ESTATE OF Gilbert M. DENMAN Jr., Deceased

362 S.W.3d 134, 2011 WL 5869479, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9262
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 2011
Docket04-10-00830-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 362 S.W.3d 134 (ESTATE OF Gilbert M. DENMAN Jr., Deceased) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ESTATE OF Gilbert M. DENMAN Jr., Deceased, 362 S.W.3d 134, 2011 WL 5869479, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9262 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

MARIALYN BARNARD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a probate court order granting a motion for summary judgment filed by appellees The Trust Company, Trinity University, and the San Antonio Museum of Art (collectively “The Trust Company”), and denying a motion for summary judgment filed by appellant Wendel Denman Thuss (“Thuss”). The controversy between the parties concerns whether Thuss is entitled to reimburse *137 ment or a “grossing up” from the Estate of Gilbert M. Denman Jr., Deceased, for certain taxes allocated and charged to a ranch he received as a bequest in Denman’s will. The probate court, by granting summary judgment in favor of The Trust Company and denying Thuss’s motion for summary judgment, found Thuss was not entitled to reimbursement or a grossing up. On appeal, Thuss raises five issues challenging the summary judgment order.

BACKGROUND

This case appears in this court for the second time. In 2008, Thuss filed an appeal in this court following the probate court’s determination that Denman’s will did not contain a “specific reference” to the federal generation-skipping transfer (“GST”) tax with regard to the bequest of the El Capote Ranch to Thuss, and therefore, section 2603(b) of the Internal Revenue Code required the tax to be allocated and charged to the Ranch. Estate of Denman, 270 S.W.3d 639, 648 (Tex.App.-San Antonio 2008, pets. denied) (“Denman I ”). However, in a footnote, this court noted that whether Thuss might have a viable state law claim for reimbursement for the amount of the taxes paid, assuming Den-man’s intent was that Thuss received the full value of the bequest, was not before the court. Id. at 646 n. 3. This footnote seems to have prompted the subsequent action, which led to this appeal.

In Denman I, this court provided a detailed rendition of the relevant background facts. Accordingly, rather than restating those facts, we have provided an excerpt from our previous opinion, and as necessary, have supplemented it with additional background information.

In 1988, Gilbert Denman ... executed a holographic will. Between 1991 and 2002, he executed four codicils to the Will. In Article XIII of the Will, [Den-man] bequeathed one-half of the residuary of the estate to Trinity [University] and the other half to The Trust Company and [the independent coexecutor] as trustees of a trust (“the Trust”) created in the Will for the benefit of the [San Antonio] Museum [of Art], In 2002, [Denman] executed Article IV of the codicil to the Will in which he bequeathed to Thuss, his third cousin, all of his real property in Guadalupe and Gonzales Counties as well as the animals and farm equipment thereon. This property is known as El Capote Ranch (“the Ranch”). The parties do not dispute that [Denman’s] bequest to Thuss gave rise to the federal GST tax imposed by Chapter 13 of the Internal Revenue Code. See 26 U.S.C. § 2601. [Denman] died on May 16, 2004, and the Will was admitted to probate in June of that year. In August 2005, The Trust Company and [the independent coexecutor] filed the estate’s federal tax return. The return, which was signed by [the independent coexecutor] and a representative of The Trust Company, apportioned and charged payment of the GST tax to the Ranch bequeathed to Thuss. The amount of the GST tax as apportioned and charged in the tax return was $913,868.
Thuss disagreed with the position taken by The Trust Company and [the independent coexecutor] in the federal tax return. He contended Article XII of the Will, which provides for allocation of taxes, removed the GST tax burden from him as the transferee of the Ranch and placed it on the residuary estate. Because of Thuss’s contention, The Trust Company and [the independent coexecutor], as coexecutors and co-trustees, filed a petition in the probate court seeking a declaratory judgment that the GST tax should be allocated and charged to the property transferred to Thuss.
*138 They argued section 2603(b) of the Internal Revenue Code mandates the tax on a generation-skipping transfer be charged to the property transferred unless otherwise directed by the governing instrument through a “specific reference to the tax imposed” under Chapter 13 and the Will did not contain the required specific reference. See id. § 2603(b). Thuss counterclaimed, asserting that because Article XII of the Will specifically referred to the [generation-skipping transfer] tax the transfer tax burden should fall on the residuary estate..
After The Trust Company and [the independent coexecutor] filed a motion for summary judgment, [the independent coexecutor] changed his position on the tax burden, deciding his grandson was correct and that [Denman’s] intent as expressed in the Will was that the GST tax be imposed on the residuary estate. As a result, [the independent coexecutor] obtained new counsel and, solely in his capacity as coexecutor, filed amended petitions generally adopting Thuss’s position, [footnote omitted]
The Trust Company, joined by Trinity [University], filed an amended motion for summary judgment, [the independent coexecutor] and Thuss filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, and the probate court heard argument on all the motions. The court rendered a final judgment on November 9, 2007, granting the motion for summary judgment filed by The Trust Company and Trinity [University] and denying the one filed by [the independent coexecutor] and Thuss. The probate court declared the Will did not direct the GST tax for the Ranch to be paid from the residuary estate so “the GST tax must thus be charged to such property,” i.e., the Ranch. The probate court impliedly found the Will did not contain a sufficiently specific reference to the GST tax to remove it from the statutory scheme of section 2603(b) of the Internal Revenue Code. Denman and Thuss appealed.

Id. at 641-42.

In Denman I, the parties agreed the devise of the Ranch to Thuss was a generation-skipping transfer as defined by section 2611 of the Internal Revenue Code. Id. at 645. They also agreed the transfer of the Ranch was subject to the GST tax. Id. (citing 26 U.S.C. § 2601). Later, after prompting at oral argument, Thuss conceded that federal law mandated the GST tax be charged to the Ranch unless the Will directed otherwise “by specific reference to the tax imposed by section 2603(b),” which provides that unless otherwise directed by the governing instrument by specific reference to the tax imposed, the tax imposed on a generation-skipping transfer must be charged to the transferred property. Id. (citing 26 U.S.C. § 2603(b)). The question on appeal was whether Article XII of Denman’s will specifically referred to the GST tax as one of the taxes to be paid by the residuary estate. Denman,

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Bluebook (online)
362 S.W.3d 134, 2011 WL 5869479, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-gilbert-m-denman-jr-deceased-texapp-2011.