Lurie, Ann v. CIR

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 2005
Docket04-3800
StatusPublished

This text of Lurie, Ann v. CIR (Lurie, Ann v. CIR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lurie, Ann v. CIR, (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 04-3800 ANN LURIE, Executor of the estate of ROBERT H. LURIE, deceased, Petitioner-Appellant, v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States Tax Court No. 22639-94. ____________ ARGUED JUNE 6, 2005—DECIDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2005 ____________

Before ROVNER, WOOD, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge. This case is an example of how the best laid plans of mice and men can often go awry. Prior to his passing, the decedent, Robert H. Lurie, planned for the bulk of his wealth to be excluded from federal estate taxes and passed through various trust instruments set up for the benefit of his wife and children. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, however, determined that the trusts formed for the benefit of the children, valued at approxi- mately $40,471,059, should be included in Lurie’s gross estate for tax purposes. This determination left the funds remaining in the probate estate insufficient to pay the estate tax deficiency, calculated by the Tax Court to be 2 No. 04-3800

$12,214,209.42. The estate does not appeal the calculations of the Tax Court, but only appeals the Tax Court’s ruling that the deficiency, as well as the legal costs arising from this dispute, must be paid by the executor, Mrs. Ann Lurie, out of the trust set up for Mrs. Lurie’s benefit, instead of out of the trusts set up for the decedent’s children that gener- ated the tax deficiency. We agree with the ruling of the Tax Court and, therefore, affirm.

I. BACKGROUND The underlying facts in this case are undisputed. Robert Lurie (“decedent”) died on June 20, 1990, leaving assets worth approximately $130 million. He was survived by his wife, Ann Lurie, and six children, who were minors when he died. In May 1969, at the start of Robert Lurie’s career, his mother created ten trusts which came to be known as the Robert Lurie Family Trusts (“the LF Trusts”). Lurie had a limited power of appointment over the LF Trusts, and exercised that power in February 1990 to create six new trusts, one for the sole benefit of each of his six minor children. The six new trusts received all of the assets of the LF Trusts. Lurie also held a power of appointment with respect to ten trusts, known as the “RD” trusts. Lurie exercised his power of appointment over the RD trusts and created ten new trusts to succeed and receive the assets of the RD trusts. Both parties and the Tax Court referred to the LF Trusts, the RD Trusts, and their successor trusts collectively as the “Notice Trusts.” Lurie created the Revocable Trust, of which he was both grantor and trustee, on December 19, 1989, three days before he executed his will. The Revocable Trust Agreement provides that upon Lurie’s death the assets of the Revocable Trust would be allocated between a “Marital Trust” and a nonmarital “Residuary Trust.” Article III of the trust No. 04-3800 3

instrument deals with the creation of the Marital Trust. Specifically, the allocation provision states in relevant part: 3.2 Amount of Allocation to Marital Trust. The allocation herein to the Marital Trust shall have a value equal to the smallest pecuniary amount which, if allowed as a federal estate tax marital deduction, would result in the least federal estate tax being payable by reason of the Grantor’s death, taking into account the maximum available unified credit and the credit for state death taxes, but only to the extent that those state death taxes are not thereby increased. The Residuary Trust is established pursuant to section 4.2. Section 4.2 provides that, upon Lurie’s death, the remainder of the trust estate not allocated to the Marital Trust or used for the payment of the debts and expenses of Lurie’s estate was to be allocated into a Residuary Trust for the benefit of Mrs. Lurie and his children. Section 4.1 of the Revocable Trust instrument provides that if the residue of the probate estate was insufficient, then any remaining expenses from the administration of his estate were to be paid from the Revocable Trust. In relevant part: 4.1 Debts and Taxes. Upon the death of the Grantor, the Trustee shall, to the extent that the assets of the Grantor’s estate . . . are insufficient, pay . . . reasonable expenses of administration of his estate . . . all income, estate, inheritance, transfer and succession taxes, including any inter- est and penalties thereon, which may be assessed by reason of the Grantor’s death, without reim- bursement from the Grantor’s Executor or Adminis- trator, from any beneficiary of insurance upon the Grantor’s life, or from any other person. . . . All such payments shall be charged first against the principal of the trust estate. . . . 4 No. 04-3800

Lurie executed his will on December 22, 1989. Mr. Lurie’s will directs that his personal effects be distributed to his wife and that any residuary, after payment of debts, funeral expenses, costs of administration, taxes and legal expenses, be distributed to the Revocable Trust. The will references the Revocable Trust Agreement and states that the trust agreement governs the administration and distribution of the residue estate which includes the payment of estate taxes and legal fees ordinarily payable from the residue estate. See Section 2.1 of the Will of Robert Lurie dated December 22, 1989. At Lurie’s death, the value of his probate estate was $760,253. The value of the Revocable Trust at his death was $88,659,780. In accordance with the decedent’s will, his personal effects valued at $12,470 were bequeathed to his wife, leaving a residuary probate estate of $747,783. After payment of funeral expenses and administrative expenses, the residue of the probate estate was distributed to the Revocable Trust. Lurie had made gifts during his lifetime which fully absorbed the unified credit, so the nonmarital Residuary Trust was never formed, and the Revocable Trust distributed all of its assets to the Marital Trust for the benefit of Mrs. Lurie. On its federal estate tax return, the estate reported a gross estate of $91,712,318, which did not include the value of any of the Notice Trusts. The estate claimed a marital deduction in the amount of $91,682,908, and other deductions in the amount of $29,410, resulting in a taxable estate of zero. Upon an audit by the Internal Revenue Service, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the Notice Trusts should have been included in the decedent’s gross estate and, as a result, calculated a $47,459,641 deficiency in the decedent’s taxable estate. The increase in the taxable estate unsurprisingly led to an estate tax deficiency, which in turn left the residual probate estate insufficient to the outstanding expenses of the estate. The No. 04-3800 5

estate then petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination. Before the Tax Court, the parties eventually stipulated that the Notice Trusts would be included in the decedent’s gross estate at a total value of $40,461,079, but left it to the Tax Court to decide whether the resulting estate taxes, payable as a result of including the value of the Notice Trusts in the decedent’s gross estate, were payable from the Revocable Trust assets that otherwise would have gone to the Marital Trust, or from the Notice Trusts that generated the tax. In addition, the parties left it to the Tax Court to decide whether the legal costs associated with the audit and the ensuing litigation should be paid by the Revocable Trust or the Notice Trusts. The Tax Court found that section 4.1 of the Revocable Trust instrument provided for payment of estate taxes and legal costs if the residuary probate estate was insuffi- cient, and that, in accordance with that provision, the estate taxes and legal costs should be paid out of Revocable Trust assets that otherwise would go to the Marital Trust.

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