Hartung v. Unander

355 P.2d 738, 224 Or. 165, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 606
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 355 P.2d 738 (Hartung v. Unander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartung v. Unander, 355 P.2d 738, 224 Or. 165, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 606 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

PERRY, J.

This is an appeal from a determination by the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon for Lane county of the inheritance tax computed upon the estate of Fred Broders, deceased.

The facts upon which the determination was made are not in dispute and are as follows:

Fred Broders, the deceased, and Violet M. Cook were married May 18, 1952. The day prior to this marriage an antenuptial agreement was entered into between these parties which, in effect, provided that Violet as the wife of Mr. Broders renounced her statutory rights of inheritance in and to his estate and he would provide for her by will a sum of $10,000 and a life estate in certain real property, the balance of his estate to pass to his lawful heirs. No will was executed by Fred Broders and on November 21, 1954, *168 he died intestate. Claudia Broders Hartung, a sister of the deceased, was appointed administratrix of the estate.

Subsequent to the commencement of the administration of the estate, the wife Violet commenced a suit contending the antenuptial agreement was void. No trial was had in the suit as a compromise settlement was entered into between the widow and Mrs. Hartung, individually and as administratrix, the sole interested parties in the estate, and upon stipulation of the parties the cause was dismissed with prejudice.

Hnder the compromise agreement, the widow received property of the value of $87,898, in addition to certain statutory allowances, and the sister received the balance of the estate. The sum received by the widow was considerably in excess of what she would have received under the antenuptial agreement.

The question presented is: Should the inheritance tax be computed upon the values based upon what each of the parties would have received by reason of the antenuptial agreement or upon what each did receive under the compromise agreement made by the sister and widow after Mr. Broders’ death?

The circuit court sitting in probate determined the inheritance tax should be computed upon values based upon what each would have received had the prenuptial contract controlled the distribution of the estate. Mrs. Hartung in her capacity as administratrix and an heir has appealed.

If the position of the trial court is to be sustained, it must rest upon the validity of the antenuptial agreement. The state treasurer and the widow contend that this premise is the true one since the antenuptial contract was not declared void, and liken the situation to the compromise of a will contest.

*169 In will contests the courts of the various state jurisdictions are not uniform in their views. Some hold that the sums paid to contestants are expenses of the estate and thus not inherited at all; others, that the nature of the settlement is determined by the nature of the claim and, therefore, sums paid in settlement of a claim of heirship are inherited by the recipient and the recipient taxed. Still others hold that the settlement paid by the legatees to the contestants is no more than an assignment of a portion of the legatee’s right of inheritance which he may dispose of as he sees fit and, therefore, the tax falls upon the legatee. See 36 ALR2d 917; 29 Columbia Law Rev. 1164 (1929). This latter rule is the one which has been followed in this state by the state treasurer and the reasoning behind this rule is set forth in the 1946-48 Opinions of the Attorney General p. 182:

“It will be observed that chapter 1, title 20, O.C.L.A., makes no express provision for the taxation of money derived from the compromise of a will contest, and there appears to be no doubt as to the legislative intent, for, in unambiguous terms, it is specifically pointed out that the tax is levied upon ‘all property’ which ‘shall pass or vest by dower, curtesy, will or by statutes of inheritance,’ and ‘shall take effect at and accrue upon the death,’ and no language is contained therein from which, it may be construed to include property passing by agreement, subsequent or otherwise, between the heirs and legatees. (Italics theirs)
“The precise question involved here has not been passed upon by our own supreme court, and, in looking to the decisions of the courts of other states, the great weight of authority appears to hold that in cases where suits have been instituted to contest wills, and before or after such suits are finally determined a settlement takes place and a compromise agreement is entered into by the legatees, heirs *170 at law, or beneficiaries interested, that successions are taxed only in the manner provided by the will and that subsequent events did not affect it. In re Cook, 187 N.Y. 258, 78 N.E. 991, and many other decisions to the same effect. (Italics ours)
“It is not necessary to review these cases or state at length the reasons by which they are supported. The theory upon which the majority ride proceeds is aptly stated by Eoyce A. Kidder, in his work on State Inheritance Tax and Taxability of Trusts, at page 28:
“ ‘The descent of property held by inheritance or devise is regulated entirely by statutory provisions, and under the inheritance tax laws, the property so passing is subject to tax at certain specified rates and is due at the death of the decedent; that to permit the heirs, legatees and parties interested in an estate to change by agreement among themselves, after the death of a testator or decedent, the proportionate amounts of the property on which the respective beneficiaries should pay an inheritance tax, might, in some instances, practically deprive the state of all power of collecting any inheritance tax; that the rights of the state to inheritance tax are fixed as of the date of the death of a decedent, and those rights cannot be annulled or abridged by any subsequent agreement between the parties interested in the estate of the decedent.’
"* * * * *
“It is my opinion, therefore, based upon the foregoing, that the tax in question should be determined according to the terms of the will.”

Our examination of these cases which follow the latter rule discloses that the courts’ decisions rest upon the premise, although not always so stated, that there is, in fact, an adjudication of the validity of the testator’s will. This must be so, for if the will is not sustained, then the testator’s property passes not in *171 accordance with, the terms of the will, bnt according to the laws of descent and distribution, and is taxed accordingly.

The situation presented by the facts in this case is, however, somewhat different. There was no will and, under these circumstances, there being no children of the deceased, the widow at his death was entitled to the entire estate unless estopped by a valid agreement to the contrary.

The parties have not cited and our research has failed to reveal any cases where a similar situation has been passed upon by the courts.

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Bluebook (online)
355 P.2d 738, 224 Or. 165, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartung-v-unander-or-1960.