First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Hart

50 N.E.2d 461, 383 Ill. 489
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1943
DocketNo. 27003. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 461 (First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Hart, 50 N.E.2d 461, 383 Ill. 489 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

. The plaintiff, as trustee of a trust fund created for the benefit of the grandchildren of Max Hart, deceased, sued to recover from defendants as contribution, the difference in amount of inheritance tax nominally assessed against the interests represented by the plaintiff and the amount charged against such interest in final distribution of the estate of Max Hart.

The circuit court of Cook county rendered judgment against each of defendants Abraham S. Hart and Maxine Hart Spitz in the sum of $14,864.47, being one half of the sum of $23,306.66, the difference found by the court to be due plaintiff, together with interest thereon to the date of judgment. The defendants appealed to the Appellate Court, First District, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed. The cause is here on leave to appeal granted.

The facts upon which this case is based are not in dispute and are as follows: Max Hart died testate in Chicago, Illinois, February 22, 1928, leaving him surviving his wife, Rebecca Hart, his son, Abraham S. Hart, his daughter, Maxine Hart Spitz, and two grandchildren, James Max Hart, Jr., and Richard Foreman Hart, children of a deceased son, James Max Hart. Defendants, Abraham S. Hart and Maxine Hart Spitz, are the appellants, and James Max Hart, Jr., and Richard Foreman Hart are the beneficiaries of the Max Hart Grandchildren’s Trust, of which plaintiff, appellee, is trustee. The will of Max Hart was duly admitted to probate and Rebecca Hart and Lessing Rosenthal were appointed executors thereof.

The Max Hart will, after specific gifts to his wife, free of inheritance taxes, gave all the rest, residue and remainder of his estate to trustees of a trust created under the 5th section of the will, the trust being known as the “Max Hart Residuary Trust.” Under the terms of the trust, the trustees were required to pay the entire income from the trust res to Rebecca Hart during her life, and after her death to stand possessed of the trust estate and its income for all or such one or more of the children or remoter issue of the testator in such shares and subject to such trusts and provisions as Rebecca Hart might by deed or will appoint. In event the power of appointment was not exercised, the will made disposition of the trust corpus. This alternative provision of the Max Hart will did not come into effect, as Rebecca Hart by her will exercised the power.

An inheritance tax was, on September 29, 1930, assessed against the interests of the beneficiaries and paid by the executors. The total inheritance tax amounted to $530,685.17, of which $107,656.81 was assessed against the interest of each of the defendants and $36,348.41 against the interest of each. of the two children of the deceased son of the testator. The balance was against the interest of the widow, Rebecca Hart. The executors also paid the Federal estate tax which was assessed at $647,810.73, against which a credit of 80 per cent thereof, or $518,248.58, was allowed by reason of inheritance tax paid, leaving a balance of Federal estate tax paid the sum of $129,562.15.

Rebecca Hart died testate December 29, 1933. By the 9th section of her will she exercised the power of appointment given her by the Max Hart will and directed that the surviving trustee of the Max Hart Residuary Trust stand possessed of the trust estate for the children of Max Hart surviving her, and the descendants living at her death of any -deceased child, such children and descendants to take per stirpes, not per capita, subject however to the restrictions, provisions and trusts contained in sections 10 and 11 of her will. By section 10 a special trust was created to hold and manage the shares of Hart, Shaffner & Marx stock held by the trustees of the Max Hart Residuary Trust until January 2, 1940, and at that time to distribute same to beneficiaries named in section 9, provided that the shares distributable to descendants of deceased children of Max Hart be transferred to the trustee of the Max Hart Grandchildren’s Trust created by section 11. Neither the Max Hart will nor that of Rebecca Hart contained any provision relating to or authorizing the payment of Illinois inheritance taxes by the executors or trustees named therein, insofar as the taxes due from beneficiaries of the Max Hart Residuary Trust are concerned. Specific bequests were, however, specifically exempted from tax payments.

The gist of the complaint of -the plaintiff, as trustee • of the grandchildren’s trust, is that in making final distribution of the Max Hart Residuary Trust pursuant to the appointment contained in the will of Rebecca Hart, the remaining trustee failed to properly apportion the inheritance tax against the respective interests of the distributees before distribution, and it seeks, on behalf of its beneficiaries, a contribution to the extent that defendants’ shares in such final distribution were enhanced by reason of the fact that proper deductions for inheritance taxes were not made.

The amount of inheritance tax assessed against the one-third interest of the two grandchildren was $72,696.82, while the one-third interest of each of the defendants bore an inheritance tax of $107,656.81. This was due to the fact that the accumulated exemptions of the two grandchildren and the resulting lesser rate of assessment amounted to a difference in the tax which inured to their benefit. The full amount of inheritance tax against the interests of defendants and plaintiff was $288,010.43. In making distribution one third of the total tax was charged against the interest of each of the defendants and one third against the plaintiff as trustee. In other words, instead of charging the grandchildrens’ trust with $72,696.82, it was charged, as was each of the defendants, with the sum of $96,003.48, which appellee says was $23,306.66 more than should have been charged against the grandchildren’s trust, and therefore it is that amount which it seeks to recover.

The defendants contend that the trustee made a proper distribution, and even if it were not so, the defendants, by reason of having paid the larger part of the inheritance tax, procured for all beneficiaries the larger per cent of credit on the Federal estate tax, all of which was charged against the corpus of the Max Hart trust and that if plaintiff’s contention be correct and defendants are given proper credit for the proportionate amount of the Illinois inheritance tax paid and used as credit on the Federal estate tax, the sum total owed plaintiff by each of the defendants would be $546.19.

The argument here is that when Rebecca Hart made her appointment, she chose to treat the corpus of the estate as a unit; that when she directed the method by which the distribution should be made she, having been one of the executors who paid the taxes, made such appointment or distribution with the purpose in mind that the taxes should be shared equally; that the estate which she took over was what was left after the payment of all taxes and all that passed to the trustees of the Max Hart Residuary Trust upon her death was the balance on hand after the payment of taxes and other expenses. It is also urged that as Rebecca Hart could legally dispose of, by appointment, only such of the corpus of the residuary trust as was actually on hand, at the time the appointment was made, she intended to distribute only such remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 461, 383 Ill. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-chicago-v-hart-ill-1943.