
    In the Matter of the Estate of Mary Howe, Deceased.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed January 15, 1889.)
    
    1. Collateral inheritance tax law—When Laws 1885, chap. 483, took EFFECT.
    The collateral inheritance tax law of 1885, which was passed June 10, 1885, went into effect on June 30, 1885, twenty days after its passage, and no tax was payable on property which passed by will before that day.
    2. Same—Construction of—Limitation of tax to estate over $500 apLIES TO PORTION TO GO TO BENEFICIARY.
    The limitation of the tax to estates of more than $500 value applies to the portion of property passing to the legatee or devisee, and not to the whole estate left by the testator.
    Appeal from an order of the supreme court, general term, fourth department, reversing a decree of the surrogate of Tompkins county.
    
      Mr. Tabor, attorney ¿general, for app’lts; Newman & McLachlan, for resp’t.
    
      
       Affirming 16 N. Y. State Rep., 555.
    
   Danforth, J.

The record shows that Mary Howe died on the 16th of June, 1885, leaving property of more than $20,000 in value and a will by which she devised it in different proportions to various persons, giving, among others, to Myra Taylor a legacy of less than $500.

So far as is material to this appeal, two questions were presented to the surrogate:

First. Whether any of the property which passed by the will was subject to the tax imposed by the “act to tax gifts, legacies and collateral inheritances in certain cases.” Laws of 1885', chap. 483.

Second. And if any, whether the legacy to Myra Taylor was liable to taxation under that act.

The surrogate answered both questions in the affirmative. Upon appeal the general term were of a different opinion upon the first point and found it unnecessary to pass upon the other.

The act was passed June 10, 1885, and declared that 41 after the passage of this act all property which shall pass by will,” etc., to any person, etc., other than the father or certain other excepted persons, “shall be subject to a tax of five dollars of every hundred dollars of the clear" market value of such property, provided that an estate which may be valued at a less sum than $500 shall not be subject to such duty or tax.” In the absence of any other provision, this act would have taken effect from its date, that being the time when, according to the certificate of the secretary of state, the bill became a law (1 R. S., page 157, tit. 4, part 1, chap. 7, § 2), biit the words “after the passage of this act” are no more significant than the word “hereafter,” and the general provision of the Revised Statutes (id., § 12), “of the enactment and promulgation of statutes and of the time from which they take effect,” declares that “every law, unless a different time shall be prescribed therein, shall commence, and take effect, throughout the state on and not before the twentieth.day after the day of its final passage, as certified by the secretary of state.”

The provisions of this section governed the statute in question. It follows that as the act itself could not take effect within twenty days after its passage, or until the thirtieth day of June, the clause relied upon by the appellant was necessarily inoperative until that time. It commenced, therefore, on the twentieth day after its passage, and as the property in question passed by the will before that day, no tax was payable upon it.

The remaining inquiry is as to its meaning) as respects the $500 limitation. We think that applies to the portion of property passing to the legatee or devisee, and not to the whole estate left by the testator. The tax is not imposed upon the estate of which she was seized or possessed, but only upon so much of it as passes to certain persons; not all persons or any person, and although the executor is required to pay the tax, he is to deduct it from the particular legacy, and cannot “ deliver, or be compelled to deliver, any specific legacy or property, subject to tax, to any person until he shall have collected the tax thereon.” Section 6.

There are many other provisions of the act requiring the same construction, all tending to show that in the matter of taxation it is simply the “estate,” or share of the beneficiary acquired through the will or the statute of distributions, which is to be valued and the duty estimated according to its value.

The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.  