Carlin v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation

19 N.J. Tax 545
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2001
StatusPublished

This text of 19 N.J. Tax 545 (Carlin v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlin v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation, 19 N.J. Tax 545 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

KUSKIN, J.T.C.

Plaintiff appeals an assessment of Transfer Inheritance Tax with respect to an Individual Retirement Account (referred to hereafter as “the IRA”) inherited by him from his sister. Plaintiff contends that, in determining his tax liability, the value of the IRA should be reduced based on the federal and New Jersey income taxes payable in connection with its distribution. Defendant contends that any such reduction in value is prohibited by statute and by the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in In re Estate of Romnes, 79 N.J. 139, 398 A.2d 543 (1979).

The parties have stipulated the following facts. Rita D. Carlin, plaintiffs sister, died on April 3, 1998, unmarried and without children. Plaintiff was her only beneficiary. At the time of her death, Ms. Carlin’s assets included the IRA which had a face value of $1,182,660.96. The Beneficiary Designation for the IRA named plaintiff as the sole beneficiary “if living.”

The inheritance tax return filed by Ms. Carlin’s estate disclosed the existence of the IRA but reported its market value as $672,369. An explanation included in the return stated that the face value of the IRA had been reduced based on the income taxes which would be payable by plaintiff and asserted: “When an individual dies owning an IRA, the value to be received by the individual is the actual amount received after the payment of income taxes .... Therefore, the value of an IRA for inheritance tax purposes must be reduced by the income tax liability which aiises out of the transfer of the account or trust.” The return estimated the federal and New Jersey income tax liability with respect to the IRA at $439,126 and $71,166, respectively, calculating the taxes “using the beneficiary’s current income tax rate and current filing status (joint),” but assuming that the IRA was the beneficiary’s only income.

New Jersey Transfer Inheritance Tax is computed “upon the clear market value of the property transferred” subject to certain specific deductions, none of which expressly includes income tax liability, “and no others.” N.J.S.A. 54:34-5. Plaintiff contends that his claimed reduction in the taxable value of the IRA is not a [547]*547deduction under N.J.S.A 54:34-5. He characterizes the reduction as a discount in value resulting from the income tax liability inherent in the IRA. Defendant responds that plaintiffs attempt to reduce the taxable value of the IRA represents an effort to take a deduction not permitted by N.J.S.A. 54:34-5 and further contends that, even if the reduction in taxable value is treated as a discount to clear market value, the discount is not allowable under In re Estate of Romnes, supra 79 N.J. 139, 398 A.2d 543.

The Romnes decision is critical to the determination of this appeal. Accordingly, a detailed explanation and analysis of that decision is warranted. There, the executors of the estate of Haakon I. Romnes sought a reduction, based on income tax liability, in the value for Transfer Inheritance Tax purposes of an annuity providing annual fixed income payments to the decedent’s widow for the duration of her life. The fund from which the annuity was to be paid was accumulated during the decedent’s lifetime from contributions to a pension plan by his employer. Income taxes on contributions to the fund were deferred, and, as a result, the annual annuity payments to Mrs. Romnes were subject to federal income tax. The estate argued that, as of the date of death, the deferred tax obligation was a burden upon the annuity payments to be received by Mrs. Romnes, and reduced their value. “Otherwise expressed, it is argued that since Mrs. Romnes will never enjoy in a beneficial sense that portion of her annuity payments that must be devoted to paying income taxes, she should not now be required to pay an inheritance tax upon what she will never beneficially receive.” Id, at 143, 398 A.2d 543. The estate sought a value discount equal to the taxes payable by Mrs. Romnes with respect to the annuity payments, assuming each payment was added to her other income.

Tn analyzing the estate’s argument, the Supreme Court defined “clear market value” under N.J.S.A. 54:34-5 as the equivalent of fair market value, that is, the price which would be paid by a 'willing buyer to a willing seller when neither is under compulsion to buy or sell and both parties have reasonable knowledge of the relevant facts. Id. at 144-45, 398 A.2d 543. The Court commented that, in determining the clear market value of assets for [548]*548which there is not an active market, a court must “create a hypothetical buyer and a hypothetical seller, whom we then place in a hypothetical market place. We attribute to each of these persons all information which might affect value, and then, weighing all relevant factors, decide how they would reach a price satisfactory to each.” Id. at 145, 398 A.2d 543. This price or value must be determined objectively without consideration of any factors personal to either the hypothetical buyer or the hypothetical seller. “The use of an objective standard necessarily precludes resort to any factors personal to the seller or the buyer. Courts have consistently so held.” Id. at 147, 398 A.2d 543.

In applying these principles to the annuity in question, the Supreme Court concluded that neither a hypothetical seller nor a hypothetical buyer would be concerned with Mrs. Romnes’ tax liability.

A hypothetical purchaser of such an income interest as this annuity would be interested in the annuitant’s health, in her life style, and in the solvency of the payor... He would be utterly unconcerned with the annuitant’s personal income tax picture.
Nor would a hypothetical seller, about to divest himself of the income interest, be concerned in any way with a presumptive future liability he would never be called upon to meet. As soon as he divested himself of the interest, the prospective future liability w'ould cease to exist. The same would be true if Mrs. Romnes herself is thought of as the seller. She would have no interest in a prospective liability that was about to end.
Finally, is there any even remote possibility that Mrs. Romnes would accept as the purchase price of her annuity the amount of money that she asks the State of New Jersey to accept as being the value of this asset? There is of course no such possibility.
[Id. at 148-49, 398 A.2d 543.]

The Court also noted that the result of permitting a valuation discount calculated in the manner suggested by the estate would be that the wealthier the recipient, the greater the tax liability attributable to the annuity (because of the graduated tax rates under the Internal Revenue Code) and, therefore, the greater the discount in value which would be claimed.

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Related

In Re the Estate of Romnes
398 A.2d 543 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1979)
Phelps Dodge Industries, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation
8 N.J. Tax 354 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1986)

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19 N.J. Tax 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlin-v-director-new-jersey-division-of-taxation-njtaxct-2001.