In re Estate of Shaka

484 A.2d 1135, 125 N.H. 589, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 309
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 5, 1984
DocketNo. 84-020
StatusPublished

This text of 484 A.2d 1135 (In re Estate of Shaka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire 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 Shaka, 484 A.2d 1135, 125 N.H. 589, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 309 (N.H. 1984).

Opinion

King, C.J.

This case involves a challenge to an assessment of legacy and succession taxes made by the New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration in the tentative amount of $19,615.86 against two recipients of a one-third share each of the estate of the decedent, Zella Shaka. The sole issue on appeal is whether a distribution of property from an estate made pursuant to a judicial decree enforcing an oral contract between the decedent and her husband to make a particular disposition of the estate at death is a taxable transfer under RSA chapter 86. We reverse the decision of the probate court and find the transfer taxable.

The facts in this case are not in dispute. Athan and Zella Shaka were married in 1921 and had one son, James, who was born in 1926. Athan Shaka, prior to his marriage to Zella, already had two children by a previous marriage, a daughter, Ora, and a son, Napoleon. In 1945, Athan and Zella Shaka entered into an oral agreement to execute mutual irrevocable wills leaving all of their property to the survivor of them and then to Athan’s three children in equal shares.

Athan Shaka died in 1947 and, pursuant to his will, his entire estate was distributed to Zella. Zella executed a total of three wills, one in 1945 and two more, subsequent to Athan’s death, in 1965 and 1973. None of these wills, however, satisfied the terms of her agreement with Athan, in that none of them left her estate to Athan’s three children in equal shares. Upon Zella’s death in 1975, her 1973 will was admitted to probate. Under this will, Napoleon, her stepson, was given ten thousand dollars, Joan Aliapoulios, the only child of her stepdaughter, Ora, who died in 1973, was given two thousand dollars, a niece was left one thousand dollars and the entire residue was left to her son, James. The total estate amounted to approximately two hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($250,000).

Napoleon Shaka and Joan Aliapoulios, the taxpayers herein, brought a bill in equity in the superior court to enforce the terms of the oral agreement entered into by Zella with their father, Athan Shaka, to provide for a one-third distribution to each of them by will. The superior court found that Zella had contracted with Athan [591]*591to leave her estate by will to Athan’s three children in equal shares, and therefore enforced the terms of the contract by entering a decree dividing her estate equally between his three children: Napoleon, Joan and James. The court further decreed that the executor was to hold the estate’s assets in a constructive trust for the three children and was to distribute these assets in accordance with the decree. The trial court’s decree was upheld by this court in Shaka v. Shaka, 120 N.H. 780, 424 A.2d 802 (1980).

An appeal from the probate of Zella Shaka’s 1973 will, which had been filed by Napoleon Shaka and Joan Aliapoulios, was withdrawn. The probate of the will was never disturbed nor set aside. Instead, the taxpayers received their respective shares in the decedent’s estate in the manner set forth in the superior court decree, rather than under the express terms of Zella’s will. Neither Napoleon Shaka nor Joan Aliapoulios is an heir at law of Zella Shaka.

The State Department of Revenue Administration (the department) determined that a legacy and succession tax in the tentative amount of $19,615.86, including interest, was due on the two distributions to Napoleon and Joan. The taxpayers challenged the determination that these distributions were taxable, and by order dated December 13, 1983, the Hillsborough County Probate Court (Cloutier,, J.) held that the transfers were not subject to tax. The department herewith appeals that determination in accordance with Supreme Court Rule 7.

On appeal, the department argues (1) that the transfers of property from Zella Shaka to Napoleon Shaka and Joan Aliapoulios have occurred in such a manner as to render them taxable transfers under the provisions of RSA 86:6, I (Supp. 1983) and (2) that the transfers, being from Zella Shaka to her stepchildren, who are not her lineal descendants, are therefore not exempt from the tax pursuant to RSA 86:6,11(b) (Supp. 1983).

RSA 86:6, I (Supp. 1983) imposes a legacy and succession tax upon:

“[a]ll property . . . which shall pass by will, or by the laws regulating intestate successions, or by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift, made in contemplation of death, or made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the grantor ... to any person, absolutely or in trust. ...”

The first contention raised by the department on appeal is that the transfers of Zella’s property to Napoleon and Joan, made pursuant to a judicial decree enforcing the decedent’s oral agreement with Athan Shaka, are taxable transfers under the provisions of RSA [592]*59286:6, I (Supp. 1983), having occurred by will. In support of its position, the department relies upon a similar case resolved by the Court of Appeals of New York entitled Matter of Kidd, 188 N.Y. 274, 80 N.E. 924 (1907).

In Kidd, a stepdaughter of the decedent brought an action against the executors and trustees of the decedent’s will and the other beneficiaries thereunder, alleging that the decedent had previously entered into an antenuptial agreement with her mother, whereby, “in consideration of the marriage and the promise of her mother to turn over to him the sum of $40,000 to be used .in his business, [the decedent] agreed ‘that he would adopt [the plaintiff], give her his name, and make her his heir . . . .’” Id. at 277, 80 N.E. at 924. The decedent, however, failed to perform his part of the agreement. Id. The trial court found the facts to be as alleged and, accordingly, entered a judgment declaring the antenuptial contract valid, “entitling the plaintiff to all the property, real and personal, of which the decedent died seised or possessed, and directing the defendants to execute and deliver to the plaintiff all necessary releases and conveyances of said property.” Id. at 277-78, 80 N.E. at 924.

Thereafter, the executor of the decedent’s will and the plaintiff in Kidd instituted a proceeding to have the estate declared exempt from taxation. The court of appeals ultimately held that the estate was liable for the transfer tax, stating:

“The contract between the plaintiff’s mother and the deceased, which has been enforced by the judgment of the Supreme Court, was to bequeath and devise to his stepdaughter, by will, either the whole property he might leave or a portion of it, dependent on the existence of other children. It was not a contract to convey, but a contract to make a will in her favor. Had the deceased performed his agreement and given her his property by will, the estate would have been subject to the tax ....
It does not affect the question of the liability of the estate to taxation that, in consequence of the failure of the testator to carry out his promise, [the plaintiff] was obligated to resort to a court for relief. The method by which a court of equity in a proper case . . . enforces an agreement of the character of the one before us is well settled.
It does not set aside the will, for in the present case such a judgment would do the plaintiff ...

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Estate of Rath
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Shaka v. Shaka
424 A.2d 802 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1980)
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In Re Soden
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Bluebook (online)
484 A.2d 1135, 125 N.H. 589, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-shaka-nh-1984.