BLODGETT v. SILBERMAN
Supreme Court of the United States
BLODGETT, Tax Com'r of State of Connecticut,
v.
SILBERMAN et al.
SILBERMAN et al.
v.
BLODGETT, Tax Com'r of State of Connecticut.
Nos. 190, 191.
Mr. Chief
Justice TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two cases, which are really one, grow out of the operation of a
transfer tax by the state of Connecticut. They are brought to this Court, one
by certiorari and one by writ of error. The questions presented are whether
the tax on the transfer of certain parts of the large estate of Robert B. Hirsch
was in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, in that
they were tangible property in New York and not in Connecticut. Hirsch died
September 23, 1924, domiciled at Stamford, Conn., leaving a will with two
codicils executed in accordance with the laws of both New York and
Connecticut. The plaintiffs are the surviving executors of the will. Hirsch
left real estate, chattels, cattle, horses and poultry in Connecticut, and also
a debt due from a resident of Connecticut and a certificate of stock in a
Connecticut corporation, as to all of which there is no dispute about the tax
that was imposed. The great bulk of his estate, however, consisted of (1) a
large interest, as general partner, appraised at $1,687,245.34, in the
partnership of William Openhym & Sons, doing business in New York, and
organized under the Limited Partnership Act of that State; (2) certificates of
stock in New York, New Jersey and Canada corporations, appraised at
$277,864.25; (3) bonds and Treasury *4 certificates of indebtedness of
the United States, appraised at $615,121.17; (4) a small savings bank account
in New York; (5) a life insurance policy in the Mutual Life Insurance Company
of New York payable to the estate; and (6) a small amount of bank bills and
coin in a deposit box in New York. All the bonds and certificates of stock at
the time of the decedent's death, and for a long time prior thereto, had been
physically placed and kept in safe deposit boxes in New York City and were
never in Connecticut. The partnership assets consisted of real estate in New
York and also in Connecticut, merchandise, chattels, credits, and other
personal property. The testator bequeathed the larger part of his estate to
charitable and educational corporations organized under the laws of New York
and existing in that state. The executors offered the will and codicils for
probate in New York. They were admitted to probate in the Surrogate's Court in
the county of New York, and thereafter the executors proceeded in the
settlement of the estate in New York. They have paid from the funds of the
estate legacies provided in the will and codicils amounting to $299,297.45.
They have also paid the debts, the federal estate tax and the New York transfer
or inheritance tax, which amounted to $19,166.04. The transfer report in that
court exempted the legacies bequeathed to charitable and educational
institutions in accord with New York law. The executors have paid to the **412
trustees named in the will and codicils the amount therein mentioned for the
benefit of certain persons named. The executors sold the stocks standing in
the name of the decedent and made transfer of the same to the purchaser, and
the Mutual Life Insurance Company paid to the executors the proceeds of the
policy. The National City Bank of New York paid to the executors the amount of
a small deposit account therein to the credit of the decedent at the time of
his death.
*5 On January 8, 1925, the executors presented to the court of
probate, for the Stamford district of Connecticut, an exemplified copy of the
will and codicils from the record of the proceedings in the Surrogate's Court
in New York, and on January 15, 1925, that court received the will and
codicils, and accepted a bond for the executors and issued to them letters
testamentary, made an order limiting the time for the presentation of claims,
directed the filing of an inventory of all the property, including choses in
action of the estate of the decedent, and appointed appraisers who made and
filed the inventory of all the foregoing items of property belonging to the
decedent at the time of his death.
On September 1, 1925, the executors filed in the probate court for the
Stamford district, and with the tax commissioner for Connecticut, a statement
under oath covering the property of the estate and the claimed deductions
therefrom, all this for the purpose of determining the succession tax, if any,
due the state of Connecticut. The tax commissioner thereafter, filed a copy of
his computation of the tax with the probate court, to which the executors made
objection, but that court, on December 4, 1925, made its order and decree
approving the computation of $188,780.58, and directed the executors to pay
this amount to the state treasurer.
From this order the plaintiff executors took an appeal to the superior
court of Fairfield county, and then by stipulation of the parties the case was
reserved for the advice and direction of the Supreme Court of Errors as to what
judgment, decree or decision should be made or rendered thereon by the superior
court.
The chief questions considered by the Supreme Court of Errors were,
first, whether the interest of the decedent in the partnership of Openhym &
Sons was subject to a transfer tax in Connecticut, and, second, whether the
bonds of the United States and certificates of its indebtedness*6 were
to be deemed tangible property in New York and beyond the taxing jurisdiction
of the state of Connecticut. There were other questions of taxable
jurisdiction over other items of the estate, but we shall consider these two
first.
The Supreme Court of Errors held, first, that the interest of the
decedent in the partnership was a chose in action and intangible, and the
transfer thereof was subject to the tax imposed by the law of the decedent's
domicile; second, that the bonds and certificates of the United States were
tangible property having a situs in New York, and were not within the taxable
jurisdiction of Connecticut, but were to be regarded as in the same class of
tangibles as the paintings, works of art and furniture considered in the case
of Frick v. Pennsylvania, 268 U. S. 473, 45 S. Ct. 603, 69 L. Ed. 1058, 42 A.
L. R. 316, In that case, Pennsylvania, the state of Mr. Frick's domicile,
sought to impose a transfer or succession tax on the paintings and other
tangible personalty, which had always been in New York City, and it was held
that they had an actual situs in New York, and that, under the Fourteenth
Amendment, Pennsylvania could impose no transfer or succession tax in respect
of them. Applying what it conceived to be the principle of that case to the
bonds of the United States and certificates of its indebtedness in this, the
Supreme Court of Errors held that their transfer could not be taxed in
Connecticut.
The superior court, following the advice of the Supreme Court of Errors
(Silberman, Appeal of (Conn.) 134 A. 778), entered a judgment giving full
effect to it. That is the final judgment in the case, and it is the judgment
now to be reviewed.
In No. 191 a writ of error was allowed by the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of Errors and the presiding judge of the superior court in the
state of Connecticut under section 237(a) of the Judicial Code, Act of February
13, 1925 (chapter 229, 43 Stat. 936, 937 (28 USCA s 344)), to the final and
consolidated judgment of the superior court of Connecticut*7 as the
highest court of the state in which a decision in the suit could be had,
because there was drawn in question therein the validity of chapter 190 of the
Public Acts of 1923 of Connecticut, on the ground of its being repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States, and especially to the Fourteenth Amendment
thereof, in that the statute as construed and applied by the superior court
levied a succession tax on the transfer and succession of property and choses
in action of the decedent which were within the jurisdiction of New York and
not within the jurisdiction of Connecticut, the decedent's domicile.
In No. 190, the state tax commissioner applied for a writ of certiorari
to the same consolidated judgment, and sought a reversal of that judgment in so
far as it denied to the state of Connecticut, because of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Federal Constitution, the power and right created by its
statute (chapter 190 of the Public Acts of 1923), **413 to tax the
transfer of the United States bonds and certificates of indebtedness and of
$287.50 in bank notes and coin, all in a safe deposit box in the city and state
of New York, as not within the taxing jurisdiction of Connecticut.
Had the Supreme Court of Errors put its ruling against the validity of
part of the tax on the construction of the state Constitution or statute, we
could not review that ruling, because it would have involved only a question of
state law, but, so far as the ruling was put on the ground that the state could
not impose the tax consistently with the due process of law clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, a federal question is presented which we may consider,
and, when we have determined the federal questions, the cause will go back to
the state court for further proceedings not inconsistent with our views on such
federal questions.
*8 The Connecticut
Succession and Transfer Act (chapter 190 of the Public Acts of 1923) says in
its section 1:
‘All property and any interest therein owned by a resident of this state
at the time of his decease, and all real estate within this state owned by a
nonresident of this state at the time of his decease, which shall pass by will
or inheritance under the laws of this state; and all gifts of such property by
deed, grant, or other conveyance, made in contemplation of the death of the
grantor or donor, or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or
after the death of such grantor or donor, shall be subject to the tax herein
prescribed.'
This is a tax not upon property but upon the right or privilege of
succession to the property of a deceased person as is made clear in the opinion
of the Supreme Court of Errors in this and prior cases. Silberman v. Blodgett,
105 Conn. 192, 134 A. 778; Corbin v. Townshend, 92 Conn. 501, 103 A. 647;
Hopkins' Appeal, 77 Conn. 644, 60 A. 657; Warner v. Corbin, 91 Conn. 532, 100
A. 354; Gallup's Appeal, 76 Conn. 617, 57 A. 699; Nettleton's Appeal, 76 Conn.
235, 56 A. 565. These cases are all in accord with Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U.
S. 41, 47, 20 S. Ct. 747, 750, 44 L. Ed. 969, in which it was said by this
Court that:
‘Taxes of this general character are universally deemed to relate, not to
property eo nomine, but to its passage by will or by descent in cases of its
intestacy, as distinguished from taxes imposed on property, real or personal as
such, because of its ownership and possession. In other words, the public
contribution which death duties exact is predicated on the passing of property
as the result of death, as distinct from a tax on property disassociated from
its transmission or receipt by will, or as the result of intestacy.'
The power of the state of a man's domicile to impose a tax upon the
succession to, or the transfer of, his intangible property, even when the
evidences of such property are outside of the state at the time of his death
has been constantly asserted by the Legislatures of the various *9
states. The Supreme Court of Errors in its opinion in this case says that at
the present time the inheritance tax laws of over four-fifths of the states
impose a tax similar to that imposed by Connecticut. Frothingham v. Shaw, 175
Mass. 59, 55 N. E. 623, 78 Am. St. Rep. 475; In re Estate of Zook (Mo.) 296 S.
W. 778; In re Sherwood's Estate, 122 Wash. 648, 211 P. 734; Mann v. Carter, 74
N. H. 345, 68 A. 130, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 150; People v. Union Trust Co., 255
Ill. 168, 99 N. E. 377, L. R. A. 1915D, 450, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 514; In re Lines'
Estate, 155 Pa. 378, 26 A. 728; In re Estate of Hodges, 170 Cal. 492, 150 P.
344, L. R. A. 1916A, 837; Commonwealth v. Williams' Executor, 102 Va. 778, 47
S. E. 867, 1 Ann. Cas. 434. The same principle was recognized by this Court in
Carpenter v. Pennsylvania, 17 How. 456, 15 L. Ed. 127; before the adoption of
the Fourteenth Amendment, and the principle was reaffirmed thereafter in Orr v.
Gilman, 183 U. S. 278, 22 S. Ct. 213, 46 L. Ed. 196; Keeney v. New York, 222 U.
S. 525, 32 S. Ct. 105, 56 L. Ed. 299, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1139; and Bullen v.
Wisconsin, 240 U. S. 625, 36 S. Ct. 473, 60 L. Ed. 830. In the latter case the
question arose as to the power of Wisconsin to impose a tax upon the succession
to certain intangible property of one of its citizens, the evidences of which
were held by a trust company in Illinois upon a revocable trust at the time of
his death, and the power was sustained. Reference to the record in the case
shows that the property included shares of stock in Missouri, New Jersey and
Illinois corporations; stock in a national bank organized under the National
Banking Act; mortgage bonds and debentures issued by New Jersey, Illinois,
Missouri, Utah and Kansas corporations; promissory notes of residents of
Illinois and Minnesota; insurance policies issued by New York, Canadian and
Wisconsin insurance companies; and money on deposit in two Illinois banks. The
same principle was affirmed in the Frick Case.
At common law the maxim ‘mobilia
sequunter personam’ applied. There has been discussion and criticism of the
application and enforcement of that maxim, but it is so fixed in the common law
of this country and of England, in so far as it relates to intangible property,
including choses in action, without regard to whether they are *10
evidenced in writing or otherwise and whether the papers evidencing the same
are found in the state of the domicile or elsewhere, and is so fully sustained
by cases in this and other courts, that it must be treated as settled in this
jurisdiction whether it approve itself to legal philosophic test or not.
Further, this principle is not to be shaken by the inquiry into the
question whether the **414 transfer of such intangibles, like
specialties, bonds or promissory notes, is subject to taxation in another
jurisdiction. As to that we need not inquire. It is not the issue in this
case. For present purposes it suffices that intangible personalty has such a
situs at the domicile of its owner that its transfer on his death may be taxed
there.
This brings us to the question
whether the partnership interest of the decedent in William Openhym & Sons
was a chose in action and intangible personalty. The partnership was a limited
partnership organized in New York; the last agreement therefor having been
executed in December, 1921. The New York partnership law then in force was
chapter 408, Laws of 1919.
Under section 51 of this law, a partner is a co-owner with his partner of
specific partnership property, holding this
property as a tenant in partnership. Such tenancy confers certain rights with
limitations. A partner has a right equal to that of his partners to possess
specific partnership property for partnership purposes, but not otherwise. His
right in specific partnership property is not assignable, nor is it subject to
attachment or execution upon a personal claim against him; upon his death the
right to the specific property vests not in the partner's personal
representative but in the surviving partner; his right in specific property is
not subject to dower, curtesy, or allowance to widows, heirs or next of kin.
Section 52 specifically provides:
‘A partner's interest in the partnership is his share of the profits and
surplus and the same is personal property.'
*11 Under section 73, when any partner dies and the partnership
continues, his personal representative may have the value of his interest at
the date of dissolution ascertained and receive as an ordinary creditor an amount
equal to the value of his interest in the partnership with interest.
Under section 98, c. 640, Laws of 1922, the rights of a general partner
in a limited partnership, which was the interest of the decedent here when he
died, are identical with those of a general partner in a general partnership.
And in regard to a limited partner's interest, section 107 of the law
specifically provides:
‘A limited partner's interest in the partnership is personal property.'
It is very plain, therefore, that the interest of the decedent in the
partnership of William Openhym & Sons was simply a right to share in what
would remain of the partnership assets after its liabilities were satisfied.
It was merely an interest in the surplus, a chose in action. It is an intangible,
and carries with it a right to an accounting.
There were among the holdings and property of the partnership buildings
and land. Although these statutes were passed after the decision in Darrow v.
Calkins, 154 N. Y. 503, 49 N. E. 61, 48 L. R. A. 299, 61 Am.
St. Rep. 637, we have no reason for thinking that the partnership law of New
York is now any different from what its Court of Appeals said it was in that
case (pages 515, 516 (49 N. E. 64)) as follows:
‘It is, however, generally conceded that the question whether partnership
real estate shall be deemed absolutely converted into personalty for all
purposes, or only converted pro tanto for the purpose of partnership equities,
may be controlled by the express or implied agreement of the partners
themselves, and that where by such agreement it appears that it was the
intention of the partners that the lands should be treated and administered *12
as personalty for all purposes, effect will be given thereto. In respect to
real estate purchased for partnership purposes with partnership funds and used
in the prosecution of the partnership business, the English rule of ‘out and
out’ conversion may be regarded as properly applied on the ground of intention,
even in jurisdictions which have not adopted that rule as applied to
partnership real estate acquired under different circumstances and where no
specific intention appeared. The investment of partnership funds in lands and
chattels for the purpose of a partnership business, the fact that the two
species of property are in most cases of this kind, so commingled that they
cannot be separated without impairing the value of each, has been deemed to
justify the inference that under such circumstances the lands as well as the
chattels were intended by the partners to constitute a part of the partnership
stock and that both together should take the character of personalty for all
purposes, and Judge Denio in Collumb v. Read (24 N. Y. 505), expressed the
opinion that to this extent the English rule of conversion prevailed here.
That paramount consideration should be given to the intention of the partners
when ascertained, is conceded by most of the cases.'
It thus clearly appears that both under the partnership agreement and
under the laws of the state of New York the interest of the partner was the
right to receive a sum of money equal to his share of the net value of the
partnership after a settlement, and this right to his share is a debt owing to
him, a chose in action, and an intangible. We concur with the Supreme Court of
Errors that as such it was subject to the transfer tax of Connecticut.
We come then to the second
question, whether bonds of the United States and certificates of indebtedness
of the United States deposited in a safe deposit box in New York City, and
never removed from there, owned by the *13 decedent at the time of his
death, were intangibles which come within the rule already stated.
The argument is that such bonds payable to bearer and transferable from
hand to hand **415 have lost their character as choses in action and
have taken on the qualities of physical property, and cases are cited to
indicate that they can be made the subject of execution and constitute a basis
for the jurisdiction of the courts and of taxing officers of the state in which
the paper upon which the evidence of the debt or obligation is written is found,
although their owner lives and dies in another state.
The Supreme Court of Errors takes this view, citing Frick v.
Pennsylvania, and holds that the transfer of the United States bonds and
certificates is taxable only in New York where they are, and only there. The
court cites, as sustaining its conclusion that the transfer of the bonds is
only taxable in New York, the case of State Tax on Foreign-Held Bonds, 15 Wall.
300, 21 L. Ed. 179. This case is often cited to the point that Mr. Justice
Field takes as indisputable (on page 319) that a state may not tax property
that is not within its jurisdiction-a matter recognized in Frick v.
Pennsylvania, 268 U. S. 473, 489, 45 S. Ct. 603, 69 L. Ed. 1058, 42 A. L. R.
316; Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194, 202, 26 S. Ct.
36, 50 L. Ed. 150, 4 Ann. Cas. 493; and Gloucester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania,
114 U. S. 196, 206, 5 S. Ct. 826, 29 L. Ed. 158. The effect of some of Mr.
Justice Field's language in that case, and the exact point on which the
decision there turned, have since been fully discussed by this Court and
qualified in Savings & Loan Society v. Multnomah County, 169 U. S. 421,
428, 18 S. Ct. 392, 42 L. Ed. 803; New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U. S. 309, 319,
320, 20 S. Ct. 110, 44 L. Ed. 174; and Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U. S. 189,
206, 23 S. Ct. 277, 47 L. Ed. 439. The tax there held invalid was a tax
imposed by a statute of Pennsylvania upon the interest due a nonresident
bondholder on bonds issued by a corporation of that state. It is now settled
in these later cases that the point decided in the State Tax on *14
Foreign-Held Bonds Case was that the law of Pennsylvania in requiring the
railroad company, which issued the bonds, to pay the state tax on them and
deduct it from the interest due the nonresident owners, was as to them a law
impairing the obligation of contracts under Murray v. Charleston, 96 U. S. 432,
24 L. Ed. 760. The case, therefore, is not authority for the proposition for
which the Supreme Court of Errors cites it, to wit: That such bonds are to be
completely assimilated to tangible personal property. The other cases cited by
the Supreme Court of Errors are New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U. S. 309, 321, 20
S. Ct. 110, 44 L. Ed. 174, and like cases which follow it in which a state, not
that of the domicile of the owner, has been held to have the right to tax
bonds, promissory notes, and other written evidences of choses in action with
which business is there carried on for the owner giving them what is sometimes
called ‘a business situs,’ but such cases have little or no bearing on the
power of the state of a decedent's domicile to tax the transfer of his bonds
which we are now considering.
The question here is whether bonds, unlike other choses in action, may
have a situs different from the owner's domicile such as will render their
transfer taxable in the state of that situs and in only that state. We think
bonds are not thus distinguishable from other choses in action. It is not
enough to show that the written or printed evidence of ownership may, by the
law of the state in which they are physically present, be permitted to be taken
in execution or dealt with as reaching that of which they are evidence, even
without the presence of the owner. While bonds often are so treated, they are
nevertheless in their essence only evidences of debt. The Supreme Court of
Errors expressly admits that they are choses in action. Whatever incidental
qualities may be added by usage of business or by statutory provision, this
characteristic remains, and shows itself by the fact that *15 their
destruction physically will not destroy the debt which they represent. They
are representative, and not the thing itself.
The case of Kirtland v. Hotchkiss, 100 U. S. 491, 25 L. Ed. 558, is in point.
The case came to this Court from the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut,
and it involved the taxable status in that state of bonds held by one of its
citizens and evidencing a debt owing to him by a citizen of Illinois. The
court said (page 498):
‘The question does not seem to us to be very difficult of solution. The
creditor, it is conceded, is a permanent resident within the jurisdiction of
the state imposing the tax. The debt is property in his hands constituting a
portion of his wealth, from which he is under the highest obligation, in common
with his fellow-citizens of the same state, to contribute for the support of
the government whose protection he enjoys.
‘That debt, although a species of intangible property, may, for purposes
of taxation, if not for all others, be regarded as situated at the domicile of
the creditor. It is none the less property because its amount and maturity are
set forth in a bond. That bond, wherever actually held or deposited, is only
evidence of the debt, and if destroyed, the debt-the right to demand payment of
the money loaned, with the stipulated interest-remains. Nor is the debt, for
the purposes of taxation, affected by the fact that it is secured by mortgage
upon real estate situated in Illinois. The mortgage is but a security for the
debt, and, as held in State Tax on Foreign-Held Bonds (supra), the right of the
creditor ‘to proceed against the property mortgaged, upon a given contingency,
to enforce by its sale the payment of his demand, * * * has no locality
independent of the party in whom it resides. It may undoubtedly be taxed by
the state when held by a resident therein,’ etc. Cooley on Taxation, 15, 63,
134, 270. The debt, then, having its situs at the creditor's *16
residence,**416 both he and it are, for the purposes of taxation,
within the jurisdiction of the state.'
The line which was drawn in the case of Frick v. Pennsylvania, supra, was
one which was adopted from the decision of this Court in Union Refrigerator
Transit Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194, 26 S. Ct. 36, 50 L. Ed. 150, 4 Ann.
Cas. 493, and other cases cited in the same connection, where it was held that
the power of taxation could not extend to tangible chattels having an actual
situs outside the jurisdiction, although the owner was within it. It was
pointed out that this is not true of debts and choses in action which usually
have a taxable situs at the owner's domicile. In the Union Refrigerator Case,
this Court said (page 205 (26 S. Ct. 38)):
‘In this class of cases the tendency of modern authorities is to apply
the maxim mobilia sequuntur personam, and to hold that the property may be
taxed at the domicile of the owner as the real situs of the debt, and also,
more particularly in the case of mortgages, in the state where the property is
retained.'
The Court again said (page 206 (26 S. Ct. 38)):
‘The arguments in favor of the taxation of intangible property at the
domicile of the owner have no application to tangible property. The fact that
such property is visible, easily found and difficult to conceal, and the tax
readily collectible, is so cogent an argument for its taxation at its situs
that of late there is a general consensus of opinion that it is taxable in the
state where it is permanently located and employed and where it receives its
entire protection, irrespective of the domicile of the owner. We have,
ourselves, held in a number of cases that such property permanently located in
a state other than that of its owner is taxable there. Brown v. Houston, 114
U. S. 622 (5 S. Ct. 1091, 29 L. Ed. 257); Coe v. Errol, 116 U. S. 517 (6 S. Ct.
475, 29 L. Ed. 715); Pullman's Car Co. v. Pennsylvania, 141 U. S. 18 (11 S. Ct.
876, 35 L. Ed. 613); Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Massachusetts, 125 U. S.
530 (8 S. Ct. 961, 31 L. Ed. 790); Railroad *17Co. v. Peniston, 18
Wall. 5 (21 L. Ed. 787); American Refrigerator Transit Co. v. Hall, 174 U. S.
70 (19 S. Ct. 599, 43 L. Ed. 899); Pittsburg Coal Co. v. Bates, 156 U. S. 577
(15 S. Ct. 415, 39 L. Ed. 538); Old Dominion Steamship Co. v. Virginia, 198 U.
S. 299 (25 S. Ct. 686, 49 L. Ed. 1059, 3 Ann. Cas. 1100).'
The Court continued (page 206 (26 S. Ct. 39)):
‘There are doubtless cases in the state reports announcing the principle
that the ancient maxim of mobilia sequuntur personam still applies to personal
property, and that it may be taxed at the domicile of the owner, but upon
examination they all or nearly all relate to intangible property, such as
stocks, bonds, notes and other choses in action. We are cited to none applying
this rule to tangible property, and after a careful examination have not been
able to find any wherein the question is squarely presented. * * *'
The discussion in the Union Refrigerator Case shows what this Court meant
in the Frick Case in holding that personal property in the form of paintings
and furniture having an actual situs in one state could not be subjected to a
transfer tax in another state, and emphasizes the inference that it did not
apply to anything having as its essence an indebtedness or a chose in action
and could not apply to property in the form of specialties or bonds or other
written evidences of indebtedness whether governmental or otherwise, even
though they passed from hand to hand. The analogy between furniture and bonds
cannot be complete because bonds are representative only and are not the thing
represented. They are at most choses in action and intangibles.
We think, therefore, that the
Supreme Court of Errors in extending the rule of the Frick Case from tangible
personal property, like paintings, furniture or cattle, to bonds, is not
warranted, and to that extent we must reverse its conclusion in denying to
Connecticut the right to tax the transfer of the bonds and Treasury
certificates. *18 Of course this reasoning necessarily sustains the
different view of that court that the transfer of certificates of stock in
corporations of other states than Connecticut was taxable in the latter as the
transfer of choses in action.
Among the other items is a savings bank account in New York which is
certainly a chose in action and was properly treated as subject to the same
rule. So, too, a life insurance policy payable to the estate was also of that
character.
There was a small amount of cash,
$287.48, in bank notes and coin in a safe deposit box in New York which the
Supreme Court of Errors held not taxable in Connecticut. As to this, the
contention on behalf of Connecticut is that it should be treated as attached to
the person of the owner and subject to a transfer tax at the domicile. It is
argued that it was not like coin or treasure in bulk, but like loose change, so
to speak. To money of this amount usually and easily carried on the person, it
is said that the doctrine of mobilia sequuntur personam has peculiar
application in the historical derivation of the maxim. But we think that
money, so definitely fixed and separated in its actual situs from the person of
the owner as this was, is tangible property and cannot be distinguished from
the paintings and furniture held in the Frick Case to be taxable only in the
jurisdiction where they were.
The results thus stated lead to our reversing the judgment of the
Superior Court of Connecticut, in respect to the tax on the transfer of the
bonds and certificates of indebtedness**417 of the United States and to
our affirming the judgment in other respects.
It is further contended by the
executors that the proceedings in the Connecticut court and the judgment
therein fail to give full faith and credit to the public acts, records and
proceedings of the state of New York, and that this is in violation of the
Constitution of the *19 United States. We do not think there is
anything in this point. There is nothing in the proceedings in the Connecticut
court that is inconsistent with those in the New York court. There is nothing
to indicate that the New York court decided, assuming it had jurisdiction to
decide, that there was no power in the state of Connecticut to impose a tax on
the transfer that was taxed in Connecticut. More than that, the proceedings
and judgment in New York were not such as would conclude Connecticut even with
the aid of the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution. Connecticut
was not a party to those proceedings or to that judgment, nor was it in privity
with any one who was a party.
Affirmed in
part, and reversed in part.