Estate of Bixby

295 P.2d 68, 140 Cal. App. 2d 326
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1956
DocketCiv. No. 21319
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 68 (Estate of Bixby) 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
Estate of Bixby, 295 P.2d 68, 140 Cal. App. 2d 326 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

140 Cal.App.2d 326 (1956)

Estate of FRED H. BIXBY, Deceased. DANA LATHAM, as Guardian, etc., Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
KATHARINE BIXBY HOTCHKIS et al., Contestants and Appellants; FRED H. BIXBY, JR., Respondent.

Civ. No. 21319.

California Court of Appeals. Second Dist., Div. Two.

Mar. 28, 1956.

Latham & Watkins, A. R. Kimbrough, Ira M. Price II and Richard F. Allen for Petitioner and Appellant.

Sherman Anderson, Lawler, Felix & Hall and William T. Coffin for Contestants and Appellants.

Fred H. Bixby, Jr., in pro. per., Blau, Shaw & Miller, Louis C. Blau, Joseph M. Shaw and Simon Miller for Respondent.

FOX, J.

These appeals are from an order for preliminary distribution rendered in the matter of the estate of the late Fred H. Bixby. The controversy is with respect to the amount that should be distributed to the decedent's widow, Florence G. Bixby, by virtue of (a) the executor's receipt of $76,000 in dividends on stock specifically bequeathed to her, (b) the taxability of the dividends to the estate under the income tax laws, and (c) the utilization by the executor of expenses of administration as deductions for federal income rather than federal estate tax purposes.

The trial court held that Mrs. Bixby was entitled to receive the amount of the dividends less the portion of the income taxes actually paid by the executor allocable against the *329 dividends. One appeal is taken by the testamentary trustees who are the residuary legatees and devisees, and the other (cross-appeal) is taken by the guardian ad litem of Mrs. Bixby. The particulars of the controversy and the contentions of the parties are set forth in an agreed statement on appeal. The following statement of the case is taken from this agreed statement.

Statement of the Case

The decedent, Fred H. Bixby, died testate May 17, 1952, a resident of Long Beach, California. He left an estate of the appraised value of $4,567,493.56 consisting of two automobiles, cash, securities, and real property. Thirty-eight thousand seven hundred fifty-five (38,755) shares of Fred H. Bixby Company stock appraised at $4,340,560 ($112 per share) constituted the principal asset of the estate.

The decedent was survived by his spouse, Florence G. Bixby (hereinafter called "Mrs. Bixby"), by four children, Katharine Bixby Hotchkis, Florence Elizabeth Bixby Janeway, Deborah Bixby Green, and Fred H. Bixby, Jr., and by eight grandchildren. The decedent's will was admitted to probate June 16, 1952, and letters testamentary were issued to Allen L. Chickering and to Mrs. Bixby. At the time of the decedent's death and subsequently Mrs. Bixby was in poor health. She was adjudged to be an incompetent person January 22, 1953, and the four children above named of the decedent and herself were appointed guardians of her person and Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles guardian of her estate. Following such adjudication, Mrs. Bixby was removed as one of the executors of the decedent's will and letters testamentary were issued February 16, 1953, to Allen L. Chickering as sole executor.

By the terms of his will, the decedent gave his automobile and 19,000 shares of Fred H. Bixby Company stock to Mrs. Bixby and the residue of his estate in equal shares to four trusts designated respectively the first, second, third and fourth trusts. Each of the trusts is to continue until the death of the survivor of the decedent's four children and thereupon the trust estate is to be distributed to the decedent's then living grandchildren, per capita, the then living issue of any then deceased grandchild to take that grandchild's share. During the continuation of each trust, the net income is to be paid to a designated child of the decedent for life and thereafter to the issue of such child, or failing such issue, *330 to the decedent's grandchildren, per capita, living at the time of the particular distribution of income, the issue of any deceased grandchild to take that grandchild's share. The three daughters of the decedent are the trustees of the first, second and third trusts and they are respectively the primary income beneficiaries of those trusts. Security-First National Bank is the trustee of the fourth trust and the decedent's son, Fred H. Bixby, Jr., is the primary income beneficiary of that trust. The four trusts are particularly declared in the order for preliminary distribution rendered by the trial court under date of December 30, 1954.

In his will, the decedent directed that all succession taxes be paid from the residue of his estate. The California inheritance tax due from the decedent's estate as normally computed amounts to less than the 80 per cent credit allowable under the basic federal estate tax law for state inheritance tax. Accordingly, the tax payable from the estate under the California inheritance tax law is equal to the 80 per cent credit and the combined succession taxes payable from the estate, viz., those payable under the California inheritance tax law and the federal estate tax law, are equivalent to the federal estate tax undiminished by the 80 per cent credit. The highest rate of the succession taxes applicable to the estate is 49 per cent.

For California and federal income tax purposes, the executor adopted a fiscal year for the estate ending April 30th. The gross income of the estate for its initial fiscal year which ended April 30, 1953, amounted to $160,602.92, inclusive of $76,000 in dividends received by the executor during that fiscal year on the 19,000 shares of Fred H. Bixby Company stock bequeathed Mrs. Bixby. Agreeably with the federal tax laws and regulations, the executor concluded to utilize as deductions for income rather than federal estate tax purposes, fees and other expenses of administration aggregating $120,270.28. The federal and California income taxes actually paid by the executor for that fiscal year amounted to $18,728.16 of which $8,713.40 is allocable to the dividends on the 19,000 shares of stock bequeathed to Mrs. Bixby. Had the executor not utilized the aforementioned fees and other expenses of administration as income tax deductions, the income taxes payable by him for the fiscal year in question would have amounted to $120,378.11 and the portion thereof allocable to said dividends on Mrs. Bixby's stock would have been $56,964.96. *331

The 19,000 shares of stock bequeathed to Mrs. Bixby were distributed to her pursuant to an order for partial distribution rendered by the trial court September 3, 1953. The only dividends on said shares paid to the executor were the aforementioned dividends aggregating $76,000 received by the executor during the fiscal year ending April 30, 1953. Those dividends were received by the executor in the amounts and on the dates following: $19,000, July 1, 1952; $19,000, November 1, 1952; $38,000, February 28, 1953.

Had the 19,000 shares of stock been distributed to Mrs. Bixby as of the date of the decedent's death and the $76,000 in dividends consequently paid to her as declared, the federal and California income taxes payable by Mrs. Bixby for the calendar years 1952 and 1953 would have been increased by amounts aggregating $56,497.48. Had the aforementioned fees and other expenses of administration aggregating $120,270.28 been utilized as deductions by the executor for federal estate tax purposes rather than as deductions for federal income tax purposes, the succession taxes payable from the decedent's estate would have been reduced by $58,932.44.

Mrs.

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295 P.2d 68, 140 Cal. App. 2d 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bixby-calctapp-1956.