DocketNumber: Docket No. 29658-87
Citation Numbers: 56 T.C.M. 285, 1988 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 501, 1988 T.C. Memo. 457
Filed Date: 9/22/1988
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
RAUM,
The case was submitted on the basis of a stipulation of facts. After concessions, the remaining dispute relates to the computation of the marital deduction, which in turn depends upon the correct interpretation of Article III of the decedent's will. Article III sets forth a formula by which the amount of property to be given outright to the widow by that article is to be determined. In particular, the issue is whether, pursuant to that formula, the amount this given outright to the widow must be reduced, inter alia, by the amount of property in Article IV which satisfies the conditions for "qualified terminable interest property" of
Decedent's will was executed on August 13, 1982. Unless decedent's wife predeceased him she was the only beneficiary of the entire will apart from certain remainder interests in a trust established pursuant to Article IV, hereinafter more fully described.
Article II of the will made a specific bequest to the decedent's wife of "all of the household goods, books, apparel, jewelry and*505 all other articles of household or personal use or adornment, any automobiles * * * and * * * all of the oil and gas producing royalties, minerals and other oil and gas properties of every kind and nature * * *".
Thereupon, Article III provided for the devise and bequest of property outright to the wife in accordance with a formula as follows:
In the event that my beloved wife, LEAH B. MONTGOMERY, survives me,
Decedent then devised and bequeathed, in Article IV of the will, the "rest, residue and remainder of [his] estate properties" to his Trustee, The First National Bank & Trust Co. of Williston "in trust as a trust fund hereinafter referred to as the 'Melvin M. Montgomery Trust'" (the trust). The trust's "net income" and "such amounts from principal of this trust fund as my Trustee deems advisable or necessary" were to be paid to decedent's wife "in quarterly or more frequent installments during her lifetime * * * for the proper care, support, maintenance and comfort". At the wife's death, 25 percent of the "remaining balance" of the trust estate, including any undistributed income, was to be distributed to decedent's stepson and the remaining 75 percent was to continue in trust with the income to be distributed for the use and benefit of the decedent's two aunts and the children*507 of his stepson. After the death of the two aunts, the remaining trust estate and accumulated income were to be distributed to the children of the decedent's stepson, when they reached the age of 25 years.
In addition, the will provides as follows with respect to the trust:
(6) No title in the Trust or Trusts created in and by this Article [IV] of my Will, or in the income therefrom, shall vest in any beneficiary, and neither the principal nor the income of any such Trust Estate shall be liable for the debts of any beneficiary, and no beneficiary shall have any power to sell, transfer, encumber or in any other manner to anticipate or dispose of his or her interest in any such Trust Estate created by the terms of this Article, or the income produced thereby, prior to the actual distribution thereof by my Trustee to said beneficiary.
The will was admitted to probate in the County Court of Williams County, North Dakota, with decedent's wife Leah B. Montgomery as Personal Representative.
Except for $ 625,146 assets transferred to the trust, the estate has not been distributed and no such distribution has been ordered by the probate court.
Petitioner filed a Federal estate*508 tax return dated June 27, 1984, and an amended return dated August 20, 1985. The amended return requested a refund as a result of the deletion from the estate of the value of a retirement annuity. That amendment is not in controversy here.
On the original estate tax return, dated June 27, 1984, an election was made that $ 300,000 of the assets which passed to the trust be treated as qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) under
On both the original and amended estate tax returns, petitioner took a marital deduction consisting of two separate parts, the second of which*509 was the $ 300,000 QTIP. But in computing the amount of the Article III component of the first part In his notice of deficiency, the Commissioner disallowed $ 300,000 of the claimed marital deduction. The Government's position here is that decedent's bequest in Article III of his will must be reduced by the $ 300,000 QTIP. It argues that the QTIP is encompassed within that "property qualifying for the marital deduction * * * passing or which passed to my wife" which Article III states is to reduce decedent's bequest to her of "fifty percent (50%) of the value of my adjusted*510 gross estate". The $ 300,000 reduction in the Article III bequest would thus reduce the marital deduction by that amount. The Internal Revenue Code provisions governing this case are all contained within (I) which passes from the decedent, (II) in which the surviving spouse has a qualifying income interest for life, and (III) to which an election under this paragraph applies. The surviving spouse has a qualifying interest for life in the QTIP if ( (I) the surviving spouse is entitled to all the income from the property, payable annually or at more frequent intervals, * * * and (II) no person has a power to appoint any*512 part of the property to any person other than the surviving spouse. Further, The question before us is whether the QTIP elected by the estate here is described in Article III of decedent's will in the language providing for the reduction of the wife's 50 percent bequest by "the aggregate value of any property qualifying for the marital deduction * * * by reason of interest in property * * * passing or which passed to my wife, otherwise than by the terms of this Article of my Will". We conclude that the language does encompass the QTIP and, consequently, that it reduces the bequest in Article III, with the consequence that the widow was given outright in Article III only that amount of property that would bring the material deduction up to 50 percent of the decedent's adjusted gross estate, as was plainly intended in that article. The $ 300,000 QTIP eliminated that amount of property from the Article III computation, which was automatically added to the residuary trust established*513 by Article IV in which the widow was given a life interest. The QTIP itself is, of course, deductible as part of the marital deduction as authorized by The problem before us can perhaps be better understood by noting another, and even more significant change in respect of the marital deduction that was made in our estate tax law in 1981 by ERTA. Prior to the enactment of ERTA, the amount of the marital deduction was specifically limited by the then What gives rise to situations like that encountered here is that prior to the 1981 Act there was widespread use of wills containing "formula" bequests and devises to the surviving spouse,*514 so drafted as to make certain that the spouse would receive outright under the will only that amount of property that would bring the total allowable marital deduction up to 50 percent of the "adjusted gross estate". Article III of the will before us obviously embodies such careful draftsmanship, and in all probability follows or adapts one of the standard forms thus used before ERTA. The irony for petitioner here is that the will was executed in 1982, after the 1981 enactment of ERTA, and there was no necessity for any such drafting maneuvering to come within a then nonexisting 50-percent limit. It would seem that the draftsman of the will at issue was probably unaware of the changes wrought by the 1981 Act, *515 has now attempted to make the best out of a bad situation, and we proceed to consider the various arguments that are obviously intended to extricate the estate from the predicament in which it now finds itself. We quite agree with petitioner's opening contention that a testator's intent as expressed in his will controls the legal effect of his disposition. Indeed, the Supreme Court of North Dakota has plainly*516 indicated that in construing the terms of a will its purpose is to ascertain the intent of the testator. Here, petitioner seems to find ambiguity in two of the phrases used in the portion of Article III of decedent's will which reduces the 50-percent bequest to the wife. First, petitioner argues that "The interest of the surviving spouse was a terminable interest, and therefore did not qualify for the marital deduction". Pet. br. p. 6, par. a. In addition, it argues that the QTIP did not actually pass to the wife. Pet. br. *517 p. 3, par. 5, p. 4, p. 6, par. b. Petitioner's first contention can be readily dismissed. The language put at issue by that contention provides that the Article III bequest is to be reduced by "property qualifying for the marital deduction". Although it appears that the interest given to decedent's wife in the residuary trust would otherwise be a nondeductible terminable interest, the estate's QTIP election made on the estate tax return served to qualify the underlying property for the marital deduction. Neither the effectiveness of the election nor any other basis for disqualification of the property has been raised and, in the absence of any such challenge to the QTIP, there can be no question that the QTIP is "property qualifying for the marital deduction" under Article III of decedent's will. The only language with respect to which there can be said to be any arguable question is the language which describes the property as "passing" or having "passed" to decedent's wife. Petitioner claims that the QTIP did not "pass" while the Government contends that it did. Petitioner's argument seems to be based on a definition of the words "passing or which passed" which equates*518 the word "pass" with actual physical transfer. We find the meaning of the word "pass" to be clear, under both North Dakota law and Federal estate tax law, and we conclude that petitioner's contention must be rejected. Initially, it should be noted that it is not the underlying trust property itself that decedent's will describes as "passing or which passed" to his wife, but "interests in property" which, if so passing, reduce the Article III bequest. Decedent's wife received a life interest in the trust property. There is no question that she did not receive the trust property outright, but that such property was instead transferred to decedent's trustee in trust for the wife and, later, for other beneficiaries. Petitioner's reading of the word "pass" as equivalent to the word transfer is particularly ill suited when applied to a life interest in property, as distinguished from the property itself. Decedent's wife's life estate could not be the object of a transfer under petitioner's definition of the word "pass". Moreover, in North Dakotain the same context as we have before us, i. *519 e., the interpretation of the terms of a will, the word "pass" has been used as the equivalent of "give, devise, and bequeath". (1) such interest is bequeathed or devised to such*520 person by the decedent; (2) such interest is inherited by such person from the decedent; (3) such interest is the dower or courtesy interest (or statutory interest in lieu thereof) of such person as surviving spouse of the decedent; (4) such interest has been transferred to such person by the decedent at any time; (5) such interest was, at the time of the decedent's death, held by such person and the decedent (or by them and any other person) in joint ownership with right of survivorship; (6) the decedent has a power (either alone or in conjunction with any person) to appoint such interest and if he appoints or has appointed such interest to such person, or if such person takes such interest in default on the release or nonexercise of such power; or (7) such interest consists of proceeds of insurance on the life of the decedent receivable by such person. Of the seven means of "passing" property listed under subsection (c), only one, in paragraph (4), reflects the definition to which petitioner claims the word, as used in decedent's will, must be limited. Moreover, in this Court, we have given the word "passing" the same broad meaning as is set forth in The Court held that the bequest was properly reduced by life interests that the decedent's spouse received on his death in payment of annuity and insurance contracts. It was determined that the life interests were, under the foregoing provisions of the decedent's will, "portions of [his] gross estate which Given the usual technical meaning accorded the*523 term "pass" in a will, as distinguished from transfer or distribute, there can be no doubt that the life interest in the QTIP passed to decedent's wife. It devolved to her under the terms of decedent's will, regardless of whether it was distributed. Moreover, there is no basis for concluding that the QTIP, by virtue of its character as such or more generally as a type of terminable interest property, does not pass in the same manner as other property. Even before QTIP was given special treatment and excepted from the disallowance for terminable interest property, it was recognized that terminable interests "pass". The legislative history of the Revenue Act of 1948, which first disallowed the deduction of terminable interests, is replete with references to them as interests which pass. See S. Rept. No. 1013, 80th Cong., 2d Sess. 28 (1948), Petitioner argues that the interpretation of Article III of decedent's will requiring the reduction of the bequest therein by the QTIP would seriously compromise the decedent's testamentary intent to leave his wife half of his "adjusted gross estate". *526 To be sure, the QTIP is likely to be included in the wife's estate at her death under section 2044. However, this is the correct result since that same property will have generated a marital deduction for the decedent's estate. Petitioner's argument fails to take into account that, when the QTIP is treated as part of the 50-percent bequest to the spouse, it also counts as part of the property passing to the spouse which makes up the marital deduction. As we interpret the will, the QTIP is a factor that must be taken into account in the computation of the 50-percent limitation established by Article III. Consequently, less of the decedent's other property passes to the wife outright. The QTIP passes to her and generates a marital deduction, while less of the decedent's other property passes to her under Article III and, consequently, the marital deduction stems from less of that other property. The QTIP does results in a marital deduction to decedent's estate and the later application of section 2044 to the wife's estate does not constitute double taxation of the QTIP. Decedent's bequest under Article III is reduced by the QTIP elected.
1. Thus, there is no issue before us in respect of the problem involved in
2. On the original return the amount claimed for the first part was $ 708,952, but this was reduced to $ 636,449 in the amended return, the difference being attributable presumably to the elimination of the annuity component of the gross estate -- a matter not in dispute here. See
3. Section 403(d)(1) of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA), Pub. L. 97-34, 95 Stat. 302. ↩
4. A strong indication that the will was carefully drafted to take into account the pre-ERTA provisions of the Code is the use of the term "adjusted gross estate" in Article III. That term had previously appeared in
5. North Dakota has also distinguished property which "passes" from that which is distributed but has done so in the context of intestate succession, not succession by will.
6. See n. 4,
old-kent-bank-and-trust-company-mildred-m-campbell-and-charles-r-sligh , 362 F.2d 444 ( 1966 )
Hoffman v. Heirs of Hoffman , 73 N.D. 637 ( 1945 )
Dorothy Jane Dougherty and Louis F. Baldwin, Executors of ... , 292 F.2d 331 ( 1961 )
Estate of Sol Schildkraut, Deceased, Eugene Schildkraut and ... , 368 F.2d 40 ( 1966 )