Delaune v. United States

143 F.3d 995, 1998 WL 310130
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 1998
Docket97-30385
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 F.3d 995 (Delaune v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaune v. United States, 143 F.3d 995, 1998 WL 310130 (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

This case will demonstrate how, under the Louisiana Law Civil, the past is not dead; how the past will not die; and how, indeed, the past is not even past. But first,-let us say that this appeal arises from the district court’s denial of an estate tax refund to the appellants, the estate and certain heirs of Sammie Barman Delaune. The dispute primarily involves the purported renunciation of a Louisiana succession, which both the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the district court found to be inadequate as a matter of federal and Louisiana law. In particular, the district court held the renunciation to be invalid under Louisiana law because the Louisiana Civil Code plainly does not provide for the renunciation of a succession by the heirs of a dead heir on her behalf. In this case, however, the Law Civil will not let us stop with a plain reading of the current Code. Because, under the Law Civil, the Code Napoleon of 1804 adds clarity to the work of Louisiana’s subsequent Digesters and Redactors, and hehee to the Code we read today, we hold that Louisiana law does in fact provide for the renunciation of a succession by the heirs of an heir, and therefore find no state law defect in the renunciation at issue. Because we further hold that the renunciation was not otherwise defective as a matter of federal law, we reverse the judgment of the district court.

I

The relevant facts are undisputed. Joseph “Jack” Delaune died on May 31, 1986. Under his will, his entire estate, with the exception of $3,000 in special bequests, was devised to his wife, Sammie.

For some time prior to Jack’s death, Jack and Sammie had been living in a nursing home. Jack’s brother, William Delaune, had been handling Jack’s affairs under a power of attorney, and he paid for Jack and Sammie’s expenses by writing checks out of an account that belonged to the couple as undivided community property. After Jack died, William Delaune continued to pay Sammie’s expenses out of this account, and replenished it on one occasion with $100,000 drawn from another community property account. During this time, the income from Jack’s estate continued to accumulate as it had done before, which is to say that it went into the community property accounts. It is undisputed that the expenses incurred by Sammie after Jack’s death were less than the income from her portion of the community property.

Sammie’s will was a mirror image of Jack’s, and devised her entire estate to him, with the exception of $3,000 in special bequests. Because Jack had predeceased Sammie, this devise to him had lapsed,- and, unless something were done, their combined estates, with the exception of $6,000, would pass to Sammie’s heirs by intestacy when she died. As Jack had a separate line of heirs from Sammie, this was not a good outcome, both as a matter of Jack and Sammie’s expressed desires for their heirs, and from the perspective of a long and contentious probate fight.

On January 14, 1987, Sammie met with attorneys to discuss her estate planning options. Among other things, Sammie’s attorneys proposed redrafting her will to provide a bequest to Jack’s heirs or executing a renunciation of some portion of the bequest she had received from Jack, so that it would pass immediately to Jack’s heirs by intestacy. Sammie’s attorneys pointed out that the latter option would be much better from a tax perspective, as it would allow the property to go to Jack’s heirs with only one level of estate tax (Jack -Tax-> Jack’s heirs) as opposed to two (Jack -Tax> Sammie -Tax-> Jack’s heirs).

Based on the tax advantages, Sammie decided to go with the renunciation plan, and directed her attorneys to return when they had drawn up the appropriate papers. The *999 Fell Sergeant 1 who commands our last days waits not for the orderlies, however, and before the renunciation could be completed and executed, Sammie lapsed into a coma. She died on January 26.

Despite the medical evidence to the contrary, William Delaune remained convinced that Sammie could be reanimated for a limited amount of post-hoc estate planning. On February 6, acting in his capacity as an heir of Jack, he filed a petition in Louisiana state court for a Rule to Show Cause why the aborted renunciation should not be given effect. He contended, essentially, that Sammie’s decision to make a renunciation before she died created a legally enforceable “natural” obligation in favor of Jack’s heirs that the court was bound to recognize.

On February 23, a meeting was held with a number of the attorneys representing various of the interested parties and heirs. They discussed, among other things, the legality of a renunciation made on Sammie’s behalf, and agreed on a plan for achieving a more “equitable” distribution of the combined successions to the two lines of heirs.

On February 27, a hearing was held on the Rule to Show Cause. At that hearing, an agreed judgment was signed by all interested parties (other than Sammie’s estate) and approved by the probate judge. Under the judgment, Sammie’s heirs purported to renounce, in her name and on her behalf, a portion of Jack’s succession equal to two-sevenths of the combined estates.

Sammie’s estate filed an estate tax return in which the “renounced” portion of Jack’s succession was excluded from her gross .es-, tate, on the basis that there had been a qualified disclaimer pursuant to I.R.C. § 2518. After an audit, the Commissioner took issue with this exclusion, and declared a deficiency of $146,728 to cover the estate tax that he felt should have been paid on the purportedly renounced portion of Jack’s succession. As the assets in Sammie’s estate had been already largely distributed, the Commissioner sent notices of transferee liability to Sammie’s heirs, and, on November 28, 1990, the estate and heirs paid the deficiency in full.

II

After exhausting their administrative remedies, on April 26, 1994, Sammie’s estate and nine of her fourteen heirs (the “Delaunes”) filed suit in the Federal District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana seeking a refund of the entire deficiency. Eventually, this claim went to trial before District Judge Parker. At trial, the Delaunes argued that the renunciation had been a qualified disclaimer under I.R.C. § 2518, such that the renounced portion of Jack’s succession was properly excluded from Sammie’s gross estate. In the alternative, they asserted that the natural obligation to renounce arising from Sammie’s pre-death decision constituted a claim against her estate for th.e amount of the renunciation, and that this amount was therefore also excludable pursuant to I.R.C. § 2053(a)(3).

The Commissioner argued that the renunciation was not a qualified disclaimer under § 2518 because Louisiana law does not allow for renunciation by the heirs of an heir, and because Sammie had accepted the benefits of Jack’s succession for . purposes of § 2518(b)(3) before the renunciation was made., The Commissioner also contended that the natural obligation was not a claim against the estate under § 2053 because it was not enforceable as a matter of Louisiana law and because it was not contracted for in exchange for an adequate consideration in money or money’s worth, as required by § 2053(c)(1).

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Delaune v. United States
143 F.3d 995 (Fifth Circuit, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
143 F.3d 995, 1998 WL 310130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaune-v-united-states-ca5-1998.