Matter of Townson

2025 NY Slip Op 25072
CourtSurrogate's Court, Monroe County
DecidedMarch 24, 2025
DocketFile No. 2023-2642/B
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25072 (Matter of Townson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Surrogate's Court, Monroe County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Townson, 2025 NY Slip Op 25072 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

Matter of Townson (2025 NY Slip Op 25072) [*1]
Matter of Townson
2025 NY Slip Op 25072
Decided on March 24, 2025
Surrogate's Court, Monroe County
Ciaccio, S.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on March 24, 2025
Surrogate's Court, Monroe County


In the Matter of the Petition of Lisa Townson, Beneficiary of the Estate of Ann K. Townson, Under SCPA 1420 for the Construction of the Last Will and Testament of Ann K. Townson.




File No. 2023-2642/B

Aaron E. Connor, Esq. and Verley A. Brown, Esq., Pierro, Connor & Strauss, LLC, Latham, New York, Attorneys for Lisa Townson, Petitioner.

Anthony J. Adams, Esq. and Mallory K. Smith. Esq., Adams Leclair LLP, Rochester, New York, Attorneys for James S. Reed, as Executor of the Estate of Ann K. Townson, Respondent.

Svetlana K. Ivy, Esq., Lippes Mathias LLP, Rochester, New York, Attorneys for JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Co-Trustee, Respondent.
Christopher S. Ciaccio, S.

The issue, brought to the Court as a will construction proceeding pursuant to SCPA §1420(1), is whether the estate's fiduciary may apportion estate taxes across the residuary estate and QTIP trusts, where language in the Will directing the taxes to be paid from solely the "residuary estate" lacks specific reference to statutory language authorizing tax apportionment or the QTIP trusts.



Facts

The facts are uncomplicated and not the subject of any dispute.

Petitioners Lisa C. Townson ("Lisa") and Winslow W. Townson ("Winslow") are the biological children of Schuyler C. Townson ("Schuyler"). They are remainder beneficiaries of two Qualified Terminable Property ("QTIP") trusts established pursuant to their father's Will.

The Respondents are James S. Reed as the executor of the estate of his mother Ann [*2]Townson, Schuyler's wife. Schuyler died in 1994, survived by his wife Ann and by his children Lisa and Winslow. Ann was not the mother of Lisa and Winslow. JPMorgan Chase is also a respondent, as co-trustee of the QTIP trusts.

Schuyler's Will was drafted by attorney Ralph J. Code, III, and provided that the two trusts were to be established for the benefit of his wife Ann, and for the benefit of his children Lisa and Winslow, and partially for the benefit of Ann's four biological children.

Of the two QTIP trusts, both established after Schuyler's death by an election on the estate's Federal Estate tax return, one was a "GST-Exempt" QTIP trust and was funded with $1,000,000.00. The remainder beneficiaries of that trust are Lisa and Winslow, in equal shares.

The second trust, a "non-GST" QTIP trust, was funded with $8,782465.11. The remainder beneficiaries of the non-GST QTIP trust are Lisa Townson (one-third), Winslow Townson (one-third), and Ann's four biological children (collectively one-third).

Schuyler's Will named his wife Ann and Chase Lincoln Bank N.A. (predecessor to JP Morgan Bank) as co-trustees of both QTIP trusts. From 1994 to September 2023, she collected all income from the trusts.

In 2022 attorney Ralph J. Code, III drafted Ann an updated Will, which she executed on September 2, 2023. She included in the Will a clause apportioning the taxes to be paid upon her death as between her estate and the QTIP trusts. It reads as follows:

"I direct that my Executor pay out my residuary estate, without apportionment, all estate inheritance and like taxes imposed by the government of the United States, or any state or territory thereof, or by any foreign government or political subdivision thereof, in respect to all property required to be included in my gross estate for estate or like tax purposes by any such governments, whether the property passes under this Will or otherwise, without contribution by any recipient of any such property"
(emphasis added).

Ann died in September 2023. She was survived by son James S. Reed (the executor of her estate) and his siblings, all Ann's biological children from a prior marriage.

James, as executor of the estate, retained attorney Code to represent the estate. In December 2023, Code sent a memorandum directing the trustee of the QTIP trusts to pay over 4 million dollars in federal and state taxes then due, notwithstanding the language in the Will regarding tax apportionment.

This will construction proceeding followed. The children of Schuyler seek to have Ann's biological children, the beneficiaries of her residuary estate, pay the entire tax burden incurred by the estate and the trusts.



Analysis

Apportionment of an estate's state and federal tax burden as between the residuary estate and marital deduction trusts is the favored outcome and the preferred policy choice (see Matter of Priedits, 132 AD3d 769, 770-71 [2d Dept 2015], citing Matter of Shubert, 10 NY2d 461, 471 [1962]).

New York Estate, Powers and Trusts Law ("EPTL") § 2-1.8 (d-1) (1) (A) provides that the estate is "entitled" to apportion the state tax burden between the residuary estate and the [*3]marital deduction trusts ("QTIP" trusts), but not "if the decedent specifically directs otherwise by will" (EPTL § 2-1.8 [d-1] [1] [B] [emphasis added]).

Similarly, the Internal Revenue Code ("IRC") § 2207A (a) (1) provides that the "decedent's estate shall be entitled (emphasis added) to recover" from the QTIP trusts taxes attributable to the assets in the trusts but "may otherwise direct" if the decedent in his Will "specifically indicates an intent to waive any right of recovery under this subchapter with respect to such property" (IRC § 2207 [a] [2]).

As noted by counsel for JPMorgan, the House of Representatives Report accompanying the amendment of IRC § 2207A in 1997 states that "The bill provides that the right of recovery with respect to QTIP is waived only to the extent that language in the decedent's will or revocable trust specifically so indicates (e.g., by a specific reference to QTIP, the QTIP trust, section 2044, or section 2207A)" and that " . . . a general provision specifying that all taxes be paid by the estate is no longer sufficient to waive the right of recovery (HR Rep 105-148, 613-614 [1997]).

"Specifically," has been held to mean an express reference to the QTIP trusts or to the provisions of the Code and/or the EPTL referenced above.

In Matter of Honig (Kirsch), Surrogate Pettit held that the language in the decedent's will directing taxes to be paid from "the principal of such trust, or trusts, as applicable, holding such assets, in the manner provided by law" (emphasis added), was not specific enough to waive the "tax obligation attributable to the Sub-Trusts for which a marital deduction was previously taken by decedent" (72 Misc 3d 823, 840 (Sur Ct, Albany County 2021)

Prior to August 5, 1997, Internal Revenue Code § 2207A (a) (2) provided for apportionment unless "the decedent otherwise directs by will." Cases decided under this decidedly less-specific language also held that reference to the QTIP trusts of the statutory provisions was required to waive tax apportionment.

In Matter of Gordon

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Townson
2025 NY Slip Op 25072 (Monroe Surrogate's Court, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 25072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-townson-nysurctmonroe-2025.