IN RE FINKELSTEIN'S ESTATE
Surrogate's Court, Rockland County, New York.
In the Matter of the Appraisal of the ESTATE of Abraham D.
FINKELSTEIN, Deceased.
March 18, 1963.
HERBERT E. HENION, Surrogate.
This is an application for
an order modifying a pro forma taxing order dated December 8, 1961. The
modification sought is the reduction of the valuation of decedent's interests
in three partnerships so as to eliminate from consideration the value of
foreign realty owned by those partnerships. The application was finally
submitted on January 17, 1963.
**226 The petition
states that after the schedules were filed the attorneys for the estate
discovered that the parcels of real estate in question, while belonging to the
respective partnerships, were actually in the individual names of the
partners. While this may be a mistake of fact, it is an immaterial fact, as
the parcels were concededly partnership property. The real basis for this
application is that the Surrogate made an error of law, to which conclusion the
attorneys did not arrive until they discovered the above fact which really has
nothing to do with the question. There is a great deal of conflict and
confusion as to whether the Surrogate can correct his pro forma taxing
order for an error of law of this kind. See in Re Lawrie's Estate, 202 Misc.
1060, 112 N.Y.S.2d 49 and cases cited, especially Matter of Ford's Estate, 198
Misc. 69, 96 N.Y.S.2d 177. In the view which I take of the merits of the
application it is not necessary to decide the question of power. I conclude
that the theory of the order was right.
In inquiring into this
question it is necessary to keep in mind the distinction between the property
of a partnership, the interest of a partner in specific partnership property,
and the interest of a partner in the partnership.
Over the years the legal
concept of a partnership as an entity rather than just a status has gained
force. While the Uniform Partnership Act (see Partnership Law, § § 1-74) did not adopt the entity theory it did
reflect the trend in that direction whereby the courts, treating a partnership
as an entity for some purposes, *912 especially where the Legislature
had made it so, had gradually veered away from the old idea that a partner's
only property right was his undivided interest in each partnership asset, in
favor of the modern concept that a partner's only personal property right is
his interest in the partnership. See United States v. A. & P. Trucking
Co., 358 U.S. 121, 79 S.Ct. 203, 3 L.Ed.2d 165; Blau v. Lehman, 368 U.S. 403,
82 S.Ct. 451, 7 L.Ed.2d 403; Ruzicka v. Rager, 305 N.Y. 191, 111 N.E.2d 1878.
In Commissioner of Internal
Revenue v. Lehman, 2 Cir., 165 F.2d 383, 384-385, Judge Learned Hand said:
‘The Commissioner's first
point is based upon the strict theory of the common-law that a partnership is
no more than a joint ownership of the firm assets by the partners, and that,
when a partner sells his interest in the firm, he sells his interest as joint
owner of each firm asset. * * * However, in equity and in bankruptcy the
chancellors long ago imposed modifications upon the rights and liabilities of partners,
as the common-law conceived them; and, while the firm never became a jural
person, capable of being sued and of suing as such, in the administration of
its affairs it did become for most purposes an entity; * * *.
**227 * * * The
practical effect of these interpolations into the common law was to impound
firm assets and deprive the individual partners of any control over them except
in so far as they were dealing with them on behalf of the firm as a unit. The
individual partner's beneficial interests as a legal joint owner were trimmed
down so that he had nothing left save that the firm assets should be devoted to
the firm business, that he should share in any profits they produced and in the
surplus upon winding up, whether voluntary or by legal process. * * * The
Uniform Partnership Law codified this congeries of rights and obligations as it
had developed; and made no substantial change, when it declared in so many
words that ‘a partner's interest in the partnership is his share of the profits
and surplus.’ * * *
‘* * * For the reasons we have given,
the firm assets so used were encumbered with the trusts or charges which equity
had created, which deprived the individual partners of all but vestigial
beneficial interests in them. * * *'
In McClennen v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 1 Cir., 131 F.2d 165, 167-168, the court said:
‘In the absence of a
controlling agreement in the partnership articles the death of a partner
dissolves the partnership. The survivors have the right and duty, with
reasonable dispatch, to wind up the partnership affairs, to complete
transactions begun but not then finished, to collect the accounts receivable,
to pay the firm debts, to convert the remaining firm assets into cash, and to
pay in cash *913 to the partners and the legal representative of the
deceased partner the net amounts shown by the accounts to be owing to each of
them in respect of capital contributions and in respect of their shares of
profits and surplus. The representative of a deceased partner does not succeed
to any right to specific partnership property. In substance the deceased
partner's interest, to which his representative succeeds, is a chose in action,
a right to receive in cash the sum of money shown to be due him upon a liquidation
and accounting. These substantive results may be rationalized upon a theory of
the partnership ‘entity’. Cf. Learned Hand, J., in Re Samuels & Lesser,
D.C.S.D.N.Y.1913, 207 F. 195, 198. The same substantive results are reached
under the Uniform Partnership Act which, in form at least, proceeds on the
aggregate theory. See Crane, The Uniform Partnership Act-A Criticism, 28
Harv.L.Rev. 762 (1915). That act, which is law in Massachusetts, conceives of
the partner as a ‘co-owner with his partners of specific partnership property
holding as a tenant in partnership’; but provides that on the death of a
partner **228 ‘his right in specific partnership property vests in the
surviving partner or partners'. Another enumerated property right of a
partner, ‘his interest in the partnership’, is described as ‘his share of the
profits and surplus, and the same is personal property’, regardless of whether
the firm holds real estate or personalty or both. See Mass.G.L. (1932 Ed.) c.
108A, § § 24, 25 and 26; see also § § 30, 33, 37, 38(1), 40, 43.
‘This chose in action to
which the representative of the deceased partner succeeds, the right to receive
payment of a sum of money shown to be due upon a liquidation and accounting, is
of course a part of the deceased partner's wealth, and includable in the
decedent's gross estate for purposes of computing the estate tax by virtue of
the comprehensive definition in § 302 of the Revenue Act of 1926 * * *.'
There has been much
confusion, and some apparent inconsistency, in the courts of this State as to
when, to what extent, and for what purposes, a partner's interest in specific
partnership property is to be considered realty or personalty. This question
need not confound us, since such interest has been so circumscribed and
restricted that it is not worth taxing (it goes to the surviving partners
anyway-Partnership Law, sec. 51(2)(d)) and, whatever may have been the
situation in In Re McKinlay's Estate, 166 N.Y.S. 1081 (1917), clearly it is not
what is taxed today. The Uniform Partnership Law (sections 24, 25 and 26-in
New York sections 50, 51 and 52) makes this obvious *914 if it
was not before. Salomon Bros. & Hutzler v. Pedrick, D.C.N.Y., 105 F.Supp.
210; La Russo v. Paladino, Sup., 109 N.Y.S.2d 627 aff'd. 280 App.Div. (2nd
Dept.) 988, 116 N.Y.S.2d 617, app. den. 281 App.Div. 753, 118 N.Y.S.2d 557.
What is taxed is the partner's interest in the partnership. In fact, the
attorneys for the estate herein recognized that implicitly when they labeled
item 4 of Schedule F as ‘Interest in Partnerships'. The McKinlay case has
never been cited in any reported New York case.
Lending support to the State
Tax Commission's position herein are Lynch v. Kentucky Tax Commission (Ky.),
333 S.W.2d 258; Wootten v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, 185 Okl. 259; and Re
Ostler's Estate, 4 Utah 2d 47, 286 P.2d 796.
It might be argued that as
some of this real estate is located in Florida, the law of that State would
determine what, if any, direct interest a partner would have in it. Florida
has not adopted the Uniform Partnership Law. Aside from the fact that the
present common law of New York on this subject (which in the absence of proof
of the law of Florida would be assumed to be
the law there), is probably the same as under the act, the real question is not
what the partner has in a given instance, such as the present one, but what is taxed,
and that is a **229 matter of New York law (on which the question of
what the partner has, in the average case, is instructive).
So the apparent
inconsistency in many cases, and the real inconsistency in a few (of which the
McKinlay case may be one), is due largely to a confusion of the different
property rights involved, as they have changed over the course of time. This
confusion, to which few seem to be immune, is illustrated by the citation by
the attorneys for the petitioner of 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 73, p. 513,
whereas it seems to this court that page 525 is more in point herein.
There has never been any
question, however, about the fact that a partner's ‘interest in the
partnership’ (compare the word ‘interest’ in section 52 with the word ‘rights'
in section 51), from the time when its separate existence became recognized, is
personal property. In this respect section 52 (section 26 of the uniform act)
is declaratory of the common law. Rossmoore v. Anderson, D.C.N.Y., 1 F.Supp.
35; State v. Elsbury, 63 Nev. 463, 175 P.2d 430, 169 A.L.R. 364; Savings &
Loan Corporation v. Bear, 155 Va. 312, 154 S.E. 829, 75 A.L.R. 980. Not only
is it personal property but it is intangible. Blodgett v. Silberman, 277 U.S.
1, 11, 48 S.Ct. 410, 414, 72 L.Ed. 749, 757; 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 85, p.
525.
In an illuminating analogy
to the history of partnerships, the Court of Appeals in Matter of Jones'
Estate, 172 N.Y. 575, 65 N.E. 570, 60 L.R.A. 476, decided in 1902 that a joint
stock association had become enough like *915 a corporation so that its
shares were personalty for New York estate tax purposes, irrespective of the
character of the property represented thereby, whether real or personal. The
real estate was local, but any interest of the decedent in real property would
have been exempt under the transfer tax statute in force at that time. The
Appellate Division, which was reversed, had stated (69 App.Div. 237, 239-240,
74 N.Y.S. 702, 704): ‘The interest of the associate in the association, or
partner in the copartnership property, is not a mere right of action to have
the property sold and the proceeds distributed, but the title to all the
property vests in the associates or partners as joint tenants.’ It also had said,
after speaking of a corporation as an artificial person (69 App.Div. p. 241, 74
N.Y.S. p. 705): ‘When we speak of a joint-stock company or copartnership,
however, there is no such artificial person created, in whom the title to the
property can vest; * * *.’ The Court of Appeals necessarily held that, as to a
joint stock association, these statements were not then the law.
Petitioner makes the point
that the Ohio real estate has already been taxed there. This is hard to
understand, since Ohio has adopted the Uniform Partnership Law and New York
would not do the same in the reverse situation. Allen v. Pfaltz & Bauer
Realty Co., Inc., 227 App.Div. 666, 236 N.Y.S. 210. However, it is not the
issue here. **230Blodgett v. Silberman, supra, at 277 U.S. page 10, 48
S.Ct. pages 413, 414, 75 A.L.R. 980. And double taxation is not necessarily
to be avoided by the courts. State Tax Commission v. Aldrich, 316 U.S. 174,
181, 62 S.Ct. 1008, 1011, 1012, 86 L.Ed. 1358, 1370.
Petitioner argues that
inasmuch as Mr. Justice Taft in the Blodgett case indicated at 277 U.S. page
11, 48 S.Ct. page 414, 75 A.L.R.2d 980 that the case of Darrow v. Calkins, 154
N.Y. 503, 49 N.E. 61, 48 L.R.A. 299, is still the law of New York, and inasmuch
as the McKinlay case followed the Darrow case, the McKinlay case must be the
law. Undoubtedly the McKinlay case was good law if a partner had an interest
such as is described there, and if that was what was taxed. But nowhere in the
Darrow case is the nature of a partner's interest in the partnership
discussed. And Mr. Justice Taft indicates clearly on pages 10 and 11 of 277
U.S., at pages 413, 414 of 48 S.Ct., 75 A.L.R. 980 that such interest is
personal property.
There remains the
constitutional issue. In a very real sense decedent had indirect interests in
the foreign realty, which interests are being taxed through the inclusion of
the realty in the partnership balance sheets. However, the Blodgett case,
supra, holds specifically that this is not unconstitutional.
Petition denied.