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"A tax shall be assessed on the transfer of, 018.43. Following the statute, the tax was

#533 property made *subject to tax as aforesaid, in this state of a nonresident decedent if all or

any part of the estate of such decedent, wherever situated, shall pass to persons or corporations taxable under this act, which tax shall bear the same ratio to the entire tax which the said estate would have been subject to under this act if such nonresident decedent had

been a resident of this state, and all his prop

erty, real and personal, had been located within this state, as such taxable property within this state bears to the entire estate, wherever situated: Provided, that nothing in this clause contained shall apply to any specific bequest or devise of any property in this state."

An amendatory act, approved April 23, 1915 (P. L. 1915, p. 745; 1 Supp. Comp. Stat. N. J. p. 1542), repeated the provision last quoted, and made no change in the act pertinent to the questions here presented.

first ascertained on the entire estate as if it were the estate of a resident of the state of New Jersey, with all the decedent's property both real and personal located there; the tax was then apportioned and assessed in the proportion that the taxable New Jersey estate bore to the entire estate.

the apportionment formula fixed by the statThe thing complained of is that applying ute, in the cases under review, results in a greater tax on the transfer of property of the estates subject to the jurisdiction of New Jersey, than would be assessed for the transfer of an equal amount, in a similar manner, of property of a decedent who died a resident of New Jersey. The cause of this inequality is said to arise because of imposing the graduated tax, provided by the statute, upon estates so large as these. If a resident, in the case of a wife or children, the first $5.

It is this method of assessment in the case of nonresident decedents which is the subject-000 of property is exempt, the next $45,000 matter in controversy.

James McDonald died January 13, 1915, owning stock in the Standard Oil Company, a New Jersey corporation, valued at $1,114,965, leaving an entire estate of $3,969,333.25, which included some real estate in the state of Idaho. Of the entire estate, $279,813.17 went to pay debts and expenses of administration. Mr. McDonald was a citizen of the United States and a resident of the District of Columbia, and left a will and a codicil which were admitted to probate by the Supreme Court of that District. The executors are Lawrence Maxwell, a citizen of Ohio, and the Fulton Trust Company, a New York corporation. The principal beneficiaries under the will are citizens and residents of states of the United States other than the state of New Jersey. Under the will the wife takes by specific legacies; the other beneficiaries are specific and general legatees not related to the deceased and a son and two grandchildren, who take the residuary estate.

James J. Hill died May 29, 1916, intestate,

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a resident *and citizen of the state of Minnesota, leaving a widow and nine children. Under the laws of Minnesota, the widow inherited one-third of the real estate and personal property, and each of the children two twenty-sevenths thereof. The entire estate descending amounted to $53,814,762, which included real estate located outside of New Jersey, and principally in Minnesota and New York, valued at $1,885,120. The only property the transfer of which was subject to taxation in New Jersey was stock in the Northern Securities Company, a New Jersey corporation, valued at $2,317,564.68. The debts and administration expenses amounted to $757,571.20.

The amount of the assessment in the McDonald Case was $29,071.68. In the Hill Case the tax assessed amounted to $67,

is taxed at the rate of 1 per cent., the next $100,000 at the rate of 12 per cent., the next $100,000 at the rate of 2 per cent., and the remainder at the rate of 3 per cent. The contention is that, applying the apportionment rule provided in the case of nonresident estates, a larger amount of tax is assessed.

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*The correctness of the figures deduced from the application of the statute as made by the counsel for plaintiff in error is contested, but in our view the differences are unimportant, unless the state is bound to apply the same rule to the transmission of both classes of estates.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error sum up their objections to the statute, based on the federal Constitution, as follows:

(1) It taxes the estates of nonresidents more than those of residents, and therefore gives to residents privileges and immunities denied to nonresidents.

(2) It provides for a tax which bears unequally, and therefore is not imposed upon a uniform rule, and it therefore denies to nonresidents the equal protection of the laws.

(3) It taxes the transfer of a nonresident's property over which the state of New Jersey has no jurisdiction while it expressly omits like property of residents, that is, real estate without the state, and thereby deprives the nonresident of his property without due process of law.

[1] Before taking up these objections it is necessary to briefly consider the nature of the tax. In Carr v. Edwards, 84 N. J. Law, 667, 87 Atl. 132, it was held by the New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals to be a tax upon the special right, the creation of the statute, of an executor or administrator of a nonresident decedent to succeed to property having its situs in New Jersey. Of section 12, as it stood in the original act of 1909, the court said:

(40 Sup.Ct.)

"That section contains nothing to indicate that other states the privileges and immunities it is not the succession of the New Jersey rep-granted to citizens of the state of New Jerresentative that is meant to be taxed. It is sey, in violation of paragraph 1, § 2, art. 4, of true that the tax is not necessarily 5 per cent. the federal Constitution, which reads, "The upon the whole New Jersey succession. The amount depends on the ratio of the New Jersey Citizens of each state shall be entitled to all property to the entire estate wherever situated. privileges and immunities of citizens in the This, however, merely affords a measure of the several states;" (b) abridges the privileges tax imposed; the tax is still by the very words and immunities of plaintiffs in error, the deof the section imposed upon the property located ceased persons whom they represent, and within this state. The reason for adopting this those taking by will or intestacy under them, provision was to make sure that the rate of taxas citizens of the United States, in contra*536 vention of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment.

ation in case of nonresident decedents *should equal but not exceed the rate imposed in the case of resident decedents.

"In the case of the estates of nonresident decedents, it is open for the law of the domicile to provide, as testators sometimes do, that such taxes shall be a general charge against the estate. Our Legislature must be assumed to

have had in mind its lack of jurisdiction over legacies under a nonresident's will, and in order to protect the New Jersey executor, administrator or trustee who paid the tax, authorized its deduction from 'property for distribution.' This phrase suffices to reach not only a distributive share of a resident's estate in the case of intestacy, but the whole of the New Jersey property of a nonresident when turned over to the executor or administrator at the domicile of the decedent. The provision for both caseslegacies and property for distribution-demonstrates that the Legislature did not mean to provide, as counsel contends, for a legacy duty only."

This language correctly characterizes the nature and effect of the tax as imposed under the amendment of 1914; but that act, under which the present cases arise, instead of reaching "the whole of the New Jersey property of a nonresident when turned over to the executor or administrator at the domicile of the decedent," now confines the transfer tax upon the property of nonresident decedents to real estate and tangible personal property within the state, the stock of New Jersey corporations, and the stock of national banks located within the state.

The tax is, then, one upon the transfer of property in New Jersey, to be paid upon turning it over to the administrator or executor at the domicile of the decedent. That transfers of this nature are within the taxing power of the state, and that taxes may be assessed upon such rights owing their existence to local laws, and to them alone, is not disput. ed. The right to inherit property, or to receive it under testamentary disposition, has

*537

been so frequently held to be the creation of statutory law, that it is quite unnecessary to cite the decisions which have maintained the principle. While this is confessedly true, the assessment of such taxes is, of course, subject to applicable limitations of the state and federal Constitutions; it is with the latter class only that this court has to do.

[2-4] (1) Taking up, then, the objections raised under the federal Constitution, it is said that the law (a) denies to citizens of

The provision quoted from article 4 of the Constitution was intended to prevent discrimination by the several states against citizens of other states in respect of the fundamental privileges of citizenship. As is said by Judge Cooley in his Constitutional Limitations (7th Ed.) p. 569:

"It appears to be conceded that the Constitution secures in each state to the citizens of all other states the right to remove to, and carry on business therein; the right by the usual modes to acquire and hold property, and to protect and defend the same in the law; the right to the usual remedies for the collection of debts and the enforcement of other personal rights; and the right to be exempt, in property and person, from taxes or burdens which the property, or persons, of citizens of the same State are not subject to." Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, 180, 19 L. Ed. 357; Ward v. Maryland, 12 Wall. 418, 430, 20 L. Ed. 449.

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What those privileges and immunities were was under consideration in Slaughterhouse Cases, 16 Wall. 36, 72-79, 21 L. Ed. 394, where it was shown (16 Wall. 77, 78, 21 L. Ed. 394) that it was not the purpose of this amendment, by the declaration that no state should make or enforce any law which should abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, to transfer from the states to the federal government the security and protection of those civil rights that inhere in state citizenship; and (16 Wall. 79, 21 L. Ed. 394) that the privileges

and immunities of citizens of the United States thereby placed beyond abridgment by the states were those which owe their existence to the federal government, its national character, its constitution, or its laws. To the same effect is Duncan v. Missouri, 152 U. S. 377, 382, 14 Sup. Ct. 570, 38 L. Ed. 485.

We are unable to discover in the statute before us, which regulates and taxes the right to succeed to property in New Jersey upon the death of a nonresident owner, any infringement of the rights of citizenship ei

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ther of the states or of the United States, within its *jurisdiction in such a way as to

secured by either of the constitutional provisions referred to. We have held that the protection that they afford to rights inherent in citizenship are not infringed by the taxation or transfer of property within the jurisdiction of a state passing by will or intestacy, where the decedent was a nonresident of the taxing state, although the entire succession was taxed in the state where he resided. Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U. S. 189, 207, 23 Sup. Ct. 277, 47 L. Ed. 439.

[5] Upon this point it is unnecessary to decide whether the case might not be rested on a much narrower ground. The alleged discrimination, here complained of, so far as privileges and immunities of citizenship are concerned, is not strictly applicable to this statute, because the difference in the method *539

of taxation rests upon residence *and not upon citizenship. La Tourette v. McMaster, 248 U. S. 465, 39 Sup. Ct. 160, 63 L. Ed. 362.

[6] (2) It is next contended that the effect of including the property beyond the jurisdiction of the state in measuring the tax amounts to a deprivation of property without due process of law because it in effect taxes property beyond the jurisdiction of the state.

really amount to taxing that which is beyond its authority, that such exercise of power by the state is held void. In cases of that character the attempted taxation must fail. Looney v. Attorney General, 245 U. S. 178, 38 Sup. Ct. 85, 62 L. Ed. 230; International Paper Co. v. Massachusetts, 246 U. S. 135, 38 Sup. Ct. 292, 62 L. Ed. 624, Ann. Cas. 1918C, 617. To say that to apply a different rule regulating succession to resident and nonresident decedents is to levy a tax upon foreign estates, is to distort the statute from its purpose to tax the privilege, which the statute has created, into a property tax, and is unwarranted by any purpose or effect of the enactment, as we view it.

[7] (3) It is further contended that the tax bears so unequally upon nonresidents as to deny to them the equal protection of the laws.

The subject of taxes of this character was given full consideration by this court in Magoun v. Illinois, 170 U. S. 283, 18 Sup. Ct. 594, 42 L. Ed. 1037, in which case a graded legacy and inheritance tax law of the state of Illinois was sustained. The statute exempted all estates valued at less than $20,000, if passing to near relations, or at less than $500 if passing to those more remote, made the rate of tax increasingly greater as the inheritances increased, and assessed it differently according to the relationship of the beneficiary to the testator or intestate. The statute was attacked as void under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, but was held to be valid. Of this class of taxes the court said (170 U. S. 288, 18 Sup. Ct. 596, 42 L. Ed. 1037):

on property, but one on the succession. (2) The right to take property by devise or descent is the creature of the law, and not a natural right-a privilege, and therefore the authority which confers it may impose conditions upon it. From these principles it is deduced that the states may tax the privilege, discriminate between relatives, and between these and strangers, and grant exemptions, and are not precluded from

It is not to be disputed that, consistently with the federal Constitution, a state may not tax property beyond its territorial jurisdiction; but the subject-matter here regulated is a privilege to succeed to property which is within the jurisdiction of the state. When the state levies taxes within its authority, property not in itself taxable by the state may be used as a measure of the tax imposed. This principle has been frequently "They [inheritance taxes] are based on two declared by decisions of this court. The pre-principles: (1) An inheritance tax is not one vious cases were reviewed and the doctrine applied in Kansas City R. R. Co. v. Kansas, 240 U. S. 227, 232, 36 Sup. Ct. 261, 60 L. Ed. 617. After deciding that the privilege tax, there involved, did not impose a burden upon interstate commerce, this court held that it was not in substance and effect a tax upon property beyond the state's jurisdiction, although a large amount of the property, which was referred to as a measure of the assessment, was situated outside of the state. In the present case the state imposes a privilege tax, clearly within its authority, and it has adopted as a measure of that tax the proportion which the specified local property bears to the entire estate of the decedent. That it may do so, within limitations which do not really make the tax one upon property beyond its jurisdiction, the decisions to which we have referred clearly establish. The transfer of certain property within the state is taxed by a rule which considers the entire estate in arriving at the amount of the tax. It is in no just sense a tax upon the foreign property, real or personal. It is only in instances where the state exceeds its authority in imposing a tax upon a subject-matter

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this power by the provisions of the respective state Constitutions requiring uniformity and equality of taxation."

And upon examining (170 U. S. 296, 297, 18 Sup. Ct. 594, 42 L. Ed. 1037) the classification upon which the provisions of the Illinois statute were based, the court found there was no denial of the equal protection of the laws either in discriminating between those lineally and those collaterally related to decedent, and those standing as strangers to the blood, or in increasing the proportionate burden of the tax progressively as the amount of the benefit increased.

Equal protection of the laws requires equal operation of the laws upon all persons in like circumstances. Under the statute, in the present case, the graduated taxes are lev

(40 Sup.Ct.)

led equally upon all interests passing from nonresident testators or intestates. The tax is not upon property, but upon the privilege of succession, which the state may grant or withhold. It may deny it to some and give it to others. The state is dealing in this instance not with the transfer of the entire estate, but only with certain classes of property that are subject to the jurisdiction of the state. It must find some rule which will adequately deal with this situation. It has adopted that of the proportion of the local estate in certain property to the entire estate of the decedent. In making classification, which has been uniformly held to be within the power of the state, inequalities necessarily arise, for some classes are reached, and others omitted; but this has never been held to render such statutes unconstitutional. Beers v. Glynn, 211 U. S. 477, 29 Sup. Ct. 186, 53 L. Ed. 290. This principle has been recognized in a series of cases in Board of Education v. Illinois, 203 U. S. 553, 27 Sup. Ct. 171, 51 L. Ed. 314, 8 Ann. Cas. 157; Campbell v. California, 200

this court.

U. S. 87, 26 Sup. Ct. 182, 50 L. Ed. 382; Keeney v. Comptroller of the State of New York, 222 U. S. 525, 32 Sup. Ct. 105, 56 L. Ed. 299, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1139. It has been uniformly held that the Fourteenth Amendment does not leprive the states of the right

to determine the limitations and restrictions

upon the right to inherit property, but "at the

most can only be held to restrain such an #542

exercise of power as would *exclude the conception of judgment and discretion, and which would be so obviously arbitrary and unreasonable as to be beyond the pale of governmental authority." Campbell v. California, 200 U. S. 95, 26 Sup. Ct. 185, 50 L. Ed. 382. In upholding the validity of a graduated tax upon the transfer of personal property, to take effect upon the grantor's death, we said in Keeney v. Comptroller of New York, supra, 222 U. S. page 535, 32 Sup. Ct. 107, 56 L. Ed. 299, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1139:

"The validity of the tax must be determined by the laws of New York. The Fourteenth Amendment does not diminish the taxing power of the state, but only requires that in its exercise the citizen must be afforded an opportunity to be heard on all questions of liability and value, and shall not, by arbitrary and discriminatory provisions, be denied equal protection. It does not deprive the state of the power to select the subjects of taxation. But it does not follow that because it can tax any transfer (Hatch v. Reardon, 204 U. S. 152, 159 [27 Sup. Ct. 188, 51 L. Ed. 415, 9 Ann. Cas. 736]), that it must tax all transfers, or that all must be treated alike."

mate authority of the state. We are not prepared so to declare. The resident testator or intestate stands in a different relation to the state than does the nonresident. The resident's property is usually within the ready control of the state, and easily open to inspection and discovery for taxation purposes, by means quite different from those afforded in cases of local holdings of nonresident testators or intestates. As to the resident, his entire intangible, and usually most of his tangible property, pay tribute to the state when transferred by will or intestacy; the transfer of the nonresident's estate is taxed only so far as his estate is located within the jurisdiction and only so far as it comes within the description of "real proper543

state."

ty within this state, or of goods, wares, *and of stock of corporations of this state, or of merchandise within this state, or of shares national banking associations located in this Simple contract debts owing by New Jersey debtors to nonresidents and some other kinds of property of nonresidents the purpose of founding administration, simare exempt, although it is settled that, for ple contract debts are assets at the domicile of the debtor (Wyman v. Halstead, 109 U. and that the state of the debtor's domicile S. 654, 656, 3 Sup. Ct. 417, 27 L. Ed. 1068), may impose a succession tax (Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U. S. 189, 205, 23 Sup. Ct. 277, 47

L. Ed. 439; Baker v. Baker, Eccles & Co., 242 U. S. 394, 401, 37 Sup. Ct. 152, 61 L. Ed. 386).

The question of equal protection must be decided as between resident and nonresident decedents as classes, rather than by the incidence of the tax upon the particular estates whose representatives are here complaining. Absolute equality is impracticable in taxation, and is not required by the equal protection clause. And inequalities that result not from hostile discrimination, but occasion

ally and incidentally in the application of a system that is not arbitrary in its classification, are not sufficient to defeat the law.

In our opinion, there are substantial differences which within the rules settled by this court permit the classification which St. has been accomplished by this statute. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Arkansas, 235 U. S. 350, 367, 35 Sup. Ct. 99, 59 L. Ed. 265, and cases cited.

Finding no error in the judgments of the Court of Errors and Appeals of the state of New Jersey, the same are

Affirmed.

Mr. Justice HOLMES (dissenting). Many things that a legislature may do if it does them with no ulterior purpose, it cannot do In order to invalidate this tax it must be as a means to reach what is beyond its conheld that the difference in the manner of stitutional power. That I understand to be assessing transmission of property by testa- the principle of Western Union Telegraph Co. tors or intestates, as between resident and v. Kansas, 216 U. S. 1, 30 Sup. Ct. 190, 54 L. nonresident decedents, is so wholly arbitrary | Ed. 355, Pullman Co. v. Kansas, 216 U. S. and unreasonable as to be beyond the legiti. 56, 30 Sup. Ct. 232, 54 L. Ed. 378, and other

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as to secure equality between residents in New Jersey and those in other States.

cases *in 216 U. S. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Foster, 247 U. S. 105, 114, 38 Sup. Ct. New Jersey could not deny to residents in 438, 62 L. Ed. 1006, 1 A. L. R. 1278. New other States the right to take legacies which Jersey cannot tax the property of Hill or it granted to its own citizens, and therefore McDonald outside the State and cannot use its power to prohibit all legacies cannot be her power over property within it to accom-invoked in aid of a principle that affects the plish by indirection what she cannot do di

rectly. It seems to me that that is what she foreign residents alone. In Kansas City, Ft. is trying to do and therefore that the judg-Scott & Memphis Ry. Co. v. Kansás, 240 U. S. ment of the Court of Errors and Appeals 227, 235, 36 Sup. Ct. 261, 60 L. Ed. 617, the State could have refused incorporation altogether and therefore could impose the carefully limited condition that was upheld.

should be reversed.

It seems to me that when property outside the State is taken into account for the purpose of increasing the tax upon property within it, the property outside is taxed in effect, no matter what form of words may be used. It appears to me that this cannot be done, even if it should be done in such a way

The CHIEF JUSTICE, Mr. Justice VAN DEVANTER and Mr. Justice McREYNOLDS concur in the opinion that I express

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