DocketNumber: Docket No. 30093-88
Citation Numbers: 60 T.C.M. 953, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 581
Filed Date: 10/4/1990
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Petitioner is the Estate of Robert F. Klein (decedent). Decedent's will provided that the residue of his estate was to pass to a trust created by decedent prior to his death and prior to the elimination by the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 of the limitation on the marital deduction then contained in
MEMORANDUM OPINION
By notice of deficiency dated August 25, 1988, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal estate tax in the amount of $ 372,435. The only issue presented in this case is whether petitioner is entitled to a marital deduction in excess of $ 1,773,245.
On February 29, 1980, Robert F. Klein (decedent) executed an agreement of trust between himself, as settlor, and himself and Glady's M. Klein as trustees. That agreement (the Trust Agreement) styles the trust thereby created (the Trust) a Revocable Living Trust. On the same day, decedent executed his will. The will provides that the residue of decedent's estate is distributable to the Trust, after payment of debtrs, expenses, and taxes. Decedent died on June 30, 1984, without having made any amendments to the Trust or codicils to the will. Decedent was survived by his wife, Gladys M. Klein.
Article VI of the Trust Agreement provides, in part, as follows:
Uppon the death of the Settlor, the entire trust shall be held and managed for the following uses and purposes:
If Settlor's wife, GLADYS MARIE KLEIN, survives the Settlor, there shall be allocated to the Marital Trust that interest in the balance of Settlor's Adjusted Gross Estate which, when taken together with all other interest and property that qualify for the Marital Deduction and that pass or shall have passed to Settlor's wife otherwise *584 than by the terms of this Paragraph, shall be needed to obtain the Optimum Marital Deduction allowable in determining the Feferal Estate Tax upon Settlor's Adjusted Gross Estate as defined herein. The Optimum Marital Deduction shall be that amount which when combined with the estate owned by Settlor's spouse, will result in the approximate equalization of the estates of the Settlor and Settlor's spouse and occasion the lowest possible Federal Estate Taxes in both of said estates. The Optimum Marital Deduction sall be the greater of Fifty Percent (50%) of Settlor's Adjusted Gross Estate or Two Hundred Fifty Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($ 250,000.00) in any case where, in the opinion of the Trustees, the application of the foregoing equalization principle would in effect, produce a substantially identical result or the Trustees are prevented from utilizing it by any rule of law, court decision, or transcendent consideration. In the event Settlor's wife fails to survive the Settlor, the foregoing provisions of this Paragrapph shall be of no effect, and the property otherwise allocated to the Marital Trust hereunder shall rather be allocated to the Family Trust hereinafter set forth. *585
There shall be allocated to the Family Trust the remaining interest in the balance of Settlor's Adjusted Gross Estate.
The interests allocated to the Marital Trust and Family Trust shall be determinied and fixed by usin asset values as finally determined for Federal Estate Tax purposes and shall be apportioned between said trusts by the Trustees such that future appreciation or depreciation in such assets or interests shall be allocated to the marital Trust which would under then current Federal Tax laws, be excludable from the Settlor's gross estate, as for example, an interest in a qualified Pension or Profit Sharin Plan or Trust. The fixed percentages of the balance of the Adjusted Gross Estate allocated to the Marital Trust and the Family Trust (Residual Trust) appropriately adjusted to reflect any partial distribution or distributions, shall, for all distributional purposes, be apppplied to the assets valued at their fair market value at the time or times of distribution.
Article X of the Trust Agreement (entitled
An estate tax return was timely filed on behalf of petitioner reflecting a ross estate of $ 3,234,702.12, an adjusted gross estate of $ 3,211,920.87 and claiming a marital deduction of $ 2,871,920.87. In his notice of deficiency, respondent determined that petitioner's marital deduction was limited to $ 1,773,245. Such amount is equal to the value of joint property, insurance, and individual retirement account benefits includable in decedent's gross estate that passed directly to Mrs. Klein, the surviving spouse, by operation of law or otherwise, outside of Article VI of the Trust Agreement (the marital trust provision.) Thus, respondent disallowed $ 1,098,675.87 of the marital deduction claimed by petitioner.
Petitioner maintains that the marital deduction is $ 2,871,920.87, as claimed on the estate tax return.
Petitioner's argument may be summarized briefly. On the date decedent executed his will and entered in to the Trust Agreement (February 29, 1980), " [T]hat amount which when combined with the estate owned by Settlor's spouse, will result in the approximate equalization of the estates of the Settlor and Settlor's spouse and occasion the lowest possible Federal Estate Taxes in both of said estates. " [T]he greater of Fifty Percent (50%) of Settlor's Adjusted Gross Estate or Two Hundred Fifty Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($ 250,000.00) in any case, where in the opinion of the Trustees, the application of the foregoing equalization principle would in effect, produce a substantially identical result or the Trustees are prevented from utilizing it by any rule of law, court decision, or transcendent consideration. The alternative marital deduction provision in the Petitioner's trust anticipated future changes in the law by invoking the highest marital deduction available in place of the estate equalization principle set forth in the initial paragraph of the marital deduction, when in the opinion of the Trustees, it was warranted by a "transcendent *590 consideration" of which the amendment of
Respondent agrees that petitioner is entitled to a marital deduction in computin the taxable estate. Respondent further agrees that, as amended by section 404(a)(1)(A) of ERTA,
This case requires us to give meaning to certain language used in the Trust Areement. Petitioner argues that the Trust Agreement is ambiguous. We agree with respondent that, on its face, the relevant language is both explicit and unambiguous, and would support respondent's determination of the allowable marital deduction. Whether we are to go beyond such explicit and unambiguous language requires an analysis of the law governing the interpretation and construction of testamentary instruments.
It is well-established principle of law that the interpretation and construction of wills and trust documents are governed by state law.
It is a fundamental rule of law in Michigan that the "primary duty of any Court faced with the task of resolving a disputed testamentary disposition is to effectuate as nearly as possible the intention of the testator."
The ambiguity here is argued to be with regard to Alternative 2. The relevant language of Alternative 2 -- "the greater of Fifty Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($ 250,000)" -- mirrors the language of the statue (
Petitioner maintains, however, that ERTA's elimination of any limit on the marital deduction creaated a
Clearly, after an individual has made his will (or otherwise effected the disposition of his property at death), the law that affects the construction or the effect and operation of the will may be changed. In cases of that sort, the question is presented whether the law as it stood when the will was made, the law as it stood at the decedent's death, or the law as it stood when the estate in question vested must apply. If the question is limited to one of construction, that is, to determining the intentions of the decedent from the language of the will when read in the light of the surrounding circumstances, it is generally said that the law that was in force when the will was executed is the law that determines the intention of the decedent unless the will shows that the decedent intends to be governed by the law that determines *599 the intention of the decedent unless the will shows that the decedent intends to be goverened by the law of some point other than execution of the will. 4 Page on Wills § 30.27 (W. Bowe & D. Parker 1961 & Supp. 1990). See
Having found no ambiguity (either patent or latent) in the relevant language of the Trust Agreement, the intent of the decedent is to be "gleaned from the four corners of the instrument."
Nevertheless, there are two qualifications or exceptions that we must keep in mind. Atkinson,
"If the testator employed a draftsman skilled in the use of technical words these must be given their technical meaning. It is practically necessary that the testator's intent should be identified with that of the agent whom he employed to express the intent. Furthermore, to the extent that either a statute or established rule of decision attributes a certain meaning to particular words, that meaning must be accepted. * * *" [
Those qualifications and the facts that the Trust Agreement was drafted by a lawyer and that Alternative 2 reflects clearly the language of prior
The marital trust *602 provision clearly states that "there shall be allocated to the marital trust that interest . . . which, when taken together with all other interests and property that qualify for the marital deduction . . . shall be needed to obtain the Optimum Marital Deduction . . ." The Optimum Marital Deduction is described as that amount that will equalize the decedent's and his surviving spouse's estates or, in the event the equalization clause is ineffective, the greater of 50 percent of decedent's adjusted gross estate or $ 250,000.
On the facts of this case, the maximum amount that can pass under the marital trust provision is 50 percent of the gross estate. An amount in excess of 50 percent of the gross estate, consisting of joint property, insurance proceeds, and pension benefits, was qualifying property passing outside of the Trust Agreement. As the amount passing pursuant to the marital trust provision must be reduced by qualifying non-trust property (roughly 55 percent of the adjusted gross estate), no amount passes under the marital trust provision. Therefore, petitioner is allowed a marital deduction only for the value of qualifying property passing outside of the Trust Agreement, *603 or $ 1,773,245. Respondent's determination of deficiency is sustained. For the foregoing reasons,
*. By Order of the Chief Judge, this case was reassigned to Jude James S. Halpern for disposition.↩
1. Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect as of the date of the decedent's death, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Congress limited the application of the unlimited marital deduction in certain cases. Section 403(e) (3) of ERTA retains the limitation of prior law in the case of decedents dying after December 31, 1981, where, among otherthings, property is received by a surviving spouse pursuant to a will executed or a trust created prior to 30 days after the date of enactment of ERTA and containin a formula marital deduction clause. By that rule, Congress intended to forestall a result unintended by decedents who, in their estate planning, had adopted a formula expressly providing that their sppouse was to receive the maximum amount of property qualifying for the marital deduction. See S. Rept. No. 97-144,
3. Put another way, the trustees are to determine the amount of property to fund the Marital Trust by a process of subtraction. The Optimum Marital Deduction is the minuend, qualifying property passing outside of the Trust Areement is the subtrahend, and the difference (if a positive number) is the amount with which the Marital Trust is to be funded. Of course, if the subtrahend (qualifying property passing outside the Trust Agreement) exceeds the minuend (Optimum Marital Deduction), the difference will be a negative number, and the Marital Trust will not be funded. As will be seen, that is precisely what respondent argues has occurred.
4. The marital trust provision provides that the entire corpus of the Trust is to be allocated between the Marital Trust and the Family Trust. Neither petitioner nor respondent disagree that, with regard to such corpus, only property allocated to the Marital Trust can qualify for the marital deduction.↩
5. See n. 3,
6. Petitioner conceds that, had decedent adopted a formula clause expressly referring to the maximum allowable marital deduction, and had decedent not amendedthat clause subsequent to the enactment of ERTA, then, pursuant to section 403(e)(3) of ERTA, petitioner would have been denied an unlimited marital deduction. Petitioner would congratulate decedent for being clever enough to avoid that verbal trap.
In Re Butterfield Estate , 405 Mich. 702 ( 1979 )
old-kent-bank-and-trust-company-mildred-m-campbell-and-charles-r-sligh , 362 F.2d 444 ( 1966 )
In Re Hund Estate , 395 Mich. 188 ( 1975 )
Morrow v. Detroit Trust Company , 330 Mich. 635 ( 1951 )
In Re Dodge Trust , 121 Mich. App. 527 ( 1982 )