Estate of Naulin v. Clancy

201 N.W.2d 599, 56 Wis. 2d 100, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 904
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1972
Docket187
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 201 N.W.2d 599 (Estate of Naulin v. Clancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Naulin v. Clancy, 201 N.W.2d 599, 56 Wis. 2d 100, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 904 (Wis. 1972).

Opinion

Heffernan, J.

In his will, Mike Naulin stated:

“I direct that the total corpus of Trust ‘A’ shall equal thirty-three and one-third (331/3 %) percent of the total of my gross estate as finally determined for United. States Federal Estate Tax purposes (not including therein property which does not pass under this Will), after deducting from the whole of such gross estate the total allowed as deductions for such Federal Estate Tax purposes for claims against my estate and funeral and administration expenses.” (R. 17)

In addition to other lengthy testamentary clauses, the will contained the provision:

“As hereinbefore set forth, it is my intention that the value for Federal Estate Tax purposes of the property in _ Trust A,’ whether passing into said Trust under this Will or otherwise, shall be available for the marital deduction allowed by the Federal Estate Tax Law applicable to my estate; all questions pertaining to this Trust shall be resolved according to this expressed intention. Furthermore, I direct that the powers of my Executor and Trustees with respect to the property in this Trust shall not be exercisable except for the purpose and in a manner consistent with this intention.”

Under the terms of the will, the decedent’s wife was to receive a life income from both trusts. In respect to Trust A, she was given a testamentary power of ap *104 pointment. This power was exercised in favor of her estate. Upon her death, the assets of Trust B were to be distributed to named beneficiaries and to a charitable foundation. During her lifetime, the trustees were empowered to invade the corpus of both trusts to provide Beulah Jean Naulin with luxuries appropriate to her standard of living.

The will was carefully drawn for the purpose of taking advantage of the marital-deduction privileges of the federal tax law. The will amply provided for the wife during the course of her lifetime and yet limited the portion of the estate passing under the marital deduction to less than the maximum. While the exact purpose of limiting the marital deduction to one third of the estate is not spelled out in the will, we take judicial notice of the fact that the assets which pass as a marital deduction in the estate of the husband will nonetheless, to the extent that they are not consumed during the recipient’s lifetime, be taxable to the estate of the surviving spouse.

The testator precisely enunciated the circumstances that would determine the monetary amount to be used in the funding of the marital trust, Trust A. While, in the abstract, it may or may not have been advantageous to so limit the funding of Trust A, we are bound by the testator’s explicit directions. Where language of a will is clear and unambiguous, that language controls and there is no occasion for judicial construction. Will of Blomdahl (1935), 216 Wis. 590, 592, 257 N. W. 152, 258 N. W. 168; Mitchell v. Mitchell (1905), 126 Wis. 47, 50, 105 N. W. 216. The criteria for valuing an estate for federal tax purposes and the time of valuation are specified by law. Internal Eevenue Code, secs. 2031 (a) and 2032. On this appeal, it is. acknowledged by the appellants that the figure of $292,149 was properly computed as the gross estate for federal tax purposes. It is *105 indisputable that the express directions of the testator limited the corpus of Trust A to one third of that amount. In view of the explicit directions of the testator, there is no interpretation that could lead us to conclude that the corpus of Trust A was either to appreciate or depreciate in value during the course of the estate. The amount to be funded was a sum certain to be computed on the size of the estate for federal tax purposes.

The will provided that Trust A was to be funded first from the proceeds of any life insurance payable to the estate. If those proceeds were insufficient, the trust was to be funded from decedent’s interest in certain patents and then from the stock of McNaulin, Inc., a Wisconsin corporation, in which the testator owned a substantial interest. Had the estate been funded immediately upon the valuation of the gross estate for federal tax purposes, since there was no life insurance payable to the estate and the valuation of the patent interest was $114,738, Trust A would have been wholly funded by a $97,383 interest in the patent rights. The patent rights, since they were to expire in 1975, were a diminishing asset. At the time of the distribution of the estate, the value of the patent rights had diminished to $59,364. Conversely, during the same period of time, the market value of the estate’s McNaulin stock had appreciated from $122,202 to $306,010. By order of the court, Trust A was funded at the time of distribution at the current market value of the assets. It was funded to the extent of $59,364 in patent interests and $38,019 in shares of McNaulin, Inc.

Under the terms of the will, to determine the funding of Trust A, it was only necessary to value the assets required to fund Trust A and not the remainder of the estate. Trust A was not limited to receiving a corpus which was worth $97,383 at the time of the computation of estate taxes. It was entitled to assets valued at that *106 amount at the time of distribution. We conclude, under the plain meaning of the will, that the trial judge properly ordered the funding of Trust A with assets valued at the time when the assets were ordered to be distributed.

Sec. 231.55, 1 Stats., provides:

“Valuation used in distribution of trust assets. In case of a division of trust assets into 2 or more trusts or shares, any distribution or allocation of assets as an equivalent of a dollar amount fixed by formula or otherwise shall be made at current fair market values unless the governing instrument expressly provided that another value may be used. If the governing instrument requires or permits a different value to be used all assets available for distribution, including cash, shall unless otherwise expressly provided be so distributed that the assets, including cash, distributed as such an equivalent will be fairly representative of the net appreciation or depreciation in the value of the available property on the date or dates of distribution. A provision in the governing instrument that the trustee may fix values for purposes of distribution or allocation does not of itself constitute authorization to fix a value other than current fair market value.”

Sec. 318.15, 2 Stats., provides a similar method and time of valuation. The valuation of assets is the current market value at the time of distribution under each statute.

Beulah Jean Naulin’s executrix additionally argues that, during the course of probate, income was received by the Mike Naulin estate and that a proportional share of that income should be allocated to Trust A. The trial judge pointed out that Trust A was a demonstrative legacy of the patent royalty rights. He therefore concluded that, since there was no evidence that the general estate would be relieved from liability to fund the trust if the *107

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Bluebook (online)
201 N.W.2d 599, 56 Wis. 2d 100, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-naulin-v-clancy-wis-1972.