
    Matter of the Estate of Jennie A. Valentine, Deceased.
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, New York County,
    
    
      December, 1914.)
    Taxes—Assessment of Transfer Tax—Jurisdiction of Surrogate to Assess Transfer Tax—Tax Law, § 231.
    The jurisdiction of the surrogate to assess a transfer tax is derived from section 231 of the Tax Law which provides that from the report of the appraiser and other proof the surrogate shall determine the cash value of all estates and the tax to which the same are liable.
    The surrogate having made the assessment in accordance with the statute is not authorized to determine what the tax would be upon the transpiring of certain events or the happening of certain contingencies.
    A provision in a proposed order for an assessment of the transfer tax that “ the total amount of the tax to which all the said transfers would be liable if the interest in the remainder had vested in possession on the date of the appraisal thereof is ” a certain amount, is unauthorized and will not be included in the order.
    Order on transfer tax appraisal.
    Jones, Bleecker & Tuekerman, for executors.
    Edward F. Boyle, for State Comptroller.
   Fowler, S.

One part of the order submitted herein provides for the assessment of the transfer tax in accordance with the decision of the Court of Appeals in Matter of Zborowski. At the end of that part of the order is a paragraph which orders that the total amount of the tax to which all the said transfers would be liable if the interests in remainder had vested in possession on the date of the appraisal thereof is $3,289.79.” It seems to be assumed that the surrogate is empowered to determine what may be due to the State in certain contingencies which may never arise, or to guess at the most remote probabilities by some method of variations such as those considered by actuaries on mathematical principles. I can find no warrant in the law for such a procedure on the part of the surrogate. I doubt if a judicial officer cold be compelled to ■ decide such abstractions. The jurisdiction of the surrogate to assess a transfer tax is derived from section 231 of the Tax Law. That section provides that from the report of the appraiser and other proof relating to an estate the surrogate shall determine the cash value of all estates and the tax to which the same are liable. The surrogate must assess the tax in accordance with the provisions of the statute, and, having made the assessment, he has not authority to determine what the tax would be upon the transpiring of certain events or the happening of certain contingencies. Section 230 provides that upon the happening of the contingency mentioned in the will the surrogate may, upon the application of an interested party, modify the order fixing tax so as to make it conform to the actual devolution of the property. Section 241 prescribes the duties of the State Comptroller in regard to tax paid at the highest rate, but it does not extend the jurisdiction of the surrogate as a taxing officer. It would appear, therefore, that the surrogate must assess the tax in the manner prescribed by the Tax Law, and that he has no jurisdiction to determine what the tax would be if the property vested at a particular time or passed upon the happening of certain contingencies. I cannot, therefore, include in the taxing order the last paragraph of the proposed order.

Decreed accordingly.  