In re the Accounting of Carman

189 Misc. 24, 65 N.Y.S.2d 756, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2926
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 189 Misc. 24 (In re the Accounting of Carman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Carman, 189 Misc. 24, 65 N.Y.S.2d 756, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2926 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Delehanty, S.

The testamentary plan of deceased was designed primarily to assure the welfare of his wife. Secondarily deceased desired to devote his wgalth in great part to charity. He made provision that one tenth of a sum ascertained by a particular formula should pass to remote relatives and that another tenth of such sum should pass to his wife’s estate if she predeceased him. The testamentary plan provided for outright gifts and gifts in trust which are import[27]*27ant here only because they enter int.o the operation of the formula just noticed. There is special provision for the impact of succession taxes to which reference must be made hereafter. It is relevant also to note that had deceased’s wife survived him his trustees were directed to maintain deceased’s realty for her use and to assure her enjoyment of all his tangible" personalty connected with the realty. After the death of the wife the property so available for her use passed under paragraph eighth of the will as amended by the codicil.

The particular provisions of deceased’s testamentary scheme which give rise to the issues in this accounting proceeding are found in the tenth and fourteenth paragraphs of the codicil executed on April 17, 1941. The tenth paragraph of the codicil provides for the impact of taxes in this language: “ I direct that all of the gifts and bequests in cash, provided in my said will, as amended, and in this codicil, be paid to the beneficiaries, in the discretion of my executors, as soon as may be after my death. I direct that all estate, inheritance and transfer taxes upon such legacies be paid from my residuary estate, so that said legacies may be received by the beneficiaries thereof, so far as may be lawful, tax free. 1 direct that such legacies be paid by my executors at the face amount thereof, without any additions thereto on account of interest, regardless of the time of payment.” In the fourteenth paragraph of the codicil the executors are directed to ‘ set aside an amount in monies, securities and other properties equal to one-tenth (l/10th) of my residuary estate, as determined after payment of all legacies and bequests provided by the third, fourth, fifth and seventh paragraphs of my said will as amended by this codicil, and the legacies provided by the second and ninth paragraphs of this codicil to my said will, and of all debts, expenses of administration, taxes (including any estate, inheritance and transfer taxes paid on account of legacies and bequests pursuant to paragraph tenth of this codicil to my will), and like charges * * The gifts under the third, fourth and seventh paragraphs of the will which are referred to in the quoted text are all gifts in trust. The gifts under the fifth paragraph of the will and under the second and ninth paragraphs of the codicil are outright gifts.

The fourteenth paragraph of the codicil directs that the one tenth of the sum ascertained under the quoted text is to be divided by the executors and paid over to collateral relative» of deceased numbering eighteen in all. Six of these [28]*28eighteen have objected to the account and assert that the executors failed to allocate to them the full amounts to which they are entitled. These objectants say that they are true residuary legatees and that they are entitled to share in all property which becomes part of the residue, including a share in the property disposed of by the third, fourth and seventh paragraphs of the will. In computing the shares of object-ants the executors excluded all of the property mentioned in such paragraphs.

The court holds that objectants are not entitled to -share in any of the property or assets dealt with in the third, fourth or seventh paragraphs of the will. Deceased did not give objectants a share in his general residuary estate. He gave them only a share of the “ residuary estate, as determined ” under a formula specifically set forth in his codicil. He listed in express terms the deductions to be made from his gross estate in fixing the shares of objectants. Deceased’s formula specifically excludes the real property - devised in the third paragraph, the furnishings and equipment bequeathed in the fourth paragraph and the amounts set aside for the “ annuity ” trusts under the seventh paragraph as well as all his outright bequests. The intent of deceased is clear and the failure of the trusts for his wife because of her death does not alter the formula. The action of the executors in computing the shares of objectants is supported by the mandate of the will and hence, the first, third, fourth, eighth and tenth objections filed by Bobert Hoe and others are overruled.

Objectants also challenge the charging of estate taxes against their respective shares. As already noted, objectants with others take one tenth of the sum determined under the formula just discussed. Deceased’s wife’s estate takes a like sum. The remainder goes to the James Foundation, a charitable corporation wholly exempt from estate taxes. The executors deducted from the gross fund the other legacies, all debts, expenses of administration and like charges, but included in the deductions only the estate taxes paid on account of cash legacies. The balance of the estate was allocated proportionately to the beneficiaries of the formula ” gifts (one tenth each) and to the James Foundation. The executors then charged the remaining estate taxes to the “ formula ” beneficiaries. Objectants contend that this method has imposed upon them an undue burden and that all estate taxes should have been deducted before the division of the fund into shares. The executors assert that their procedure is justified by the [29]*29quoted text of the tenth paragraph of the codicil and by the fact that James Foundation is a charity. They argue that such quoted text indicates an intent of deceased that all beneficiaries other than the recipients of “ gifts and bequests in cash ” should bear their proportionate share of estate taxes. It is conceded that the “ formula ” gifts are not embraced within the term “ gifts and bequests in cash ”.

The court is not required to spell out by implication deceased’s testamentary intent respecting estate taxes. He expressly states his purpose and intent in this respect. As the court has hereinabove stated, objeetants are to receive a share in a fund computed under a specified formula. This formula expressly provides the deductions to be made from the gross estate before division into tenths. The group of which object-ants are part is entitled in the aggregate to one tenth of the net result. The formula directs that there be deducted from the gross fund “all * * * taxes (including any estate, inheritance and transfer taxes paid on account of legacies and bequests pursuant to paragraph tenth of this codicil to my will) * * (Emphasis supplied.) The plain and literal meaning of this text requires that all estate taxes be deducted before allocating to objeetants one tenth of the net fund. The direction to. deduct “all * * * taxes ” is not modified by the subsequent express inclusion of the estate taxes allocated against the residue by the tenth paragraph of the codicil. Perhaps the text used by deceased was desirable to obviate the claim that such taxes were allocated against the general residue rather than the particular or formula residue. In any event the word “ including ” and the text following* were not intended to restrict the prior direction but rather to clarify it (Red Hook Cold Storage Co. v. Department of Labor, 295 N. Y. 1, 8).

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Bluebook (online)
189 Misc. 24, 65 N.Y.S.2d 756, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-carman-nysurct-1946.