Cory v. Riney

89 Cal. App. 3d 1003, 153 Cal. Rptr. 128, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1443
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1979
DocketCiv. No. 44216
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 Cal. App. 3d 1003 (Cory v. Riney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cory v. Riney, 89 Cal. App. 3d 1003, 153 Cal. Rptr. 128, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1443 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, Acting P. J.

The above named decedent left a will and a codicil which were regularly admitted to probate. In subsequent proceedings upon her estate, the probate court entered an “Order Fixing Inheritance Tax And Directing Executor To Pay” in which it actually made four separate orders in enumerated parts. The executrix of the estate appeals from the entire order, but challenges only one part. The State Controller appeals from the other parts. The issues on both appeals involve the validity and effect, for state inheritance tax purposes, of a series of so-called “renunciations” filed by various persons named in the will and codicil.

The four-part order reflects testamentary and procedural complications which require that the record be summarized in detail. The testatrix executed the will and codicil in 1969, producing a single integrated instrument which read in successively numbered paragraphs. In pertinent part, it recited and provided as follows:

[1007]*1007The testatrix was a widow with one child (Bernice Riney) and a granddaughter (Patricia A. Riney). She nominated Bernice to act as her executrix. In paragraphs Third and Fourth, she made specific gifts to Bernice with alternative provisions in the event Bernice did not survive her for 30 days. In paragraph Fifth, the residue of the estate was left to Bernice in a trust of which she was to be the income beneficiary for her life and the corpus would be distributed to Patricia upon Bernice’s death.

Paragraph Eighth provided for the contingency that neither Bernice nor Patricia survived the testatrix for 30 days, in which event she left $10,000 to William I. McDonald, $10,000 to Joseph T. White, Jr., $100,000 to Lynda Pastorino, and the residue to these three persons (none of whom was related to her by blood or marriage) in trust for specified charitable purposes. Paragraph Ninth provided that state and federal death taxes were to be paid from the residue in all events, without reference to a contingency that any person survive the testatrix or not.1

The testatrix died in 1975, the integrated will was admitted to probate, and Bernice was appointed and qualified as executrix of the estate. She and Patricia survived the testatrix for more than 30 days, which meant that they were to take under paragraphs Third, Fourth and Fifth of the will and that paragraph Eighth would pass nothing to the three contingent beneficiaries named in it (McDonald, White and Pastorino). Bernice and Patricia undertook a deviation from this scheme by filing a joint “partial renunciation” in which they purported to disclaim, “from the bequest” of the residue made to them in paragraph Fifth, “that portion of the residue used to pay the federal estate tax” pursuant to paragraph Ninth. (See fn. 1, ante.) McDonald and White (but not Pastorino) each filed a “renunciation” in which he purported to disclaim any “interest” he might have received in consequence of the “partial renunciation.”2

[1008]*1008In contested inheritance tax proceedings which followed, the Controller reported the appraised values of the assets to be taken by Bernice and Patricia (both under the will and as surviving joint tenants of the decedent); subtracted the sum of “deductions” he had allowed them for inheritance tax purposes;3 and produced a “clear market value” figure which he allocated between them in itemized taxable shares. He apparently proposed to include in each share the taxable values of a “bequest” made to the respective beneficiary of part of any amount paid as federal estate tax, and of a parallel “bequest” in the amount of respective state inheritance tax, on the theory that she was to receive both “bequests” by operation of paragraph Ninth of the will.4 (See fn. 1, ante.)

Bernice and Patricia showed by declaration that Bernice, as executrix, had paid a federal estate tax in the amount of $70,982. They accordingly contended that the values taxed to them should be reduced by that amount because they had disclaimed a “bequest” of it in their “partial renunciation.” The Controller opposed this result, and the controversy was submitted for decision. The probate court resolved it by making the four-part order described above.5 Bernice appeals from the order as

[1009]*1009executrix, but challenges only part 4. The Controller appeals from parts 1, 2 and 3.

The order, and the opposing contentions on the appeals, should be analyzed in light of the “renunciation” scheme which Bernice and Patricia had planned, in progressive stages, with the objective of legitimately avoiding inheritance taxes on $70,982. Its first two stages reflected their premises (1) that paragraph Ninth of the will (see fn. 1, ante) operated as a testamentary “transfer” to them in the form of a constructive bequest of the federal estate tax which materialized at $70,982; and (2) that the “transfer” also gave them a disclaimable “interest” which they might effectively renounce pursuant to the disclaimer provisions of the Probate 6 From these two premises, the progression would proceed in the following further stages:

[1010]*1010(3) They would renounce the $70,982 “interest” by filing a “disclaimer” of it, which (4) would operate to absolve them from liability for inheritance taxes on it because the Inheritance Tax Law would give effect to their disclaimer for that purpose. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 13409 [see fn. 6, ante].) (5) Their disclaimer would also cause the “interest” to “descend ... as if” they had predeceased the testatrix as provided in section 190.6, which meant that it would pass to the three contingent beneficiaries (McDonald, White and Pastorino) who were to take in that event as provided in paragraph Eighth of the will. (6) The contingent beneficiaries would avoid taking the “interest” (and liability for inheritance taxes on it) by successively disclaiming it in the same manner, each acting as a “beneficiary” who would be “entitled, but for his disclaimer,” to take the “interest” by succession to it as provided in section 190, subdivision (a).

Bernice and Patricia undertook to effect the third stage of this progression by purporting to disclaim the $70,982 “interest” in their “partial renunciation.” (See fn. 2, ante.) McDonald and White went along with the sixth stage by filing their successive “renunciations” of the “interest,” but the scheme was partially aborted when Pastorino declined to participate. (See ibid.)

The probate court nevertheless salvaged the essence of the scheme by accepting its two premises and validating all three “renunciations” in part 1 of its order. Part 1 had the immediate effect of absolving Bernice and Patricia first, and McDonald and White in succession, from inheritance taxes on the $70,982. These results turned up in part 3, where the court fixed Bernice’s and Patricia’s inheritance taxes on the bases of taxable values which did not include that amount and fixed no taxes payable by McDonald and White. The court handled Pastorino’s defection by [1011]*1011ordering in part 2 that section 190.6 consequently operated to pass the full $70,982 to her alone; ordering in part 3 that she was liable for an inheritance tax fixed on it; and relieving her from that tax by ordering in part 4 that it was to be paid from the remaining assets of the estate. (See fn. 5, ante.)

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Related

Estate of Sagal
89 Cal. App. 3d 1003 (California Court of Appeal, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 Cal. App. 3d 1003, 153 Cal. Rptr. 128, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cory-v-riney-calctapp-1979.