Court Opinion

ID: 8780588
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:16:52.385647+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:48.837629
License: Public Domain

WARD, Circuit Judge.
The question in this case is whether the dower right of Mary Adelaide Yerkes, widow of Charles T. Yerkes, should be charged with any part of the unpaid taxes which were a lien upon his real estate.
*680Reference may be had to 169 Fed. 671 for the circumstances whicK led this court to appoint a receiver for the preservation of the decedent’s estate April 5, 1909. Many controversies existed between the widow on one hand and the executors and the heirs of the decedent on the other. To settle them an agreement was entered into November 11, 1909, which established Mr. Yerkes’ title to the real estate at the time of his death, December 29, 1905, as against the widow’s claim of title thereto, and provided that the gross money value of her dower should be calculated in accordance with the mortality tables at the date of valuation and be paid to her out of the proceeds of sale of the real estate to be sold by the receiver under a decree of this court and the balance to the executor for payment of creditors of the estate.
The material provisions of the agreement upon this subject are the following:
“ * * * And the parties further consent that said gross sum shall be the amount that a person of the age of forty-eight years at the time of the admeasurement would be entitled to receive thereunder; -and shall be ad-measured as of that date; and such gross sum shall be paid forthwith, without interest thereon, and without damages foT detention or costs taxed against any party to this agreement, but the disbursements of such proceeding may be paid out of the proceeds of the sale in such manner as the court may direct.” (Article 3.)
“It is understood and agreed that the widow shall be permitted, during the receivership in the suit of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London, Limited, against Owsley, to continue to occupy the premises at the southeast comer of Sixty-Eighth street and Fifth avenue and the stable hereinbefore referred to without rent or other charge therefor for any period smce the death of said Charles T. Yerkes, subject to the possession of the receiver in said suit, until a sale thereof shall have been made as herein provided. * * * ” (Article 10.)
Thereafter and subsequent to the time the taxes became a lien the widow’s dower was fixed as 20.18 per cent, of the proceeds of sale of the premises. They were sold by the receiver, the taxes paid out of the proceeds of sale to> the amount of $191,379.57, and a further sum equal to 20.18 per cent, thereof was reserved in addition in the hands of the receiver, subject to the future determination of this court as to what portion thereof, if any, should be paid to the widow in settlement of her dower. In New York City taxes on real estate are not required to be assessed against the owner (section 894, Greater New York Charter [Laws 1901, c. 466]), and they “continue to be until paid a lien thereon and shall be preferred in payment to all other charges.” Section 1017. The only effect of omitting the real owner’s name or of assessing in the name of one not the owner is to confine the city’s remedy to a lien upon the land. Haight v. Mayor, 99 N. Y. 280, 1 N. E. 883. Section 2719 of the New York Code of Civil Procedure makes it the duty of the executor to pay “taxes assessed on the property of the deceased previous to his death” next after debts entitled to a preference under .the laws of the United States and before all other claims.
[ 1 ] The premises were assessed for the years 1903, 1904, and 1905, before the death of Mr. Yerkes, in the name of Mary Adelaide Yerkes. As the settlement agreement and the decree of sale in pursuance thereof determine that Charles T. Yerkes, and not Mary Adelaide Yerkes, was then the owner, the taxes were not assessed against the rightful *681owner, there was no personal liability for them on his part, and the city’s right -was restricted to á lien. The executor cites Krueger v. Schlinger, 19 Misc. Rep. 221, 43 N. Y. Supp. 305, and Lauby v. Gill, 42 Misc. Rep. 334, 86 N. Y. Supp. 718, in which it was held that the taxes mentioned in section 2719 are such as were personally owed by the decedent. The Court of Appeals, however, makes no such distinction, but applies the provision to all taxes assessed against the premises before the decedent’s death. In Matter of Gill, 199 N. Y. 155, 92 N. E. 390, Cullen, C. J., saying at page 159:
“Nor is it necessary to inauire whether in Brooklyn at the time of the imposition of these taxes t,v'y constituted a personal charge against the testator or not. Throughout .'.11 the state, in the case of a tax against the lands of a nonresident, no personal charge is created against any person, hut simply a lien on the land. The command of the statute, however, is imperative, and executors and administrators must pay out of the personalty all taxes on the property of the deceased. Therefore the liability of the appellant as devisee of the real estate was not primary, but only secondary.’’
It follows that the executors of the widow (who has since died) are entitled to 20.18 per cent, of the taxes paid for these years, with any interest that has accrued on the same while in the receiver’s hands.
[2J The will gave the widow a life estate in the premises in question, and she did remain in possession after the death of the decedent, December 29, 1905, until May 14, 1907, when she claimed against the will.
During this interval the premises were assessed for taxes in 1906 and 1907 in her name as owner, and, if she was in possession as life tenant under the will, she would be responsible for the taxes of those years, as the executor contends.
[3] But there is nothing to show whether she occupied under the will or under her claim of title, and I think the effect of the settlement agreement was to wipe out claims of every nature against her for occupation during this period.
[4] Therefore we have to consider the taxes for 1906, 1907, 1908, and 1909 after the death of Mr. Yerkes, without reference to her occupation. They were assessed against some of the premises as owned by Mary Adelaide Yerkes and against others as owned by Charles T. Yerkes. In neither case was there any personal liability, because under the settlement agreement and decree Mrs. Yerkes was not the owner during any of this period, and Mr. Yerkes was dead. Consequently for these taxes there was no liability except of the land by virtue of the city’s paramount lien. If the premises had gone into the possession of heirs or devisees, they would have been liable as between them and the widow for taxes assessed during their occupation. But the controversy is entirely between the executor on behalf of creditors and the widow. He neither owned nor occupied the premises, and it is established by the settlement agreement that she never owned them, is in no way chargeable because of occupation, and that her dower is to be valued of a date after the taxes had become a lien. The land owed the taxes and the land actually paid them. I think the widow’s interest was subject to the lien of the taxes, and therefore the per*682centage retained for these years, with any accrued interest, must go to the executor of Charles T. Yerlces.
It was understood between the parties and the court that this question should be determined within two weeks after the sale of the premises, but because of the delay of the parties the receiver has incurred an indebtedness for another annual premium on his bond to the amount of $125 for payment of which he has no other funds in hk hands than the one now being distributed. This charge must be paid first, and the balance distributed in accordance with this opinion.