Blood v. Poindexter

534 N.E.2d 768, 1989 Ind. Tax LEXIS 3, 1989 WL 10474
CourtIndiana Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1989
Docket26T05-8803-TA-00012
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 534 N.E.2d 768 (Blood v. Poindexter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blood v. Poindexter, 534 N.E.2d 768, 1989 Ind. Tax LEXIS 3, 1989 WL 10474 (Ind. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

FISHER, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

John C. Blood, Jr., as trustee and individually, appeals the Indiana Department of Revenue’s “Order Determining Value of Estate and Amount of Tax, Etc.” The order being appealed resulted in the assessment of additional inheritance tax on a transfer arising from the death of Jane A. Blood. The appeal is before this court on joint motions for summary judgment.

On January 1, 1967, Jane A. Blood and other persons executed and delivered a trust agreement and deed of conveyance pertaining to land situated in Knox and Gibson Counties, of the State of Indiana, as well as other property. The trust was designated as the “John M. Blood Heirs Trust No. 1”. The beneficial interests were divided into certificates of interest, aggregating in number and amount in $1,000 units is *769 sued by the trustee, John C. Blood, Sr., to the granting parties in proportion to their prior fee simple ownership of the land conveyed. Subject to early termination in certain events, the trust was to expire December 81, 1986, with any property then remaining passing to the then beneficiaries of the trust in the same proportions or percentages as ownership of the beneficial interest bore to the whole. Prior to its termination date of December 31, 1986, the trust was, by agreement of the beneficiaries, extended for an additional period of time to and including December 31, 1991.

The 1967 trust agreement provided that the trustee could deal with the real estate only when authorized to do so in writing by the owner or owners of 51% or more of the beneficial interests. The interest of each beneficiary consisted of a right to earnings, avails, and proceeds from the trust property.

In 1980, Jane A. Blood, by then the owner of a 22.6% interest in the John M. Blood Heirs Trust No. 1, executed and delivered to herself as trustee a declaration of trust creating a trust commonly known as a charitable remainder unitrust, whereby she transferred assets to the trustee to be used for her benefit for life. At her death the successor trustee was to pay funeral expenses, claims, taxes, etc., and thereafter pay an annuity to John C. Blood, Jr. for his lifetime. At the death of John C. Blood, Jr., the successor trustee was to terminate the trust and distribute the remaining principal among named charitable beneficiaries. Included among the assets transferred by the declaration of trust was the decedent’s beneficial interest in the John M. Blood Heirs Trust No. 1.

Jane A. Blood was a resident of Illinois when she died in 1981, leaving a will admitted to probate in the state and county of her domicile and admitted to probate as a foreign will in Gibson County, Indiana. The will did not specifically refer to the decedent’s beneficial interest in the land trust, but it did devise the residue of her estate, wherever located, to the successor trustee of the charitable remainder uni-trust, John C. Blood, Jr. In 1982, the decedent’s domicilary executor filed a non-resident Indiana Inheritance Tax Schedule with the Indiana Department of Revenue, reporting for taxation coal and oil royalty interests pertaining to the real property located in Gibson County, Indiana, and owned by the decedent at the time of her death. The Department determined that additional inheritance tax was due because of the transfer of the beneficial interest in the trust. This appeal resulted.

The parties generally agree on the two issues for summary judgment. They cannot agree, however, on how the issues should be stated. The court' states the issues as follows:

I. Is the transfer of an interest from a non-resident decedent subject to Indiana inheritance tax when the interest transferred is a beneficial interest in a charitable remainder unitrust that includes as an asset a beneficial interest in a land trust holding Indiana real property among its assets?
II. Were the Indiana Department of Revenue’s actions so intentionally vexatious as to warrant an award of obdurate behavior attorney fees when its “Order Determining Value of Estate and Amount of Tax, Etc.” was delayed and resulted in economic injury to the taxpayer?

ISSUE I.

IC 6-4.1-2-1(a) provides that an inheritance tax is imposed on the property interest transfer of a non-resident decedent if the property transferred is described in both IC 6-4.1-2-3 and IC 6-4.1-2-4, and the transfer is not exempt under IC 6-4.1-3. For purposes of this summary judgment, there is no dispute concerning the applicability of IC 6-4.1-2-4 or IC 6-4.1-3. John C. Blood, Jr. (Blood) does dispute, however, that the property transfer in question is one to which IC 6-4.1-2-3 applies. IC 6-4.1-2-3 reads:

The inheritance tax applies to the property interest transfer made by a non-resident decedent if the interest transferred is in:
*770 (1) real property located in this state; or
(2) tangible personal property which has an actual situs in this state.

The Department relies on IC 6-4.1-2-6 for the imposition of tax. IC 6-4.1-2-6 makes a transfer taxable if the transferor transfers property by a deed of trust in such a manner that he reserves to himself any interest or to himself and others powers of revocation, alteration, or amendment, which if exercised would cause the property to revert back to the transferor. In the Department’s opinion, the 1967 land trust interest is taxable under IC 6-4.1-2-6 because the decedent had the powers of amendment which could have caused a portion of the Indiana real property to revert back to her. The control given to the beneficiaries over the actions of the trustee, coupled with the provision that all remaining property would be distributed in kind to beneficiaries upon the termination of the 1967 trust provided the Department with the basis for its determination. The subsequent transfer of the decedent’s 1967 trust interest into the 1980 trust was, in the Department’s opinion, a transfer of Indiana real property into the new trust. The transfer made at decedent’s death of the beneficial interest in the charitable remainder unitrust, by which Blood is to receive an annuity as beneficiary and is the trustee unless he dies, resigns, or becomes incompetent, is also characterized by the Department as a transfer of real property located in Indiana. Even though it makes no explicit reference to IC 6-4.1-2-3, the Department has implicitly considered the statute in its determination that the property interest transferred was real property.

Blood contends that the transfer made at Jane A. Blood’s death was a transfer of intangible personal property. A transfer of intangible personal property from a non-resident is not subject to tax under IC 6-4.1-2-3. Indiana’s inheritance tax laws are ownership statutes which require imposition of the tax where there is a transfer from the decedent of an interest in property which the decedent owned at death. Indiana Dep’t of Revenue, Inheritance Tax Div. v. Hungate’s Estate (1982), Ind., 439 N.E.2d 1148; Matter of Estate of Bannon (1976), 171 Ind.App. 610, 358 N.E.2d 215.

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534 N.E.2d 768, 1989 Ind. Tax LEXIS 3, 1989 WL 10474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blood-v-poindexter-indtc-1989.