Jones Trust

46 Pa. D. & C.2d 705, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 68
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedJune 4, 1968
Docketno. 62,059
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Pa. D. & C.2d 705 (Jones Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones Trust, 46 Pa. D. & C.2d 705, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 68 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

Taxis, P. J.,

This petition was filed on September 20, 1967, by the executors of the Estate of Mary Elizabeth Jones, deceased. Mrs. Jones died on March 6, 1963, a resident of Philadelphia, and her estate has been administered there. Respondents, who are First Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Company and William A. Schnader, Esq., are trustees of a certain irrevocable inter vivos trust created on September 26,1928, by Mrs. Jones as settlor.

The trust was funded with substantially all of the assets which Mrs. Jones acquired from the estate of [706]*706her husband, Newton Jones, who died June 8, 1928, which assets she obtained by electing to take against her husband’s will. At decedent’s death, the assets of the trust had a value of $259,644.39. The trust was created at the suggestion of Mr. Schnader, who was also one of the executors and a trustee of Mr. Jones’s estate, so that Mrs. Jones might have more income than her husband had provided for her in his will, as well as a right to use principal if necessary. The assets awarded to the trust were worth approximately $119,000 at the time of distribution. From this fund, the trustees paid settlor $5,000 outright; they were required to purchase a home for her use, to cost not more than $15,000; and thereafter they were to pay settlor $4,500 per year from the income of the estate. Settlor retained a right to use principal "... because of sickness, injury or other emergency. . . .” And by paragraph fourth of the deed of trust settlor provided as follows:

“FOURTH: Out of the income of the property received by them [trustees] to pay all taxes by whatever authority levied upon the income derived by me from this estate; and all taxes levied upon any property belonging to the estate....”

As part of their estate administration, petitioners filed a Federal estate tax return, and paid the sum of $9,612.14. In the return, petitioners disclosed the existence of the inter vivos trust and its terms, but did not pay any tax upon its assets, alleging that it was not subject thereto. The Internal Revenue Service did not agree, and after conferences and litigation involving counsel for both the estate and the trust, an ultimate deficiency of $35,788.20, reduced from an initial claim of $73,497:23, was agreed upon on June 19, 1967. Of this deficiency $33,050.25 was paid from trust assets, and it was then agreed by counsel that the present petition and answer would be filed to de[707]*707termine where the ultimate liability for payment of this tax should be placed.

Petitioners, as executors, are vitally interested in this matter because the Internal Revenue Code places upon them a potential personal liability for unpaid estate taxes, where debts of an estate are discharged before providing in full for such tax: 31 U. S. C. A. §192. However, while it is the duty of the executors under Federal law to see that the tax is paid, where its ultimate burden is placed is determined by State law, and in Pennsylvania is fixed by either the expressed intent of the settlor or testator or the Estate Tax Apportionment Act of August 24, 1951, P. L. 1405, 20 PS §881, et seq., in the absence of such expressed intent.

The trustees filed an answer denying that the language in paragraph fourth of the deed of trust rendered the provisions of the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra, inapplicable. The trustees concede that the assets of the trust are subject to tax apportionment, but only in the manner set forth by the act. In addition, the trustees counterclaim against the estate for $4,224.34 plus interest, which they allege to be the amount by which the trust’s share of tax liability has been exceeded by the payment made, and which they now claim back from the estate under the provisions of section 5(a) of the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra.

Reduced to basics, therefore, the opposing contentions are simple and direct. Petitioners argue that they paid all of the Federal estate tax due on all of the assets of the probate estate; hence, the additional tax which became due thereafter by the inclusion in the Federally taxable estate of a portion of the assets of the inter vivos trust must all be paid from trust assets, under settlor’s direction to pay all taxes levied on those assets from the trust. The trustees counter [708]*708that settlor’s language does not express any intent to this precise effect, and under the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra, all assets subject to apportionment of estate tax must bear the liability therefor at the same rate.

Initially, it is clear that there is no justification for apportioning estate taxes under the provisions of the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra, other than on a pro rata basis. In the present case, the sequence of events makes the effect of the subsequent inclusion of trust assets on total liability strikingly clear; the tax due on the probate estate was completely determined and paid before any claim for tax on account of the trust assets was even asserted. Because of the graduated nature of the levy, the tax liability on $120,500.16 in probate assets was only $9,612.44; but the additional liability brought about by the inclusion of $129,862.30 in trust assets was some $35,788.20. Under such circumstances, the argument is appealing that a pro rata apportionment requires the parties interested in the probate estate to pay tax due solely from the inclusion of trust assets in the taxable estate; but it is necessary to remember that all parties in interest in both the probate and trust estates are being subjected to tax liability for the same reason, that is, that decedent has died. Section 4(a) of the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra, reads, in part, “Apportionment of the estate tax, . . . shall be made among the persons interested in property includible in gross estate in the proportion that the value of the interest of each such person bears to the value of the net estate before exemption. . . .” This language is clearly to the effect that the parties owning individual property interests of any type whatever, which are subject to tax apportionment, must each bear their share of the tax, to be determined only by the respective value of each interest: Cf. Anderson Estate, 373 Pa. 294, where [709]*709this rule was applied to a fund composed of testator’s own probate assets plus assets from a marital deduction trust over which he had a power of appointment, each residuary or appointive legatee bearing his or her own proportion of the tax regardless of the nature of the interest in the fund.

The remaining question is whether settlor has expressed any intent to charge the trust assets with tax in a manner other than the pro rata method set forth in the Estate Tax Apportionment Act, supra. In the deed of trust, settlor instructed her trustees to pay “. . . all taxes levied upon any property belonging to the estate.” In paragraph 19 of her will, Mrs. Jones provided, “All pecuniary and specific bequests and devises contained in this will shall pass to the donees thereof, free and clear of all estate, inheritance and succession taxes, which shall be charged upon and paid out of the residue of my estate.” These two provisions constitute the sum and substance of decedent’s expressions of intent concerning taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Pa. D. & C.2d 705, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-trust-paorphctmontgo-1968.