Moss v. Edwards
Moss v. Edwards
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court iras delivered by
John L. Foote, at the time of his decease, November 10th, 190G, was a resident of the State of Connecticut, and possessed of one hundred shares of the capital stock of Warren Railroad Compaq, a New Jersey corporation. He died intestate. By' the laws of distribution of the State of Connecticut, the said shares passed to a nephew and certain grandnephews" and grandnieces of the deceased, who were his only heirs and next of kin. The defendant, the comptroller of the State of New Jersey, under an act entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to tax intestates estates, gifts, legacies, devises and collateral inheritance in certain cases,’ approved May 15th, 1894” (Pamph. L. 1906, p. 432), assessed a transfer tax upon said property to be so distributed under the law of Connecticut.
It is conceded that if the stock had passed by will, it would
In Dixon v. Russell, Mr. Chief Justice Gummere, in delivering the opinion of the Court of Errors and Appeals, on page 491, said: “In the case of Neilson v. Russell, 47 Vroom 655, we were called upon to determine the scope of the original act which is amended by the statute of 1906, so far as it dealt with legacies. We reached the conclusion that its purpose was to impose legacy duties and not transfer or succession taxes; that it was not intended to, and did not, reach legacies, the validity and amount of which were required to be determined by the laws of a foreign jurisdiction. * * * We .further expressed the opinion (perhaps unnecessarily) that even if we had considered the imposition provided by the statute to be a succession tax, and not a legacy duty, we would have reached the same conclusion, i. e., that it was not intended by the statute that a tax should be imposed upon the singular succession of the legatee of a foreign testator, even though the subject of the legacy was shares of stock of a !\ew Jersey corporation.”.
The fact that the succession is by virtue of the intestate laws, and noi by will, is wholly immaterial and does not admit of the application of any different principle than that applied hv the Court of Errors and Appeals lo succession by will.
The assessment is invalid and must he set aside.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.