In Re Estate of Rankin

404 A.2d 1200, 169 N.J. Super. 317
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 27, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 404 A.2d 1200 (In Re Estate of Rankin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division 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 Rankin, 404 A.2d 1200, 169 N.J. Super. 317 (N.J. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

169 N.J. Super. 317 (1979)
404 A.2d 1200

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CATHERINE ALICE RANKIN, DECEASED.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted May 29, 1979.
Decided June 27, 1979.

*318 Before Judges FRITZ, BISCHOFF and MORGAN.

Messrs. Kerby, Cooper, Schaul & Garvin, attorneys for appellant Cancer Research Institute, Inc.

*319 Messrs. Haskins, Robottom, Hack, Piro & O'Day attorneys for respondent The Howard Savings Bank.

The opinion of the court was delivered by MORGAN, J.A.D.

Cancer Research Institute, Inc., a residuary beneficiary under the will of Catherine Alice Rankin, appeals from a final judgment denying appellant's exceptions to the account of the estate's executor concerning the manner in which the federal estate tax and the New Jersey transfer inheritance tax were charged against the respective shares of the charitable and noncharitable residuary beneficiaries of decedent's will.

The will of Catherine Alice Rankin, a resident of East Orange, who died on June 2, 1976, was admitted to probate on June 14, 1976 and letters testamentary were issued to The Howard Savings Bank as executor. Their gross estate was valued for federal estate tax purposes at $370,403.74, consisting of nonprobate assets in the amount of $15,862.16, specifically bequeathed tangible personal property valued at $4,892.00, and other probate assets worth $349,649.58. Debts and administration expenses of $38,900.23 are payable, leaving a distributable residue (before estate and inheritance taxes) of $310,749.35.

Article Second of the will requires the payment of all estate and inheritance taxes from the residue in the following words:

SECOND: All estate, inheritance, succession, transfer and legacy taxes payable by reason of my death under the laws of the United States or of any state, district or territory thereof with respect to any property included in my gross estate subject to such taxes, together with interest charges on such taxes, shall be paid from the residue of my Estate, and I hereby waive on behalf of my Estate any right to recover from any person, including any beneficiary or beneficiaries of insurance on my life, all or any part of the taxes, or interest on such taxes, so paid. I direct all the expenses involved in shipping specific items bequeathed be paid as an administration expense from the residue of my estate.

*320 Article Seventh directs a division of the residue into "three (3) equal parts or shares." One of those three equal parts is bequeathed to a group of charities, and this constitutes a deduction for estate and inheritance tax purposes. Cancer Research Institute, Inc. (the appellant herein) is given half of that third, or one-sixth of the residue. The remaining half of that third is allocated to other charities, several of whom have joined in this appeal. The remaining two of the three shares of the residue are bequeathed to decedent's relatives consisting of an uncle and various cousins, and to individuals unrelated to decedent.

The executor's account, challenged by appellant, proposed that all estate and inheritance taxes be deducted from the residue before its division into the three equal shares. As a result of this procedure, approved by the trial court, one-third of all such taxes is to be charged against the charities' share of the residue even though that share generates no portion of the federal and state tax liability. The following is a tabulation of the residue shares calculated in that manner:

                                   Total        Charities'    Individuals'
                                  amount       share (1/3)    share (2/3)
Residue before taxes            $310,749.35    $103,583.12    $207,166.24
Less:
  N.J. Inheritance
        Tax         $32,766.28
  Federal Estate
        Tax          45,744.95
                   ___________
Total taxes                       78,511.23    26,170.41     52,340.82
                                ___________   __________   ___________
Net residue                     $232,238.12   $77,412.71   $154,825.42

This method results in a reduced charitable deduction in the calculation of the amount subject to the federal estate tax by the amount of the tax taken from the charties' share, thus not only decreasing the charities' share of the residue but increasing the total federal estate tax liability.

*321 It was this manner of calculating the estate's tax liability, deducting it from the residue before division of the residue into the shares required by the will, which generated the exceptions filed by the charities thereto, a position supported by the Attorney General of the State of New Jersey on behalf of all charitable beneficiaries. The charities concede that under the express direction of the will all taxes on both probate and nonprobate assets are payable from the residue. They argue, however, that because the will is silent as to the apportionment of taxes between the charities and the individual residuary legatees within the residue, no part of the taxes generated by the individuals' shares of the residue should be borne by them. Under the allocation proposed by the charities, only those taxes attributable to nontestamentary assets are paid from the residue before division. The taxes attributable to the individuals' shares of the residue are then equitably apportioned against those shares rather than being partially shifted to the charities' share of the residue.

By this latter method of allocation, allocating taxes generated by the noncharitable shares of the residuary estate to those shares, the portion of the residue available to charities would be increased from $77,412.71 to $101,973.87. In addition, the federal estate tax charitable deduction would be increased by that much, with the result that the federal estate tax on the taxable estate will be reduced from $45,744.95 to $38,966.07.[1] Under this method, the charities will be paying from the residue their share of the tax attributable to nonresiduary assets: $1,691.33 of New Jersey transfer inheritance tax, and federal estate tax of $3,136.41. The balance of estate and inheritance taxes, generated solely by the individuals' interest in the residue, would be charged against those interests alone.

At the hearing on the charities' exception, the attorney for the executor, also scrivener of the will, advised the court *322 that Article Second of the will which concerns the apportionment of taxes was nothing more than "boiler plate. It's in all the wills that we have drawn in our office." He frankly admitted that Article Second was not expressive of decedent's intent with respect to apportionment; that he didn't know what that intent was, or if she had any, and that in using the language he was simply following a suggestion made at a course for lawyers he had attended. There was no testimony or affidavit material submitted suggesting that testatrix had any intention with respect to the allocation of the tax burden among the charitable and noncharitable residuary legatees.

The trial judge, however, divined the intent of the testatrix regarding this subject from the testamentary direction to divide the residuary estate into three equal shares.

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404 A.2d 1200, 169 N.J. Super. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-rankin-njsuperctappdiv-1979.