Estate of Huntzinger

38 Cal. App. 3d 569, 113 Cal. Rptr. 227
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1974
Docket41665
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 Cal. App. 3d 569 (Estate of Huntzinger) 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 Huntzinger, 38 Cal. App. 3d 569, 113 Cal. Rptr. 227 (Cal. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 571 OPINION

This is an appeal by the State Controller from an order fixing the amount of an inheritance tax. The single question to be decided is whether the value of certain shares of common stock, transferred in trust by the decedent in 1958, should be included in the measure of the tax under section 13643 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.1 The inheritance tax appraiser included the value of the stock in his computation of the tax. The executor filed objections, and a hearing was held in the superior court, where evidence was received, after which that court made its findings of fact and an order sustaining the objections in this respect and fixing the tax without reference to that transfer. We have concluded that the evidence establishes as a matter of law that the transfer of the common stock is taxable. Accordingly, we reverse the order of the superior court.

Prior to 1958 the decedent, Ada Thatcher Huntzinger, was the owner of a parcel of real property on which she operated an office building known as the Thatcher Medical Center. In 1958, on the advice of her attorney, she adopted an estate plan which contained the following elements:

(1) A corporation was to be formed to own and operate the medical *Page 572 center. The corporation would issue to Mrs. Huntzinger preferred shares with voting powers of a value equal to the current appraisal of the real property. A nominal amount of common stock was to be issued to her for cash.

(2) The common stock would be transferred irrevocably in trust for the benefit of her three daughters and their children.

(3) Her will would leave the bulk of her estate, including the preferred shares, in trust for her three daughters and their children.

As the plan was explained to Mrs. Huntzinger by her attorney, "your two principal objectives will be to save taxes and to preserve for as long as practical the Medical Center as a unit for the benefit of the family."

Huntzinger Investment Corp. was organized as a California corporation in July 1958. It issued to Mrs. Huntzinger 12,600 shares of its preferred stock, of a par value of $100 per share, in exchange for the real property which had been appraised at a value of $1,260,000. The corporation also issued to her 100 shares of its common stock in exchange for $10,000 of other assets. The preferred shares were entitled to preferential but noncumulative dividends, when and as declared by the directors, at an annual rate not exceeding 5 percent of the par value. In the event of redemption of the preferred shares or the dissolution of the corporation the holders of the preferred shares were entitled to $100 per share plus the amount of any previously declared but unpaid dividends. The common shares could not receive any dividends in any fiscal year unless dividends were first declared and paid upon the preferred shares in that year.

In October 1958 a declaration of trust was executed under which Security First National Bank (now named Security Pacific National Bank) was trustee and Mrs. Huntzinger was trustor. The sole asset of the trust was the 100 shares of common stock which she conveyed to the trustee.

The declaration of trust required the trustee to divide the trust estate into three equal shares, one for each of the three daughters of Mrs. Huntzinger. During the lifetimes of the daughters, respectively, the trustee had discretion to pay so much of the principal or income of the daughter's share to the daughter or any or all of her issue as the trustee deemed to be in the best interests of the daughter or her issue. Notwithstanding this provision, the trustee was directed to "distribute so much of the principal of a daughter's share, up to the whole thereof, to or for the benefit of any or all of her issue to the extent and in accordance with the written direction from time to time of such daughter during her lifetime to the Trustee." *Page 573 No daughter had the right, however, to direct a distribution which would have the effect of favoring herself, or her estate or creditors.

The daughters each received a testamentary power to appoint any remainder of their trusts to their husbands or issue. If the power of appointment was not exercised the daughter's share was to be subdivided for her issue. As to such issue the trustee was given discretion to distribute income or principal and each issue had the right to withdraw certain amounts from and after the age of 25. Each grandchild was likewise given a testamentary power of appointment. The final termination date of the trust as a whole is 21 years after the death of the last survivor of Mrs. Huntzinger's issue living at the date of the declaration of trust.

The declaration of trust referred to the Thatcher Medical Center as the principal asset of the corporation and to the fact that the stock of the corporation was an asset of the trust. The trustor expressed her wish and desire that the property and any adjacent property subsequently purchased by the corporation and operated as part of the medical center be held intact for the benefit of the members of her family for so long as economically practical.

The trust expressly provided that the trustor had no right or power to alter, amend, revoke or terminate it. The trustee was given broad powers including the power to sell and to reinvest. The trustee was expressly relieved from any responsibility or liability for retaining as a trust asset the stock of the corporation. The trustee was precluded from making any loans to Mrs. Huntzinger without full and adequate security and at current rates of interest. She was precluded from dealing in any manner with the corpus of the trust or its income for less than adequate consideration in money or money's worth.

Throughout the life of Mrs. Huntzinger after creation of the trust, no income was received by the trust and no additional corpus was transferred to it. Mrs. Huntzinger was the only shareholder ever to vote in corporate elections during her life. No dividends were ever declared or paid by the corporation on either the preferred or common stock. The corporation was a successful venture, with profits being used to purchase adjoining property and to expand the medical center.

The inheritance tax appraiser valued the 12,600 shares of preferred stock at $1,260,000. No objection is made, of course, to the inclusion of the value of these shares in the computation of inheritance tax since they were owned by Mrs. Huntzinger at the time of her death.

The appraiser also included in his report, under the heading "Transfers *Page 574 in Trust" the value of the common stock, which he appraised at $415,000. After reducing this sum by the amount of $415, representing the appraiser's fee, the remainder of $414,585 was allocated one-third ($138,195) to each of the three daughters. The trial court sustained the executor's objections to the inclusion of this property in the computation of the tax.

(1) Preliminarily, we note that the superior court received in evidence, over the executor's objections, certain records of the trustee and records of the corporation offered by the Controller as evidence of Mrs. Huntzinger's intention. The point of the objection was that extrinsic evidence was not admissible to show that a written instrument was intended to have a meaning to which its language was not reasonably susceptible, citingEstate of Cohen (1971) 4 Cal.3d 41, 54 [92 Cal.Rptr. 684

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Bluebook (online)
38 Cal. App. 3d 569, 113 Cal. Rptr. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-huntzinger-calctapp-1974.