Bircks v. Armstrong

54 A.2d 22, 73 R.I. 232, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1947
StatusPublished

This text of 54 A.2d 22 (Bircks v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bircks v. Armstrong, 54 A.2d 22, 73 R.I. 232, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 65 (R.I. 1947).

Opinion

Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for the construction of the will of Edward Collings Knight, Jr., late of Middle-town, Rhode Island, deceased, so far as it relates to the allocation of the federal estate tax to certain property which the testator, prior to making his will, had deeded in trust to a trustee in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but which the commissioner of internal revenue of the United States included in the testator’s testamentary estate in assessing the iederal estate tax.

*233 The bill was originally brought by H. Wilber Bircks, of Collingswood, New Jersey, and The Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, hereinafter called The Pennsylvania Company, trustees under the will, The Pennsylvania Company, trustee under the deed of trust, and a number of beneficiaries, under the will, whom we need not identify here. After subpoenas had issued to respondents but before all had answered, The Pennsylvania Company, as trustee under the deed of trust, moved “that it be permitted to withdraw as a party complainant”, that it “be made a party respondent in said capacity and that a subpoena be issued accordingly and that the bill in equity be so amended.” Without objection, the motion was granted and The Pennsylvania Company, as such trustee, entered its appearance by its solicitor and filed an answer.

In its answer it admitted the allegations of the bill except that it prayed “that no part of the sum of $26,401.71 tax paid by the Estate of Edward Collings .Knight be reimbursed from the funds of the Trust created by the Trust Deed of Edward Collings Knight dated June 28, 1912 to the Trustees under the will of the said Edward Collings Knight.” Respondents Clara Knight Doreau and Dorothy Colford Armstrong, beneficiaries under the deed of trust and annuitants under the will, but who' are more interested in preserving their interests under the deed than in increasing their life income under the will, have, by the same solicitor, filed an identical answer. For our purpose no further reference to other respondents need be made since they did not contest the bill, and all future and contingent interests and interests of minors appear to have been taken care of before the hearing in the superior court.

. After the cause was ready in that court for hearing for final decree it was certified, in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 545, §7, to this court for determination. In the decree certifying the cause, the following question is propounded: “Should any portion, and if so what portion, *234 of the Federal Estate Tax paid by the estate of Edward Col-lings Knight, Jr. be allocated or apportioned to and paid out of the principal of the trust fund under a Deed of Trust made by Edward C. Knight, Jr. to The Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities dated June 28, 1912, by reason of the inclusion by the Department of Internal Revenue of the principal of said trust fund as part of the gross estate of said Edward Collings Knight, Jr.?”

It appears from the evidence that the estate of the testator was closed in the probate court of the town of Middle-town in this state on April 18, 1938. On that date the final account of the executors was allowed and they were credited therein with having paid the federal estate tax of $475,-041.84 on the testator’s testamentary estate and also on his trust estate under the deed of trust as they were required to do by the law of the United States. No appeal from the allowance of the final account was taken. Thereafter, however, the executors filed a petition in the court of claims of the United States to recover from the United States the amount of the extra tax which resulted from including the principal of the trust estate under the deed of trust in the gross testamentary estate of Edward Collings Knight, Jr. On October 1, 1945 that court denied and dismissed the petition, and rendered judgment against petitioners for the cost of printing the record. From that judgment no appeal was taken, but on November 27, 1946 the complainants filed the present bill.

The executors, apparently, did nothing further, but the trustees under the sixth clause of the will, together with their co-complainants, are now asking this court if any portion, and if so what portion, of the federal estate tax should be paid by the trustee, under the deed of trust, to the executors in reimbursement of the extra tax which they paid to the United States because of the inclusion of such trust estate in the testamentary estate of Edward Collings Knight, Jr. In the meantime on December 14, 1936 the court of common pleas of Philadelphia county, No. 3, having juris *235 diction of the trust estate under the deed of trust, entered its decree ordering payment of the principal of that trust to the respondents Clara Knight Doreau and Dorothy Col-ford Armstrong “subject to the payment of Federal Estate Tax if any be due”. In accordance with that decree payment was made and the sum of $26,406.71 withheld until the question of the tax was determined.

Complainants contend that the testamentary estate should be reimbursed in that amount by the trustee under the deed of trust by virtue of clause seventh of the will and the law of Rhode Island as declared in Hooker v. Drayton, 69 R. I. 290. Clause seventh reads as follows: “I direct that all the foregoing gifts, devises, bequests and life interests shall, so far as possible, be paid free and clear of all succession, inheritance or estate taxes, which taxes I direct shall be paid out of the principal of my residuary estate.”

The deed of trust is not mentioned in the will. Hooker v. Drayton, supra, held that the estate of the donee of a power should not be chargeable with the federal tax assessed against the donee’s gross estate, including the estate subject to the power, but that the tax required to be paid by the executor to the United States should be apportioned between the two estates. The will which was involved there contained an appointment in exercise of the power and a residuary clause substantially the same as clause seventh in the will now under consideration. This court held that the language of the clause in that will was not sufficiently explicit to justify the conclusion that the testator intended to burden his own estate with taxes that were properly allocable to the property over which he had merely a power of appointment.

The fundamental question posed here is whether the facts and circumstances surrounding the case at bar are sufficiently similar to the facts in the Hooker case to justify the application of the same reasoning and rule of law as were applied there. The parties have argued and briefed the case largely on this question, except that the respondents, Arm *236 strong, Doreau, and The Pennsylvania Company, trustee under the deed of trust, have added a further contention that inasmuch as the executors have had their final account allowed and are not parties to this cause, and inasmuch as the complainant trustees under the will are accountable only for the funds which they have received from the executors, it is too late to raise the .question of reimbursement to the executors; and that it is not the duty of such trustees to seek such reimbursement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A.2d 22, 73 R.I. 232, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bircks-v-armstrong-ri-1947.