In re Estate of Gatch

83 N.E.2d 526, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 1948 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 223
CourtHamilton County Probate Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1948
DocketNo. 150791
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 N.E.2d 526 (In re Estate of Gatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Gatch, 83 N.E.2d 526, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 1948 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 223 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

OPINION

By DAVIES, J.

This matter came before the Court on the application of John N. Gatch, executor and trustee under the will of Loren G. Gatch, deceased, for a redetermination of the inheritance tax and a refund of an alleged overpayment of tax paid by the said personal representative.

By stipulation it is agreed that Loren G. Gatch died a resident of Hamilton County, Ohio, on December 16, 1942. In the process of settlement of the estate of said decedent, an application for determination of the Ohio inheritance tax was made, and said tax was determined as $3106.07,. which amount less a credit of 4% for early payment was thereafter paid. The total gross estate for Ohio inheritance tax purposes amounted to $143,943.72. The debts (less that portion of the widow’s allowance in excess of $3000 not deductible for Ohio inheritance tax purposes) amounted to $23,963.43, leaving a net amount of $119,980.29 subject to Ohio inheritance tax, ex-' cepting, however, that no' deduction for federal estate tax was made at the time of such determination.

Thereafter, the executor filed with the United States Collector of Internal Revenue a federal estate tax return, and after adjustment, paid a total federal estate' tax amounting [547]*547to $32,933.67. Included in the estate reported for federal estate tax was the amount of $67,604.70, proceeds of life insurance.

Item I of the Will of said decedent reads as follows:

“I direct that all my just debts and funeral expenses be first paid out of my estate, and I further direct that all taxes, tooth State and Federal shall be a charge against the principal of my estate and shall be paid therefrom and shall not be charged against the interest of any distributee.”

The executor has filed an application for redetermination and refund of Ohio inheritance tax calculated after a deduction of federal estate tax as a debt of the estate.

Sec. 5339 GC, as amended by the Legislature in 1923, provides that

“If any debts shall be proven against the general estate after the determination of inheritance tax has been made, an application for modification of such order of determination may be filed. Of this application and of the hearing thereof the tax commission shall have notice. If the court finds that the tax has not been paid and that the adjudication as made should be amended, it shall so order and shall furnish the commission with a copy of the entry of determination as amended. But if the tax as assessed has been paid the court shall make an order of refunder of such a part of the amount paid as is in excess of what should have been assessed. It shall further find the successors who are entitled to share in such refunder and the particular township or municipality against which such refunder is chargeable.”

While the Tax Commission concedes 'that a refund of a portion of the Ohio inheritance tax paid in this estate is due, the amount of the refund and the method of computing the amount are in dispute. The Tax Commission concedes that at least some portion of the federal estate tax paid be now allowed as a debt of the- estate in redetermining the tax, since no deduction was taken for federal estate tax in the original determination of tax.

The taxable amount of the estate for federal estate tax purposes exceeds the taxable amount for Ohio inheritance tax purposes by $67,604.70, the amount of certain insurance policies, as above stated, for the benefit of named beneficiaries of the decedent. The Tax Commission accordingly argues that any of the amount of the federal estate tax assessed against [548]*548the insurance policies should not be allowed as a debt of the estate taxable in Ohio, since no tax in Ohio is chargeable against the insurance policies. The Tax Commission has taken the position that the amount of the insurance policies is to be treated as an addition to the net taxable estate in Ohio, and accordingly should be treated as being entirely in the top rate bracket for federal estate tax purposes. In computing the amount of the federal estate tax to be allowed as a debt of the estate, for redetermining the Ohio Inheritance tax, the Tax Commission has set up a ratio of .2745, which ratio is that of the federal estate tax, $32,933.67, to the net taxable estate in Ohio ($119,980.29). This ratio applied to the amount of the federal estate tax results in an allowable deduction for federal estate tax purposes of $9,040.29. The recomputation of the Ohio inheritance tax on the above basis results in a refund of $307.64.

The attorneys for the estate claim that the full amount of the federal estate tax paid ($32,933.67) should be allowed as a debt of the estate in redetermining the inheritance tax.

If the full amount of the federal estate tax paid is allowed as a debt of the estate, the redetermination of the inheritance tax on that basis results in a refund of $1,075.58.

The Tax Commission has also advanced the claim that the amount of the federal estate tax chargeable against the insurance policies might properly be collected from the beneficiaries under the policies. It is further claimed that if the beneficiaries are responsible for the payment of the tax, the amount of the federal estate tax assessed against the insurance policies (figuring the amount of the policies as if in the highest federal estate tax rate bracket) should not be allowed as a debt of the estate.

In the alternative, the executor claims that if the full amount of the federal estate tax is not allowable as a debt of the estate, a refund of $741.96 should be made, that figure being computed by allowing $22,002.99 of the federal estate tax as a debt of the estate. (The ratio of the life insurance to the net federal estate is .3318 which percentage of the federal estate tax, if paid by the life insurance beneficiaries, would reduce the amount of tax paid out of the principal of the estate to $22,002.99.)

It now becomes the duty of this Court to determine what “debts” can be proven against the general estate, after the determination of an inheritance tax has been made, to enable a Court, under the provisions of §5339 GC, to modify a previous order of determination.

After providing that an inheritance tax shall be levied upon successions of property passing to or for the use of a [549]*549person, institution or corporation in enumerated cases, the Legislature, in §5332 GC, provided that

“Such tax shall be upon the excess of, the actual market value of such property over and above the exemptions made and at the rates prescribed in this subdivision of this chapter.”

In §5332-1 GC, it is provided:

“The value of any property set off and allowed to a widow and children under the provisions of §10656 GC in excess of three thousand dollars, shall be deemed a succession taxable under the provisions of this subdivision of this chapter. The widow, if any, shall be deemed the successor of such entire succession; but if there be no widow, each child shall be deemed a successor of his share thereof.”

Sec.

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Related

In re Estate of Kilroy
86 Ohio Law. Abs. 366 (Cuyahoga County Probate Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 N.E.2d 526, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 1948 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-gatch-ohprobcthamilto-1948.