People ex rel. Voelkel v. Browne

Decision Date29 December 1944
Citation268 A.D. 596,52 N.Y.S.2d 822
PartiesTHE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK ex rel. JOHN F. VOELKEL et al., as Surviving Executors of EMIL BOMMER, Deceased, Relators, v. ROLLIN BROWNE et al., Constituting the State Tax Commission, Respondents.
CourtNew York Supreme Court

PROCEEDING under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act (transferred to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the third judicial department by an order of a Special Term, Albany County) to review a determination of the respondents constituting the State Tax Commission, sustaining unincorporated business taxes assessed against relators under article 16-A of the Tax Law, for the period from May 17, 1935, to December 31, 1935, and for the calendar year 1936.

COUNSEL

Carl S. Heidenreich, attorney (Charles A. Kussmaul of counsel) for relators.

Nathaniel L. Goldstein, Attorney-General (Wendell P. Brown First Assistant Attorney-General, John C. Crary, Jr., Assistant Attorney-General, of counsel), for respondents.

FOSTER, J.

This is a proceeding pursuant to article 78 of the Civil Practice Act, to review a determination of the State Tax Commission assessing taxes against relators under article 16-A of the Tax Law, for the period from May 17, 1935, to December 31, 1935, and for the calendar year 1936. The taxes so assessed were paid under protest.

Relators are surviving executors of Emil Bommer, who died May 16, 1935, a resident of Kings County, and whose will was admitted to probate May 22, 1935. Decedent left an estate consisting of cash, securities, eighty-one separate pieces of real estate, and a manufacturing business which made door spring hinges and other door-closing devices. By his will he conferred upon his executors the power to sell his real estate, and authorized them to carry on the manufacturing business for a period not to exceed seven years or beyond the lives of his wife and daughter. After the will was probated the executors held, managed and leased all of the real property in the estate, and also operated the spring hinge business until the time when both the real estate and the business were transferred as the result of a compromise agreement between the parties interested in the distribution of the estate. The controversy between relators and the Tax Commission centers primarily over whether depreciation on the real property, excluding property used for factory purposes, should be allowed in computing unincorporated business taxes against the manufacturing business. Secondarily there is the question of whether the holding, managing and leasing of the real property by relators, as surviving executors, was an unincorporated business within the meaning of the statute.

Section 386 of article 16-A of the Tax Law (as originally enacted by L. 1935, ch. 33 and amd. by L. 1935, chs. 367 and 745), provided in part: 'For the purposes of this article, * * * the words 'unincorporated business' mean any trade, business or occupation conducted or engaged in by an individual, statutory or common law trust, estate, partnership or limited or special partnership, society, association, executor, administrator, receiver, trustee, liquidator, referee, assignee, or by any other entity or fiduciary, * * * and include any trade or business which if conducted or engaged in by a corporation would be taxable under any of said articles; * * *. It is not intended that an individual shall be deemed engaged in an unincorporated business with respect to compensation for services rendered by him as an employee, or as an officer of a corporation, society or association, or of a state, municipality or other political subdivision of a state, or as an executor, administrator, receiver, trustee, liquidator, referee, assignee or other fiduciary, unless such compensation constitutes receipts of a business regularly carried on by such individual'.

By chapter 411 of the Laws of 1938, made retroactive to January 1, 1936, the foregoing section was amended in part as follows: 'It is not intended that an owner, lessee or fiduciary shall be deemed engaged in an unincorporated business solely by reason of the holding, leasing or managing of real property or * * *'.

Relators claim first, that in their administration of all the assets of the estate they were carrying on an unincorporated business within the meaning of the statute. Of course if this contention is correct then it follows as a matter of simple logic that depreciation allowances on the real estate were proper deductions as a business loss in computing a tax. The Commission has found otherwise and we think the facts and the law sustain its decision.

There is no proof that decedent integrated or connected his real estate holdings with his manufacturing business during his lifetime. Indeed the proof is quite to the contrary. The records of the business and the real estate were kept separately. Separate bank accounts were maintained. Decedent...

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3 cases
  • Newark Bldg. Associates v. Director, Division of Taxation
    • United States
    • New Jersey Superior Court — Appellate Division
    • May 28, 1974
    ...it held, did not constitute the conduct of a business, and thus appellants were not taxable. Cf. People ex rel. Voelkel v. Browne, 268 App.Div. 596, 52 N.Y.S.2d 822 (App.Div.1944), aff'd o.b. 294 N.Y. 834, 62 N.E.2d 390 Our Legislature, in the Corporation Business Tax Act of 1945, has recog......
  • Swift v. Taxation Division Director
    • United States
    • New Jersey Tax Court
    • February 9, 1982
    ...Newark Building Associates is more contemporary and more persuasive than the earlier New York cases of People ex rel. Voelkel v. Browne, 268 App.Div. 596, 52 N.Y.S.2d 822 (App.Div.1944), aff'd o.b. 294 N.Y. 834, 62 N.E.2d 390 (Ct.App.1945), and People ex rel. Nauss v. Graves, 283 N.Y. 383, ......
  • In re Whiteman
    • United States
    • New York Supreme Court
    • December 29, 1944

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