Estate of Larkin Anson Jones , 422 S.W.3d 775 ( 2013 )


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  •                     In The
    Court of Appeals
    Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana
    No. 06-12-00086-CV
    ESTATE OF LARKIN ANSON JONES, DECEASED, Appellant
    On Appeal from the County Court at Law
    Rusk County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 08-143-P
    Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.
    Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss
    OPINION
    Larkin Anson Jones died in 2008, survived by his wife, Myrna S. (Hellen) Jones, as well
    as children by his former, predeceased wife, including Larkin’s son, Ronnie Jones. Hellen and
    Ronnie were named co-executors in Larkin’s Will. At the time of his death, Larkin owned two
    Hartford variable annuity contracts (the variable annuities) payable to the Estate of Larkin Anson
    Jones that paid lump-sum death benefits totaling $486,986.12. 1 A dispute developed between
    Hellen and Ronnie over whether the death benefits from the variable annuities was income, 2 to
    which Hellen would be entitled, or principal. If the benefits were classified as principal, Hellen
    would be entitled only to income generated by that principal. 3 On competing motions for
    1
    In 1994, Larkin purchased the first variable annuity from Hartford Life and Annuity Company (Contract 704).
    Jones purchased the other variable annuity from Hartford in 1998 (Contract 308). The named beneficiary of each
    contract was the Estate of Larkin Anson Jones. When Jones passed away in September 2008, the annuity contracts
    matured, and death benefits totaling $486,986.12 became payable—in a lump sum—to Jones’ Estate. The actual
    amount of the death benefit varies throughout the record; the trial court’s order before us recites the amount we use
    here.
    2
    Before the competing summary judgment motions served up the issues on this appeal, Hellen had previously asked
    the trial court to interpret certain of the Will’s provisions. In that round of the battle, also, the parties had filed
    competing motions for summary judgment, and, in December 2011, the trial court had entered an order partially
    granting motions for summary judgment, ruling that all net income earned in the Will’s Marital Trust and Family
    Trust would belong to Hellen for her lifetime. The summary judgment order did not, however, resolve the parties’
    remaining dispute—whether the amount by which the variable annuities increased in value at the death of Larkin is
    properly considered principal payable to the Marital Trust or income payable to Hellen.
    3
    Jones’ Will was admitted to probate in the County Court at Law of Rusk County, Texas, in October 2008. Jones’
    Will divided his estate between Hellen and four children by his previous wife. The remainder of the estate was
    divided into a marital trust and a family trust. With respect to the marital trust, the Will provides:
    4.2       If my wife survives me, I give, devise and bequeath unto my Trustees hereinafter named,
    to be known as the MYRNA S. (HELLEN) JONES Marital Trust, (the marital deduction amount)
    an amount equal to the value of my residuary estate which, when added to all other assets of my
    gross estate that qualify for federal estate tax marital deduction and that passed or have passed to
    or for the benefit of my wife otherwise then by the terms of this Article Four (IV) hereof, is equal
    to the maximum marital deduction which is allowable under Section 2056 of the Internal Revenue
    Code.
    2
    summary judgment, the trial court ruled that the death benefits were principal. 4 Hellen appeals.
    On appeal, Hellen contends that the trial court erred in determining she was not entitled to the
    death benefit of $486,986.12 payable by the variable annuities because such benefit constitutes
    With respect to the family trust, the Will provides:
    5.1       To my Trustees, I give, devise and bequeath all of my residuary estate not passing under
    Article Four (IV) above, in trust nevertheless, for the use and benefit of my wife during her
    lifetime, to be called the LARKIN ANSON JONES Family Trust to be held for my wife under
    Article Eleven (XI) hereof, and the following provisions:
    (a) As long as my wife lives, my Trustees shall pay to my wife all of the net income of
    the trust, in quarter-annual or more frequent installments, and may pay to my wife
    such principal of the trust as my Trustees or their successors, in their sole judgment
    may determine is necessary for the health, education, support, or maintenance in my
    wife’s accustomed standard of living. Anything in this Will notwithstanding, my
    wife may require that the net income be distributed directly to her and that my
    Trustees convert unproductive trust property to productive trust property within a
    reasonable period of time; and undistributed net income at my wife’s death (whether
    accrued or collected) shall be paid to my wife’s estate.
    (b) Unless the properties of the trust are sooner exhausted, the trust shall terminate on
    my wife’s death. The principal of the trust shall then pass and be paid to my children
    or their lineal descendants as provided in Article Eight (VIII).
    4
    These were the second set of competing motions for summary judgment. The trial court determined that “the
    $486,986.12 lump sum Death Benefit” from Hartford Annuity Contracts 704 and 308 “is not ‘internal income’ as
    defined in Section 116.172 of the Texas Trust (Property) Code but is properly allocated to principal under Section
    116.164 of the Texas Trust (Property) Code.” Accordingly, the trial court determined that Hellen
    is not entitled to additional distributions from Hartford Annuity Contract 704 and Hartford
    Annuity Contract 308 (the “Hartford Annuities”) because “internal income” as defined in Section
    116.172(j) of the Texas Trust Code means the income portion of installment payments that a
    fiduciary receives as current income earned from a principal asset in a calendar year, specifically
    the excess of installment payments to be made by the Hartford over the purchase price paid by the
    Co-Executors of the Estate of Larkin Anson Jones ($94,812.10) paid over the five (5) year term.
    Such amounts have been paid except for “internal income” in the unpaid installments due in 2012
    and 2013.
    IT IS THEREFORE DECLARED, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Myrna S.
    (Hellen) Jones is not entitled to additional distributions from the Hartford Annuities because net
    income required to be distributed under the Myrna S. (Hellen) Jones’ Marital Trust under Section
    4.7 of the Last Will and Testament of Larkin Anson Jones is income earned during a calendar year
    and such amounts have been paid.
    The trial court entered a separate order denying Hellen’s motion for summary judgment.
    3
    “internal income” as defined by the Texas Trust Code. Because the trial court correctly decided
    that the death benefits from the variable annuities were properly defined as principal, we affirm
    the judgment.
    A traditional motion for summary judgment is granted only when the movant establishes
    there are no genuine issues of material fact and it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 
    289 S.W.3d 844
    , 847 (Tex. 2009). An
    appellate court reviews de novo the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment. 
    Id. Where, as
    here, both parties file dispositive cross motions for summary judgment, and the court
    grants one and overrules the other, the appellate court has jurisdiction to review both the grant
    and the denial. Tex. Mun. Power Agency v. Pub. Util. Comm’n of Tex., 
    253 S.W.3d 184
    , 192
    (Tex. 2007). Thus, in this case, we are to review the summary judgment evidence presented by
    each party, determine all questions presented, and render judgment as the trial court should have
    rendered. Id.; Comm’rs Court v. Agan, 
    940 S.W.2d 77
    , 81 (Tex. 1997); Nash v. Beckett, 
    365 S.W.3d 131
    , 136 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2012, pet. denied).
    (1)     The Original Death Benefits Were Properly Classified as Principal
    Although there is little Texas law to guide us on this issue, a few statutory provisions are
    helpful in its resolution. Hellen concedes that Section 116.164 of the Texas Property Code
    would typically require a Trustee to allocate the increase in value resulting from the death benefit
    feature of the annuities to principal, 5 but argues that circumstances here do not so require.
    Hellen claims that, because Section 116.164 does not apply to a contract to which Section 116.72
    5
    While Hellen, here, stops well short of any admission damaging her case, we agree that the death benefit should be
    allocated to principal. We also conclude that the circumstances she cites do not change that proper allocation.
    4
    applies, Section 116.164 does not apply here. TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.164 (West 2007).
    Section 116.164 provides:
    (a)      Except as otherwise provided in Subsection (b), a trustee shall
    allocate to principal the proceeds of a life insurance policy or other contract in
    which the trust or its trustee is named as beneficiary, including a contract that
    insures the trust or its trustee against loss for damage to, destruction of, or loss of
    title to a trust asset. The trustee shall allocate dividends on an insurance policy to
    income if the premiums on the policy are paid from income, and to principal if the
    premiums are paid from principal.
    (b)     A trustee shall allocate to income proceeds of a contract that
    insures the trustee against loss of occupancy or other use by an income
    beneficiary, loss of income, or, subject to Section 116.153, loss of profits from a
    business.
    (c)    This section does not apply to a contract to which Section 116.172
    applies.
    TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.164.
    Section 116.172, titled “Deferred Compensation, Annuities, and Similar Payments,”
    provides, in part:
    (h)    Subsections (j) and (k) apply and Subsections (b) and (c) do not
    apply in determining the allocation of a payment made from a separate fund to:
    (1)    a trust to which an election to qualify for a marital
    deduction under Section 2056(b)(7), Internal Revenue Code of 1986, has
    been made; or
    (2)     a trust that qualifies for the marital deduction under Section
    2056(b)(5), Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
    5
    TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.172 (West Supp. 2012). 6 Hellen claims that Section 116.172(h)
    applies to the annuity contracts because they were allocated to a trust in which an election to
    qualify for a marital deduction under Section 2056(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code was
    made. 7 Hellen further contends that, because Section 116.172(h) applies, subsection (j) applies
    to the marital trust as well. Subsection (j) requires the trustee to “determine the internal income
    of the separate fund for the accounting period as if the separate fund were a trust subject to this
    code.” TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.172(j). Hellen’s expert, Craig Adams, an estate and
    probate attorney, opines in his affidavit that the difference between the value at the date of Jones’
    death and the value at the close of the accounting period ending December 31, 2008, is “internal
    income” generated by the annuities to which Hellen is entitled under Section 116.172(j) of the
    Texas Property Code.            Accordingly, Hellen claims entitlement to the death benefit of
    $441,625.00 as internal income. We disagree.
    On Jones’ death, the variable annuity contracts matured, resulting in combined death
    benefits in the amount of $486,986.12 payable to Jones’ estate in a lump sum. Paragraph 11.2(k)
    of Jones’ Will provides the following instructions:
    (k) Power to Determine Income and Principal: Dividends payable
    in stock of the issuing corporation, stock splits and capital gains shall be
    treated as principal. Except as herein otherwise specifically provided, the
    Trustees shall have full power and authority to determine the manner in
    which expenses are to be borne and to which receipts are to be credited as
    6
    “Payment” under this section “means a payment that a trustee may receive over a fixed number of years or during
    the life of one or more individuals because of services rendered or property transferred to the payer in exchange for
    future payments. The term includes a payment made in money or property from the payer’s general assets or from a
    separate fund created by the payer.” TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.172(2).
    7
    Section 2056(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code allows for the election of a marital deduction when certain
    requirements are met. 26 U.S.C. § 2056(b)(7) (West 2002).
    6
    between principal and income, and also to determine what shall constitute
    principal or income, and may withhold from income such reserves for
    depreciation or depletion as it may deem fair and equitable. In
    determining such matters, the Trustees may give consideration to the
    provisions of the Texas Trust Code (or its successor statute) relating to
    such matters, but shall not be bound by such provisions.
    Section 116.051 of the Texas Property Code provides that “a fiduciary of an estate . . .
    shall determine the amount of net income and net principal receipts received from property
    specifically given to a beneficiary. . . . The fiduciary shall distribute the net income and net
    principal receipts to the beneficiary who is to receive the specific property.” TEX. PROP. CODE
    ANN. § 116.051 (West 2007). Jones purchased the variable annuities and named his Estate as the
    beneficiary under those contracts.            Section 116.164 of the Texas Property Code, entitled
    “Insurance Policies and Similar Contracts,” provides that, for income and principal allocation
    purposes, proceeds of a life insurance policy or other contract in which a trust or trustee is named
    as beneficiary shall be allocated to principal. Here, Jones’ estate is the named beneficiary.
    Section 116.164 is persuasive, analogous authority that the death benefits (similar to insurance
    policy proceeds) were properly allocated as principal of Jones’ estate. 8 See TEX. PROBATE CODE
    8
    Even Adams concedes that such analysis is correct, as stated in his affidavit: “The increase in value resulted from
    the ‘death benefit’ feature of the Annuities. As such, TPC Section 116.164 would require the Trustee to allocate
    such death benefit to principal. . . .”
    Adams’ opinion that the proceeds are not principal appears to us to be based, at least in part, on the fact that two
    five-year annuities were purchased with the proceeds of the two variable annuities and the five-year annuities were
    put into the Marital Trust. Hellen’s apparent logic suggests that these changes, culminating some two years after
    Jones’ death, made the death benefit proceeds into income. We do not find that logic persuasive. In fact, the
    purchase of the five-year annuities with the death benefits and their transfer into the Marital Trust—rather than
    distribution to Hellen’s separate account, as was done with true income—suggests to us that, though the co-
    executors appear to have never explicitly or formally classified the death benefits as principal, they implicitly
    considered them principal that should be properly maintained and managed under the terms of a trust set out by the
    Jones Will.
    7
    ANN. § 378B (West 2003) (referring executor to Texas Trust Code when determining whether
    funds are income).
    Moreover, the variable annuities were not subject to Section 116.172. Subsection (a)(2)
    defines “payment” as one “that a trustee may receive over a fixed number of years or during the
    life of one or more individuals . . . .” TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.172(a)(2). Here, Jones’
    estate was the beneficiary of the variable annuities. These funds were not payable to the Marital
    Trust or its trustees. Additionally, the variable annuities did not involve a payment over a fixed
    number of years or during the life of one or more individuals. Instead, a single payment,
    triggered by Jones’ death, was to be made to the co-executors of Jones’ estate under each annuity
    contract. The Estate asset was the payment of death benefits, not a right to receive future
    payments or annuity. Thus, the death benefits were properly classified as principal at the time
    they became due and payable. 9
    (2)      The Initial Character of the Death Benefits Was Not Transformed by the Subsequent
    Purchase of the Five-Year Annuities or the Transfer of the Annuities from the Estate to
    the Marital Trust
    Hellen’s contentions appear to be largely based on a flawed premise—that the initial
    character of the variable annuities’ death benefits was transformed by the Estate’s acquisition of
    the five-year annuities 10 and the subsequent transfer of those annuities to the Marital Trust.
    9
    There is no indication in the record that the co-executors ever formally allocated the lump-sum death benefits to
    principal.
    10
    In December 2008, the Co-executors elected to use the variable annuities’ death benefits to obtain two fixed term
    annuities for a period of five years, payable in ten semi-annual installments with a rate of return of 5.37 percent (the
    five-year annuities). The Estate is named beneficiary of the five-year annuities. As of January 2010, three payments
    from the five-year annuities were received into the Estate account. In June 2010, the five-year annuities were
    transferred from the Estate to the Marital Trust. Thereafter, annuity payments of principal were credited to the
    8
    Contrary to Hellen’s contention, the purchase of the five-year annuities with the lump-sum
    proceeds of the original annuity contracts cannot serve to re-classify assets previously allocated
    to principal. Section 116.161(2) of the Texas Property Code requires that “money or other
    property received from the sale, exchange, liquidation, or change in form of a principal asset,
    including realized profit, subject to this subchapter” be allocated to principal. TEX. PROP. CODE
    ANN. § 116.161(2) (West 2007). Accordingly, the purchase of the five-year annuities with the
    proceeds of the variable annuity contracts did not change the assets from principal to income.
    In June 2010—almost two years after death benefits became payable to Jones’ Estate—
    the five-year annuities were transferred from the Estate to the Marital Trust. 11 The subsequent
    transfer of the five-year annuities from Jones’ Estate to the Marital Trust likewise did not
    transform the principal classification of the original death benefits. Section 116.152 of the Texas
    Property Code provides:
    A trustee shall allocate to income an amount received as a distribution of
    income from a trust or an estate in which the trust has an interest other than a
    purchased interest, and shall allocate to principal an amount received as a
    distribution of principal from such a trust or estate . . . .
    TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. § 116.152 (West 2007). Thus, once allocated to principal, 12 neither the
    change in form resulting from the purchase of the five-year annuities, nor the subsequent
    Marital Trust, while interest earned by the annuities was paid to Hellen. Each of the ten payments on the five-year
    annuities is $58,179.85. Each payment is allocated $9,481.10 to Hellen’s income account and the remaining
    principal of $48,698.75 to the Marital Trust.
    11
    Before the transfer of the five-year annuities from the Estate to the Marital Trust, accrued interest from the
    annuities was distributed to Hellen’s separate account and the principal was paid to the Estate.
    12
    As explained in the summary judgment affidavit of Diane Gibson, a licensed Certified Public Accountant,
    Certified Valuation Analyst, and Certified Forensic Financial Analyst,
    9
    distribution of those annuities to the Marital Trust changed the characterization of the original
    death benefits from principal to income.
    Even so, Hellen was paid all to which she was entitled, that is, the income portion of the
    payments made under the five-year annuities. Each annuity was funded by death benefits from
    the variable annuities. The newer annuities were to be paid in ten payments, twice a year over a
    five-year period.      Those ten payments totaled $581,798.50.                Each payment is $58,179.85;
    $9,481.10 of each was interest to be paid to Hellen’s income account, leaving $48,698.75 of each
    as principal to be paid to the Marital Trust. 13 The trial court correctly determined that Hellen is
    not entitled to additional distributions from the five-year annuities because net income required
    to be distributed under the Marital Trust (pursuant to Section 4.7 of Jones’ Will) is income
    earned during a calendar year and such amounts have been paid. 14
    The difference in the Cash Value and the Death Benefit Value is the amount of benefits due to the
    owner as a result of the death of the annuitant, which includes the life insurance-type attributes
    included in the annuity contract. It is not income earned while the owner holds the annuity, but is
    more correctly classified as Income in Respect of a Decedent (IRD). IRD is income earned, but
    not received, before the decedent’s death. This difference in the Cash Value and the Death Benefit
    Value becomes principal at the moment of the annuitant’s death and is not “internal income” as
    referenced in Section 116.172(j) of Chapter 9 of the Texas Property Code (“Code”). Per
    § 116.002(4), income is “money or property that a fiduciary receives as current return from a
    principal asset.” The death benefits are principal and not currently earned income. Only the
    amounts earned from investing the principal is classified as income by the Code.
    13
    These payments reflect an allocation between principal and income in accordance with the terms of the five-year
    annuities and as reflected in a letter from Morgan Stanley/Smith Barney.
    14
    The summary judgment evidence showed that payments to Jones’ Estate commenced in 2009 per the terms of the
    payment agreements. The 2009 total payment was $174,539.00, of which $146,096.25 was placed in the Jones’
    estate account and $19,162.40 in interest was paid to Hellen as income. In 2010, Contracts 704 and 308 were
    transferred to the Marital Trust. Thereafter, Morgan Stanley/Smith Barney records reflect that principal payments
    were made to the Marital Trust while interest payments were made to Hellen in the years 2010–2012. This evidence
    was uncontradicted.
    10
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Josh R. Morriss, III
    Chief Justice
    Date Submitted:      January 11, 2013
    Date Decided:        February 20, 2013
    11