Karam v. Law Offices of Ralph J Kliber

655 N.W.2d 614, 253 Mich. App. 410
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 2003
DocketDocket 225505
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 655 N.W.2d 614 (Karam v. Law Offices of Ralph J Kliber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karam v. Law Offices of Ralph J Kliber, 655 N.W.2d 614, 253 Mich. App. 410 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Markey, J.

In this legal malpractice action, plaintiffs appeal by right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendants. 1 We affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiffs Carole Karam and David Karam sued defendants Kliber and nbd for providing allegedly erroneous legal and tax advice concerning an estate plan for the decedent, Abraham Karam, Jr., that plaintiffs claim resulted in a large federal estate tax liability upon the decedent’s death. The estate plan consisted of a last will and testament and a revocable trust (including amendments) with the decedent as the settlor and trustee. Upon his death, Carole Karam, the decedent’s surviving spouse, and David Karam, one of the decedent’s children, became the cotrustees of the decedent’s trust and were appointed as the *412 joint personal representatives of his estate. They brought this action on behalf of both the trust and the estate, and Carole Karam also joined the action as a beneficiary of the decedent’s estate.

A somewhat basic overview of federal estate tax law 2 is helpful to an understanding of this case. In the vast majority of cases, no estate tax is due upon a person’s death if he leaves his assets to a surviving spouse or others. There are two principal reasons for this. First, the estate tax is intended for wealthy individuals; the estate tax system has a built-in tax credit that corresponds to an amount that is excluded from taxation. In this context, the “unified credit” refers to a credit on the amount of otherwise payable tax. The “applicable exclusion amount” or “credit equivalent” refers to the monetary value of the person’s assets that, if subject to tax, would result in a tax equal to the unified credit amount. The actual unified credit amount, and thus the corresponding credit equivalent in assets, has varied over the years. At the time of the decedent’s death, the allowable unified credit was $192,800, which, in effect, exempted from tax an asset amount of $600,000. Thus, at that time, if a person died having less than $600,000 in assets, his estate would not owe any federal estate tax, regardless of to whom he left his estate.

A second principal reason that a person might not owe federal estate taxes upon death is the existence of an “unlimited marital deduction.” The estate tax scheme allows for an automatic deduction for all *413 property left to a surviving spouse. The amount deducted is not taxed upon the death of the first spouse, but any assets remaining upon the death of the second spouse are subject to taxation at that time. Thus, if the decedent in the instant case had left his estate entirely to his wife, no taxes would have been due upon his death.

However, simply leaving all of one’s assets to a surviving spouse may pose problems apart from estate taxation issues. Additionally, it may result in the wasting of the first spouse’s allowable unified credit. In order to take advantage of both the first spouse’s unified credit and the unlimited marital deduction, a revocable trust may be created. Upon the grantor’s death, the trust splits the decedent’s assets into two separate trusts or funds, e.g., a “family trust” that would contain only the assets necessary to reach the applicable exclusion amount and a “marital trust” containing the remainder. In this so-called “normal” scenario, no taxes are due upon the death of the first spouse and, although the assets left to the surviving spouse are subject to taxes upon the latter’s death, the family trust can generate interest income to the surviving spouse or can grow tax free and be distributed to the remaining beneficiaries upon the latter’s death.

Alternatively, as referenced in Price, Contemporary Estate Planning (1992), § 2.9.2, p 112, “[b]eeause of the progressive nature of the federal transfer tax, the overall gift and estate tax burden may be minimized if the sizes of the spouses’ estates are equalized.” The estate tax, like the income tax, is based on a sliding scale with the top tax percentage greater than the bottom. So, it may be to the advantage of a couple with larger estates whose assets are disparate to pay *414 some of the tax upon the death of the first spouse rather than having to pay a larger total tax when the second spouse dies.

These two strategies are obviously incompatible, with the so-called “normal” estate plan relying on the time value of money and the reluctance of some wealthier individuals to pay taxes, while the “equalization” strategy takes advantage of the sliding rate schedule. In the “normal” trust, the family trust receives only the amount necessary to reach the applicable exclusion amount, while in a trust containing an “equalization” clause, the money is split equally between the two trusts. The issue in the instant case basically involves the difference between the two, with plaintiffs arguing that while the decedent actually wanted a “normal” estate plan, the language of the trust documents created an “equalization” plan that caused the estate to be taxed upon the death of the decedent. 3

A number of the underlying facts are undisputed in this case. The original trust of the decedent, Abraham Karam, Jr., was prepared in 1987 by attorney Raymond Lynch, who is now deceased. This trust named the decedent as trustee and defendant NBD and plaintiff David Karam as successor trustees in the event the decedent could no longer serve. Included in this trust was the provision at issue that contained language creating two separate trusts, the marital trust *415 and the family trust. Upon the death of the decedent (if Carole Karam survived him), the trust provision required the trustees to use the “equalization” model to apportion the decedent’s assets between the two trusts.

The decedent met with Arthur B. Hudson, vice president of nbd’s trust division, sometime in 1993 to discuss his estate plan. At that time, Hudson provided advice about the trust document. Hudson allegedly then sent the decedent a letter disclosing his views and recommending that the decedent contact an attorney to address Hudson’s concerns. Although the parties dispute the nature of that discussion, the letter Hudson purportedly wrote contains a discussion indicating that the existing trust’s distribution scheme was a “normal” one, with the first $600,000 passing into the family trust and the remainder to the marital trust, contrary to the actual language of the trust instrument. Upon receiving the letter, the decedent contacted defendant Ralph J. Kliber, who, after analyzing the decedent’s trust and the letter, drafted the decedent’s last will and testament and an amendment of the trust agreement. The decedent signed these documents on December 22, 1994. This first amendment changed the terms of the marital trust by adding a Qualified Terminable Interest Property (qtip) provision pursuant to 26 USC 2056(b)(7), 4 but did not change the nature of the controversial “equalization” *416 language.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
655 N.W.2d 614, 253 Mich. App. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karam-v-law-offices-of-ralph-j-kliber-michctapp-2003.