Estate of Jacks

182 P.2d 605, 80 Cal. App. 2d 562, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 992
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1947
DocketCiv. 13328
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 605 (Estate of Jacks) 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 Jacks, 182 P.2d 605, 80 Cal. App. 2d 562, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 992 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

By the decree of distribution in the estate of Vida Jacks certain property was distributed to trustees to be held in trust as provided in the will and in the decree of distribution. Thereafter the trustees filed their “First Account and Report of Trustees, Petition for Settlement and for Instructions,” and Romie C. Jacks, brother of the testatrix, filed objections thereto, contending that the trustees had acted improperly in charging certain property taxes, certain interest on a deficiency on the federal estate tax, and certain payments made to him, against the income of the trust, it being his contention that all three items should have been charged against the corpus of the trust. The lower court entered its order settling the account as filed, holding that the three items in question were properly charged against income. From that order Romie C. Jacks appeals.

Under the will of Vida Jacks, and the decree of distribution in her estate, appellant is one of five income beneficiaries of a trust, it being provided that the trust should continue during the lives of the five beneficiaries, and upon the death of the last survivor should terminate. Appellant has no interest in the remainders in the corpus upon the termination of the trust. He, therefore, has a direct financial interest in the determination of whether any particular charge is made by the trustees against income or corpus.

The will of Vida Jacks was executed in October, 1940. She died June 26, 1943. There are several provisions of her will that are pertinent here. In setting up the trust, in article seven, subdivision (d), the testatrix provided that: “Fees and commissions of the trustees for their ordinary and usual services as such, whether on account of income or principal, other than those payable on the termination of the trust, shall be a first charge against income. In other respects the determination of the trustees shall be conclusive as to whether any payment received or charge incurred shall be credited to or charged against income or principal.” The decree of *564 distribution specifically declared that the trustees took the trust property subject to this provision.

In article ten of the will she provided that: “I direct that any and all estate, inheritance, and similar taxes which may be chargeable against my estate or against the gifts, devises, bequests and other interests hereunder, or any of them, shall be paid out of the general assets of my estate, it being my intention that no devisee, legatee or other beneficiary hereunder shall be required to pay personally any tax or taxes which may be imposed on account of his or her interest in my estate, and that no such tax or taxes shall be deducted from the amount of any legacy or devise herein provided for.” The facts in reference to the contract payments involved require further elaboration. At the time Vida executed her will in October, 1940, the Jacks family was composed of four sisters — Lee, Margaret, Mary and Vida (the testatrix)— and one brother — appellant Romie Jacks. Lee died on January 1, 1941. There was a dispute over her estate. On July 11, 1941, the three surviving sisters entered into a contract with appellant and his wife, and it is Vida’s portion of the payments made under this contract that appellant claims should be charged to the corpus of the trust set up by Vida. Under the terms of this contract the three sisters agreed, jointly and severally, to pay to appellant the sum of $600 per month for his life, plus other sums not here involved. Appellant agreed to release Lee’s estate, and the surviving sisters, from any claims he might have against it or them. The three surviving sisters agreed to release appellant from all claims they might have against him, and to hold him harmless from any claim Lee’s estate might have against him. The contract contained this clause: “It is anticipated that some or all of Second, Third, and Fourth Parties [the surviving sisters] may make provision for payments to First Parties [appellant and wife] in their respective last wills and testaments, and in such event it is understood that any payments made under the provisions of each will shall be deemed to be a credit on the obligation provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this agreement, not to exceed one-third (%) of such obligation in the case of each will.”

When this contract was executed Vida had already executed her will in which, as already indicated, appellant had been named as a life income beneficiary. On the day following the execution of the contract Vida executed a codicil to *565 her will by which, so far as pertinent here, she provided: “I hereby declare that I and my two sisters, Margaret A. Jacks and Mary Jacks Thomas, have entered into an agreement dated July 11, 1941, with my brother, Romie O. Jacks and his wife, Mabel W. Jacks, providing for certain payments to be made by me and my sisters to them. I hereby amend my said last will and testament dated October 28,1940, so that any payments to be made thereunder to my brother, Romee C. Jacks or to Mabel W. Jacks, his wife, shall be credited upon my obligation to him and her under said agreement of July 11, 1941, to the extent of $200 per month in the case of my brother and $100 per month in the case of his wife. In all other respects my said will of October 28, 1940, is hereby confirmed and republished.”

Upon the death of Vida, which occurred June 26, 1943, appellant.filed a claim against her estate based on the contract provisions. The decree of distribution in Vida’s estate recognized the validity of that claim and provided that such claim, from its nature, could not be satisfied in the course of administration “but should be provided to be satisfied by the trustees.” The decree further provided that as a charge on the trust “prior to the payment of any income, said trustees are hereby authorized and directed to pay to Romie C. Jacks . . . the moneys agreed to be paid” to him under the contract, and that trust income payments to appellant should be applied to Vida’s obligation to him under the contract, not to exceed $200 monthly, and that if Margaret or Mary had to pay in excess of one-third of the total $600 per month due appellant under the contract the sisters might have contribution from the trustees “to the end that the payments by Margaret A. Jacks, Mary Jacks Thomas and the trustees are equal. ’ ’

During administration the executors charged the $200 a month payable to appellant under the allowed claim based on the contract to income and not to corpus. During such time the executors paid to appellant $200 a month for nineteen months, or a total of $3,800. In their final account the executors asked for an order: “Determining the amount of net income in the hands of your petitioners which is distributable as such to the residuary trustees and which in turn trustees are to pay to the beneficiaries of the residuary trust. ’ ’ In response to this request for instructions the decree of distribution orders that the sum of $76,822.57 and some *566 stock “constituting income of the trust” should be distributed as follows:

“To Romie C. Jacks $12,377.28

To Margaret A. Jacks $15,913.45

To Mary Jacks Thomas $16,177.28

To Ernest Romie $16,177.28

To Karl Romie $16,177.28”

The persons above named are the five life income beneficiaries of the trust setup in Vida’s will. Margaret A.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 605, 80 Cal. App. 2d 562, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-jacks-calctapp-1947.