
    Matter of the Appeal from the Order Fixing, Determining and Assessing the Transfer Tax on the Estate of David F. Riemann, Deceased.
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, Erie County,
    
    
      February, 1904.)
    Transfer Tax—A Legacy in Lieu of Dower is a Taxable Transfer.
    A dower right is not subject to the transfer tax because it is not a transfer by will or intestacy, but a legacy in lieu of dower, when accepted, is a taxable transfer because the widow elects to accept the provision of the will and takes under it.
    Appeal from a decree assessing the tax under the transfer Tax Law.
    Godfrey M. Frohe, for appellant, Mary E. Riemann, widow of deceased; Thomas Penney, for State Comptroller.
   Marcus, S.

This is an appeal from thq decree assessing the tax under the Transfer Tax Law upon a legacy given under the will of said deceased to his widow, Mary E. Riemann, and from that portion of the order and determination made by the surrogate herein fixing, assessing and determining the transfer tax upon the property transferred to the appellant under and by virtue of the provisions of the will of said decedent; and brings up for review the sole question as to whether a legacy made in lieu of dower is a taxable transfer.

A dower right is an interest in real estate not subject to a tax, to the testator’s disposition, and is, therefore, not a transfer of, or a succession to, property of her husband. It is property which exists incohoately during her husband’s lifetime and passees to the widow regardless of the laws governing the¡ disposition of the property of a decedent by will or under the laws applicable to intestacy.

It is, therefore, argued that to assess and tax against her the property accepted by the widow from her husband in his will in lieu of dower would, in effect, be taxing her dower as a taxable transfer.

It is further urged that the testamentary provisions made for the benefit of the appellant having been made and accepted for and in consideration of the relinquishment of the appellant’s dower in thei lands of which her husband died seized, should be the subject of taxation, not in her hands, but in the hands of those receiving the lands, at least to the extent of the value of the appellant’s dower in the lands at the time of her husband’s death, and that the provisions accepted by her must be regarded: as a consideration for the sale by her of her dower rights; and the immediate effect, of the testator’s action in making this provision conditional upon their acceptance in lieu of the appellant’s dower, would be, in ease of her acceptance of the provisions, forthwith to free the lands from her dower; that to the ejxtent of the value of her dower in her husband’s lands the widow has by the acceptance of the testamentary provisions made for her benefit merely received her dower in a gross sum, and to that extent, not she, hut those getting the lands,, have succeeded to the property of the decedent.

It might be said, further, that, when dower has been relinquished, the lands passing under the will of the) decedent have thereby immediately and proportionately to that extent enhanced in value, and it must be assumed that the appraiser in fixing the value of lands has taken into consideration the question of the relinquishment of the widow’s dower as bearing upon the value of the lands transferred by the deceased, since transfer taxes are imposed upon the clear market value of ■ the lands transferred. What the market value of the property is depends of course not alone upon its location, character and purpose hut also on matters relating to the owner’s title and to outstanding interests, liens and incumbrances; therefore, the clear market value of the land is certainly greater, free from dower, than when the same is subject to it; and that the measure of the right subject to taxation in the hands of the appellant should be the value of the testamentary provisions accepted by her in lieu of her dower, minus the value of her dower.

Along such lines it might be urged that the same liberality should be extended to widows, when they elect between their dower and a legacy, that is extended to executors and trustees by section 227 of the Transfer Tax Act, which reads as follows:

“ If a testator bequeathes or devises property to one or more executors and trustees in lieu of their commissions or allowances, or makes them his legatees to an amount exceeding the commissions or allowances prescribed by law for an executor or trustee, the excess in value of the property se bequeathed or devised, above the amount of commissions or allowances prescribed by law in similar cases shall be taxable under this article.”

A strong, equitable argument can be made in favor of giving to a dower right immunity from the tax, but the statute does not bear this out; neither does the application of legal principles as applied to this question sustain such contention. It must, therefore, be for the Legislature to give thei immunity and not the court.

In Matter of Gould, 156 N. Y. 423, the principle is broadly stated, viz.: It matters not what the motive of the transfer by will may be, whether to pay a debt, discharge some moral obligation, or benefit a relative for whom the testator entertains a strong affection, if the devise or bequest be accepted, by the beneficiary, the transfer is made by will, and the State by the statute in question makes a tax to impinge upon that performance.”

This case must, therefore, be authority that the appellant could have refused to accept the legacy given to her in lieu of dower under the will, in which event, whatever the value of dower may have been, it could not have been taxable under the Transfer Tax Act, since it would not be a transfer by will; but the moment the appellant accepted the provision under the will in lieu of her dower, a tax under and by virtue of the Transfer Tax Act immediately attached upon that performance, and by her acceptance of the legacy for her dower she released all claim to her dower and to every right which she would have under the same.  