In re the Estate of Baker

687 A.2d 1047, 297 N.J. Super. 203, 1997 N.J. Super. LEXIS 45
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 4, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 687 A.2d 1047 (In re the Estate of Baker) 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 the Estate of Baker, 687 A.2d 1047, 297 N.J. Super. 203, 1997 N.J. Super. LEXIS 45 (N.J. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

DREIER, P.J.A.D.

Defendants, Michael W. and Louise T. Alcott, appeal from an order of the Chancery Division, Probate Part, requiring them to reimburse the Estate of Mabel M. Baker in the amount of $18,150, representing the transfer inheritance tax paid as a result of the inter vivos transfer to defendants of decedent’s Medford, New Jersey home. Decedent Mabel Baker executed her Last Will and Testament on June 13,1994, specifically devising to Michael Alcott the Medford property she owned. The will also contained a tax [206]*206apportionment clause which would have relieved Michael of the burden of estate and inheritance taxes on the property. Approximately two weeks later, on June 29, 1994, decedent executed a deed transferring the property to herself and defendants as joint tenants.

Decedent died at the age of ninety-nine on May 20, 1995. She was survived by the children of her nieces and nephews. Decedent’s will was admitted to probate by the Burlington County Surrogate’s Court on June 13, 1995. Also on that date, Letters Testamentary were issued to plaintiffs Karen A. Cutler and William F. Alcott, the co-executors appointed in the will.

Decedent’s will contained the following tax apportionment clause:

I ... direct that all estate and inheritance taxes be paid from the general funds of my estate in order that the beneficiaries hereinafter named may receive the full legacies or devises so given to them.

Further, the “general funds” to be used for the payment of decedent’s “debts, funeral expenses, taxes and administration costs, as provided in the [tax apportionment clause]” were defined as “[t]he net proceeds from all [decedent’s] bank accounts and certificates of deposit____”

In paragraph two of her will, decedent specifically devised her property at 84 North Main Street, Medford, to her grandnephew, defendant Michael Alcott. This was the same property that was deeded to Michael, his wife, and decedent as joint tenants slightly more than two weeks after the execution of the will.1

The issue in this case is whether decedent’s direction in her will for the inheritance taxes to be paid from the “general funds” of her estate should be applied to the real estate deeded to defendants. Plaintiffs obtained an order to show cause why defendants should not be required to pay the inheritance taxes on the real [207]*207estate. R. 4:95-2. After argument on the return date of the order, the judge determined that the inheritance taxes on the deeded property were not to be paid by the estate.

Defendants argue that the trial court should have at least inquired into decedent’s dominate intent because of the “unusual circumstances” of the deed making defendants and decedent joint tenants despite the fact that the will devised the same property to Michael alone. Defendants believe they were entitled to “present testimony of vital participants to the preparation and execution of the Will and Deed instruments.”

The trial court noted that what decedent was communicating in the will, and the effect of the subsequent deed, was that:

if you get something, whether it’s real or personal property under the will, and if in doing that it would otherwise cause taxes to have to be paid I want the estate to pay them. I want the person to whom a bequest or devise is made to get it net, free and clear so to speak____ Well, there was something that wasn’t through the will and it ... was not ... just an inadvertent substituted action____ [It] was a> deed to the grandnephew and someone else, so its not now the same as paragraph second____ So it takes it out of being probate property____

Athough defendants’ counsel represented to the trial court that it could put on witnesses to testify that decedent did not intend to remove the property from the tax apportionment clause, the judge nevertheless found that the offered testimony would not prove that decedent did not intend for defendants to pay the disputed taxes. He found that there was no ambiguity, and thus there was no need to hold an evidentiary hearing to look for decedent’s intent. The judge held: “By making the property non-probate property!,] the inheritance taxes are the responsibility of [defendants]____” We review the court’s findings as if they were made after a summary judgment motion. Compare R. 4:67-5 mth R. 4:46-2. The proofs before the court were documentary, and if they raised a substantial issue of fact, a plenary hearing, albeit a limited one, would have been necessary. R. 4:67-5; 4:46-3(b).

Under N.J.S.A 3B:3-33:

The intention of a testator as expressed in his will controls the legal effect of his dispositions, and the rules of construction expressed in N.J.S. 3B:3-33 through [208]*208N.J.S. 3B:3-48 apply, unless the probable intention of the testator, as indicated by the 'will and relevant circumstances, is contrary.
[Emphasis added.]

In the present case, unless the doctrine of “probable intent” requires that the trial court should have taken testimony, the strict language of the will indicates that defendants should pay the disputed taxes. As plaintiffs properly note, N.J.S.A 3B:24-5 limits the effect of a tax apportionment clause “to the property passing [under the will] unless the will ... otherwise directs.” The section also permits such a direction in “a non-testamentary instrument,” but the deed here, the only other relevant instrument, contains no tax apportionment language. Therefore, in the language of N.J.S.A. 3B:24-5, “the will or other instrument” did not “otherwise direct[ ].”

The deed of the property to Michael, as opposed to the interest deeded to his wife, Louise, might however be considered an advancement of the property devised in the will, and therefore sufficiently tied to the declaration in the will to give the apportionment clause effect. Ordinarily, property mentioned in a will which has been destroyed or transferred to another during the decedent’s lifetime is held to be an ademption. See White v. White, 105 N.J.Super. 184, 188, 251 A.2d 470 (Ch.Div.1969); In re Burnett, 49 N.J.Super. 439, 443-44, 140 A.2d 242 (Cty. Ct.1958); In re Estate of Cooper, 95 N.J. Eq. 210, 212, 123 A. 45 (E. & A.1923); see also Herschberg v. Director, Div. of Taxation, 2 N.J. Tax 121, 127 (Tax 1981). However, under the common law, when specific property given under a will is transferred to the beneficiary during the testator’s lifetime, the will’s provisions were deemed revoked, as the testator was deemed to have changed his or her mind regarding the devise. Hattersley v. Bissett, 51 N.J. Eq. 597, 603, 29 A. 187 (E. & A. 1893). The absolute import of this rule must be lessened following this State’s adoption of the probable intent rule in Robert. Of course, where the donee of the property claims entitlement to both the gift made and the provision under the will, there is now a factual question to be resolved, whereas under Hattersley the claim would have been barred. We need not [209]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 A.2d 1047, 297 N.J. Super. 203, 1997 N.J. Super. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-baker-njsuperctappdiv-1997.