
    Matter of the Estate of Alexander Thompson, Deceased.
    (Surrogate’s Court, New York County,
    April, 1914.)
    T'axes — transfer tax — what constitutes a part of decedent’s estate — moneys deposited in various banks — unrecorded assignment of bond and mortgage subject to transfer tax — value of dower when deducted from appraised value of property upon assessment of transfer tax.
    A deposit of money in a savings bank in trust for another creates a tentative trust which is revoked by the death of the cestui que trust during the lifetime of the trustee, and the money constitutes no part of decedent’s estate.
    Where it appears that the entire amount on deposit in various banks to the credit of a decedent and his wife, at the date of his death, consisted of money which belonged to him and also money which was her individual property, it will be presumed in the absence of evidence as to how much of the deposit belonged to each that each owned one-half of the money, and decedent’s part which passed to his legatees was subject to a transfer tax.
    In a transfer tax proceeding it appeared that certain bonds and mortgages were executed to decedent and his wife. His daughter, who submitted to the appraiser an affidavit that the money loaned on said securities belonged to decedent’s wife, testified that said money belonged to decedent. Held, that the court would assume that her testimony was correct as it was least advantageous to her.
    
      Assuming that the securities were all purchased with the money of decedent, it would be presumed in the absence of testimony of a gift inter vivos of the securities to decedent’s wife that they were his, that he intended to give her the right of survivorship and that they passed to her at his death and were subject to a transfer tax as a gift intended to take effect after death.
    Where decedent assigned certain bonds and mortgages executed to him individually, to himself and wife, but the assignments were not recorded until after his death, and the daughter testified that it was his money which was .loaned on said securities, it will be presumed that decedent intended to confer the right of survivorship upon his wife, and such gift to her is therefore subject to a transfer tax.
    Where decedent, an old man in failing health, died nine days after the execution of a deed of real estate from himself to himself and wife as joint tenants, the appraiser properly held that the property passed to the wife as a gift in contemplation of death, but the value of her dower should be deducted from the appraised value of the property upon an assessment of the transfer tax.
    Appeal from an order fixing and assessing the transfer tax.
    Lawrence E. French (Clarence C. Fowler, of counsel), for Mary C. Thompson, appellant'.
    Thomas E. Ensh (Thomas A. S. Beattie, of counsel), for State Comptroller, respondent.
   Fowler, S.

The executrix of the estate of decedent appeals from the order fixing tax, and alleges that the appraiser erred in his findings as to the ownership of certain property mentioned in the report, its distribution among the legatees mentioned in decedent’s will and its taxation under the Transfer Tax Law.

The decedent was a resident of New York. He died on the 6th of February, 1911. Among the assets in-eluded in the appraiser’s report is the sum of $2,167.89 on deposit in the Eastchester Savings Bank. The bank-book evidencing this deposit was indorsed “ M. Celia Thompson, in trust for Alexander Thompson.” M. Celia Thompson is the daughter of the decedent. There is no evidence as to the ownership of the money which was deposited in the bank, and in the absence of such proof it will be presumed that the money belonged to the depositor. The deposit of the money in the particular form above indicated created a tentative trust in favor of Alexander Thompson, deceased, but the trust was revoked by the death of the cestui que trust during the life of the trustee. Matter of United States Trust Co., 117 App. Div. 178 ; affd., 189 N. Y. 500. This money therefore did not constitute any part of decedent’s estate and should not have been included in the taxable assets thereof.

The decedent and his wife had accounts in various banks. The pass-books issued by the banks bore the following indorsement: “Alexander Thompson or Mary E. Thompson.” Mary E. Thompson was decedent’s wife. The entire deposits amounted to the sum of $13,280.82. The appraiser included this amount in the taxable assets of decedent’s estate. The only evidence contained in the record as to the ownership of the money at the time it was deposited in the various banks is that supplied by M. Celia Thompson, the daughter of decedent. In her affidavit she alleges that the decedent was in the trucking and monument setting business, and that at various times he gave to Mary E. Thompson, his wife, a part of the profits resulting from the operation of his business; that the money so given to his wife, as well as some of his own money, was deposited by her "in the various banks, and that the entire amount deposited in the banks above mentioned consisted of money which belonged to the decedent and money which was the individual property of his wife. The evidence, however, does not show how much of the deposits belonged to the decedent and how much to his wife. In the absence of such evidence it will be presumed that one-half of the money so deposited belonged to the decedent and one-half to his wife. Wetherow v. Lord, 41 App. Div. 413 ; Matter of Wilkens, 144 id. 803. While the decedent and Ms wife could by agreement between themselves have created a right of survivorship in the deposits, the record contains no evidence of such an agreement, and in the absence of such proof it will not be presumed that the depositors intended that the entire amount on deposit at the death of either should go to the survivor. Matter of Albrecht, 136 N. Y. 91 ; Matter of Kaupper, 141 App. Div. 54. Therefore one-half of the amount on deposit in the savings banks at the date of decedent’s death passed to his legatees under the provisions of Ms will and is subject to a transfer tax. The other half belonged to decedent’s wife and should not be included in the taxable assets of decedent’s estate.

The decedent and his wife were the owners of certMn bonds and mortgages amounting to $38,900. The bonds and mortgages were executed to “Alexander Thompson and Mary E. Thompson, his wife.” M. Celia Thompson submitted to the appraiser an affidavit in which she alleged that the moneys which were loaned on these bonds and mortgages belonged to Mary E. Thompson; but when deponent was examined before the appraiser she testified that all the money loaned, and for the payment of which the bonds and mortgages were given, belonged to her father, the decedent herein. The affidavit submitted to the appraiser was evidently prepared by the attorney for the executrix, and therefore the allegations therein contained . are not entitled to the same probative force as the direct testimony of the deponent. "When she testified before the appraiser her answers to the questions propounded to her were in her own words, the language was her own, and she evidently testified to the facts from her own knowledge and without the adventitious aid of counsel. As she was an interested witness the court will assume the correctness of the evidence that is least advantageous to her. Assuming, therefore, that the bonds and mortgages were all purchased with money which belonged to the decedent, it will be presumed, in the absence of evidence of a gift inter vivos of the bonds and mortgages to decedent’s wife, that they belonged to him during his life, that he intended to give his wife the right of survivorship, and that as she survived him they passed to her upon his death. West v. McCullough, 123 App. Div. 846 ; affd., 194 N. Y. 518. They are therefore taxable as a gift intended to take effect at or after death.

The decedent assigned to himself and his wife two bonds and mortgages amounting to $3,500. These bonds were originally executed in favor of the decedent individually. In 1905 he assigned them to himself and his wife, but the assignment was not recorded until after his death. The daughter of decedent testified that it was his money which was loaned on these bonds and mortgages. It will be presumed, therefore, that by assigning these bonds and mortgages to himself and his wife he intended to confer upon her the right of survivorship. As the gift took effect in possession and enjoyment upon decedent’s death it is taxable under the provisions of the Transfer Tax Act.

While as original questions I might have had some doubt, in view of the law relating to tenancies by entireties, which has been extended to personal property, held by husband and wife simpliciter, yet I am bound to follow the decisions of the Appellate Division which seem to me to be decisive.

On the 26th of January, 1911, the decedent executed certain deeds by which he transferred to himself and his wife as joint tenants certain real estate of which he was then seized. The value of this real estate is about $67,000. The appraiser reported that the value of this real estate was taxable against decedent’s widow.

At the time the decedent executed these deeds lie was nearly seventy-nine years old. He had broken his shoulder in August, 1910, and was confined to his bed for several weeks thereafter. On the 24th of December, 1910, he had an attack of la grippe and suffered from that disease for about two weeks. He sent for his attorney and asked him to prepare papers which would convey his real estate from Mm individually to Mmself and his wife as joint tenants. He said that the conveyance which he had instructed Ms attorney to prepare was so that his wife would take the property when he died.” On the 26th day of January, 1911, he executed the deeds, and on the 28th his attending physician said that he was suffering from pneumonia. He died nine days thereafter. The decedent at the time he executed the deeds had arrived at an age when the possibility of his early demise must have presented itself forcibly to his mind. His advanced age and failing health must necessarily have suggested to him that under the inexorable law of nature which governs and controls human existence upon this planet his corporal dissolution must inevitably occur within a comparatively short period of time. The suffering caused by the broken shoulder rendered him feeble and debilitated, and when this condition was aggravated by two weeks of la grippe it is easy to understand that he could have but little hope of prolonging his life for any extended period. It was at this time that he executed the deeds, and all the circumstances surrounding their execution seem to lead irresistibly to the conclusion that he made the conveyances in contemplation of death. This conclusion receives additional force from the fact that he died nine days after the execution of the deeds. Matter of Birdsall, 22 Misc. Rep. 180 ; affd., 43 App. Div. 624 ; Matter of Price, 62 Misc. Rep. 149 ; Matter of Palmer, 117 App. Div. 360. The appraiser, therefore, was correct in holding that this property passed to the decedent’s wife as a gift in contemplation of death. But as she was entitled to her dower in the real estate so conveyed, the value of such dower should be deducted from the appraised value of the real estate.

That part of the real estate described as parcel 1, which was conveyed to the decedent and his wife at the time of its purchase, was held by them as tenants by the entirety. Therefore she took this parcel upon the decedent’s death by virtue of her right as such tenant by the entirety, and not as a gift made by the decedent to her. It is, therefore, not subject to a transfer tax.

The order fixing tax will be reversed and the appraiser’s report remitted to him for correction as indicated.

Order reversed.  