Nease v. Estate of Nease

643 S.W.2d 97, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3255
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1982
DocketNo. WD 33293
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 643 S.W.2d 97 (Nease v. Estate of Nease) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nease v. Estate of Nease, 643 S.W.2d 97, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3255 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

The issue in this probate proceeding is where the final burden of federal estate taxes shall be allotted as among the transferees of the decedent’s property. Appealing from the judgment denying the claim for apportionment of the estate taxes are the minor grandsons of the testatrix who are beneficiaries of a testamentary trust created from the personal property of the deceased. Respondent, the son of the deceased, is the transferee of an interest in real estate owned by the deceased and ordered set over to respondent by a judgment which enforces an agreement made during decedent’s lifetime.

Ethel Nease died December 26,1976 leaving as her survivors a son, Herbert Nease, and two grandchildren, the sons of Herbert. The grandchildren were aged 10 and 11 at the date of Ethel’s death. By her will, as modified by a codicil, the testatrix left her residence property, household goods and personal effects to the grandsons, share and share alike, outright free of trust. All remaining personal property was devised to the Home Bank of Savannah in trust for the benefit of the grandsons.

The additional real estate owned by Ethel, consisting of approximately 400 acres of farmland in Andrew County, was also devised in trust to the Home Bank with the income therefrom payable to Herbert during his life and thereafter to the grandchildren until the youngest attained age 36. At that time, the trust corpus was to be distributed in equal parts to the grandchildren or their descendants.

The will and codicil were admitted to probate, following which Herbert brought suit contesting the provisions of the will devising the farm property to the trustee. It was his contention that the will failed to recognize an oral agreement he had made with his mother to devise him a life estate in the property. The full record of that case has not been presented here, but the judgment entry found the issues in Herbert’s favor. The court declared Herbert to be vested with a life estate in the farms with the remainder in fee to the two grandsons of Ethel as tenants in common. The judgment further held the provisions of Ethel’s will establishing the real estate trust to be “null, void and of no force or effect whatsoever.” That judgment was not appealed.1

Subsequent to the will contest case, a petition was filed by the guardian for the minor grandchildren asking construction of Ethel’s will. The question presented was whether the will directed payment of estate taxes from the residuary estate, thus exonerating Herbert from any obligation to contribute that portion of the tax generated by the value of his life estate in the farms. The issue is of material consequence to the grandchildren who, as legatees of the general estate, will otherwise bear the full burden of the tax. The amount of the tax is not shown in this record nor is sufficient data available to evaluate Herbert’s life estate under the formula set out in 12 C.S.R. 10-8.110. We do observe, however, that the guardian’s petition alleges the tax[99]*99es paid by the executor will totally or substantially exhaust the personal estate if no contribution is made by Herbert.

The trial court construed the will to direct payment of federal estate taxes from the personal property of the decedent as an expense of the estate and without entitlement of the executor to seek reimbursement from beneficiaries. The language of the will interpreted by the court to justify this result, and the preceding paragraph, are reproduced as follows:

“First: I direct my hereinafter named Executor to pay all of my just debts and funeral expenses as soon after my demise as possible.
Third: After the payment of all my expenses, I give and bequeath to the Home Bank of Savannah, Missouri, all of my personal property including, but not limited to, notes, time certificates, bonds and bank accounts in trust, however, for the use and benefit of my two grandsons, the natural born children of my son Herbert.” (Emphasis supplied.)
(Paragraph Second was deleted by the codicil)

The trial court construed the term “expenses” to include estate taxes and reasoned that the language indicated an intent by the testatarix to impose on the beneficiaries of the personal estate the full burden of death duties. On this appeal, the guardian for the minors contends the will discloses no true intention by the testatrix as to payment of estate taxes and he contends the doctrine of equitable apportionment should be applied. For several reasons, we agree that the judgment of the trial court was in error.

Before considering the issue raised by the appeal, certain collateral features of the case require mention to eliminate uncertainties generated by the pleadings and the judgment and to aid in further proceedings before the trial court. It is first to be noted that little attention has been given to the distinction between the federal estate tax and the Missouri inheritance tax in effect at the date of death of Ethel Nease. Under § 145.120, RSMo 1978 (repealed 1980), the inheritance tax was charged against and was directly recoverable from the legatee, grantee, donee, devisee or person entitled to the property. Apportionment was thus a feature of the tax assessment process. By contrast, an estate tax, which is a levy upon the transfer of the entire estate upon death without relevance to the identity of the successors in interest, except for deductions in computation, provides no apportionment. Recourse to equitable principles is necessary if a charge of the share of the estate tax is to be allotted to each of the beneficiaries.

The petition by the guardian in this case refers somewhat indiscriminately to “State and Federal taxes” but the judgment speaks only to the exoneration of the devised interest in real estate from any ratable charge on account of federal estate taxes. The judgment leaves the inference that Missouri inheritance taxes, if any, accrued by reason of the life estate taken by Herbert will be collected from Herbert by the executor as the statute requires. In view of the result directed by this opinion, that consequence must follow and the uncertainty of the trial court judgment is therefore not of dispositive concern.

The guardian’s petition injects some confusion into the proceeding because of the relief which the prayer seeks. Apart from the prayer, the pleadings seem to define the issue to which the judgment responds, that is, whether Herbert is chargeable with a proportionate share of federal estate taxes under the doctrine of equitable apportionment or is exonerated from any contrib-utive liability by the declaration of the testatrix. The petition asks, however, that the court order a sale and conversion into personalty of “sufficient real estate owned by Petitioner’s wards as remaindermen” so that the funds otherwise paid in taxes not attributable to bequests to the minors may be restored to fund the initial trust. Obviously, a sale of all or part of the minors’ remainder interest in the farms would accomplish no apportionment of the tax obligations, but would simply convert assets of the minors from one form into another.

[100]*100If the guardian is correct and the will cannot be construed as forgiving the ratable share of estate tax attributable to the life estate taken by Herbert, the judgment should direct the executor to charge Herbert with that amount and, if not paid, to take action to enforce payment. No sale of real estate by the executor is or should be involved.

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Bluebook (online)
643 S.W.2d 97, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nease-v-estate-of-nease-moctapp-1982.