Estate of Freeman v. Department of Revenue

11 Or. Tax 219, 1989 Ore. Tax LEXIS 9
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1989
DocketTC 2784
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Or. Tax 219 (Estate of Freeman v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Freeman v. Department of Revenue, 11 Or. Tax 219, 1989 Ore. Tax LEXIS 9 (Or. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

This matter comes before the court on cross-motions for partial summary judgment. The parties have stipulated to the following facts:

Donald Freeman (hereinafter referred to as “decedent”) resided in Alaska from 1950 until 1979. He owned *220 property and was engaged in a contracting business while residing in Alaska. Commencing in 1955, decedent suffered from diabetes mellitus and, in 1976, he suffered a stroke. By 1979, the combination of the two health problems left him “unable to provide for himself, disoriented as to time, place and person and unable to form the intention to change his place of abode, domicile or residence.”

In November 1979, the lack of appropriate medical care resulted in a business associate transporting the decedent to California. He remained in California for evaluation and medical care until February 1980 when he was transported to Corvallis, Oregon, where his daughter lived. In Corvallis, he was placed in a nursing home where he remained until he died. In June 1980, his daughter petitioned to be appointed his guardian and conservator, which appointment was made July 7, 1980. In August 1980, the daughter petitioned the court in Alaska to be appointed the guardian and conservator of her father, which appointment was made on January 8,1981. The decedent’s health continued to deteriorate and he died December 25, 1982, in Corvallis, Oregon. Defendant concluded that the decedent was domiciled in Oregon and assessed income and inheritance taxes from which plaintiff appeals.

By agreement of counsel, the narrow issue presented by the motions for partial summary judgment is whether a guardian can change the domicile of an incompetent adult ward. These motions do not require the court to decide whether the guardian did change the ward’s domicile, but only whether the guardian could change the domicile. 1 To answer this question requires an examination of the Oregon statutes in effect at that time and the inherent powers of guardians.

During the relevant time periods involved, ORS 126.137 provided:

“(1) A guardian of an incapacitated person has the same powers, rights and duties respecting his ward that a parent has respecting his unemancipated minor child except that a guardian is not liable to third persons for acts of the ward solely by reason of the parental relationship. In particular, *221 and without qualifying the foregoing, a guardian, except as modified by order of the court:
“(a) May to the extent that it is consistent with the terms of the court order relating to detention or commitment of the ward, have custody of the person of his ward and establish the ward’s place of abode within or without this state.”

Since the statute equates the powers of a guardian of an incapacitated person with the powers of a parent toward its unemancipated minor child, the first question that must be asked is whether a parent has the power to choose or change the domicile of its child? The answer is: not directly. It is not the parent but the law which chooses a child’s domicile. The parent chooses only its own domicile. The law imposes the parent’s domicile on the child. As a general rule, neither the child nor the parent can choose a different domicile for the child. Fox, et ux v. Lasley, 212 Or 80, 318 P2d 933 (1957). 2

The statute also specifies that the guardian has the power to establish the ward’s place of “abode.” However, the power to establish an abode is not the power to establish a domicile. Ramsey v. Dept. of Rev., 7 OTR 478 (1978).

Defendant argues that, by analogy, the rule applicable to a parent and child should also be applied to a guardian and ward. Defendant cites as authority Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 22, comment h, at 92 (1971), for the proposition that:

“The ward does not take his guardian’s domicile by operation of law. If the ward lives with a guardian in the state of appointment, he takes the domicile of the guardian. If he does not live with the guardian, he does not take the latter’s domicile.”

Section 22 purports' to restate the law with regard to guardianships for minor children. Defendant appears to recognize that whether an adult ward resides with the guardian may not be a valid basis for distinction. Defendent, nevertheless, argues that on the basis of the statute and by analogy the ward’s domicile should be that of the guardian’s.

*222 The rationale for imposing the parent’s domicile on its child is the need to preserve family unity as well as lack of capacity in the child. The relationship between a guardian and an adult ward is not one that requires a unity of domicile. This is particularly true where the ward has established a domicile of choice prior to becoming incompetent. In considering this area, it is helpful to look at the basic reasons underlying the concept of domicile. Those reasons revolve around the law pertaining to the person.

“The idea of the personal law is based on the conception of man as a social being, so that those transactions of his daily life which affect him most closely in a personal sense, such as marriage, divorce, legitimacy, many kinds of capacity, and succession, may be governed universally by that system of law deemed most suitable and adequate for the purpose. In accepting domicile as this personal law, however, the English courts have regarded man as more than a social being: true to the common law tradition of individualism, they have regarded him as an individual, entitled to determine for himself, through the factual elements of domicile, the specific legal system which should constitute his personal law. * * * The adoption of domicile in English law as the personal law of an individual is based on the sound reasoning that the law of the community in which a person lives and makes his home is the one most appropriate to govern his personal status and relationships as a permanent member of that community.” R. H. Graveson, The Conflict of Laws 148 (5th ed).

As a starting point, it appears that very few jurisdictions require domicile to establish a guardianship. Rather, guardianships may be established on the basis of mere presence in the state, like asserting jurisdiction over the person who may be fishing or driving in the state. The individual’s presence in the state does not automatically make that state the most appropriate jurisdiction to govern all of the individual’s affairs. This case is a good example. The decedent spent some thirty years in Alaska engaged in business, buying and selling property and undoubtedly had numerous other contacts with the community in which he resided. To equate establishment of a guardianship in Oregon with a change of domicile for the individual ignores the basic reasons for domicile. This would be particularly true if the ward happened to recover.

*223

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Or. Tax 219, 1989 Ore. Tax LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-freeman-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1989.