed a tax on a remainder interest, absolutely vested in the person who was finally to take but subject to be defeated by the contingency of his dying before reaching the age of thirty-five years. .Shortly
The effect of these two decisions is to declare that the amendment of 1899 is constitutional and valid, and that it must he so construed as to give it force and not to defeat it; that, for the purposes of the act, a transfer is the passing of the title of a valuable interest out of or from the estate of a decedent, though the transferee is not now ascertainable, and that every such transfer is presently taxable, however obscure, contingent or nebulous the ultimate vesting of the transferred interest may he. That this construction effectuates the purpose of the Legislature is obvious, and it will also greatly simplify the administration of the collection of the tax. The race between the lawmakers seeking to impose the tax and testators striving to postpone its collection will, on this point at least, come to an end.
I must, therefore, determine that the remainders, after the death of the life beneficiary, though not ascertainable until after the end of her life and the provisions of her last will are disclosed, are now taxable and that the order appealed from must he reversed.
Decreed accordingly.