Pleska v. Zakutansky

459 N.E.2d 745, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 2338
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1984
Docket3-1282A326
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 459 N.E.2d 745 (Pleska v. Zakutansky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pleska v. Zakutansky, 459 N.E.2d 745, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 2338 (Ind. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

STATON, Presiding Judge.

Catherine Pleska (Catherine) appeals the trial court's determination that the federal estate taxes due on the estate of Peter Pleska (Peter) be apportioned between the *747 probate estate and t! non-probate assets which passed to Catherine. On appeal, Catherine raises three issues:

(1) Whether Peter's Will clearly stated that all of the federal estate taxes be paid out of the probate assets;
(2) Whether the attorneys' fees and the executor's fee awarded by the trial court were excessive; and
(8) Did the trial court err in allowing a claim for legal services rendered to Peter before his death when there were no objections to the claim or the amount charged during the hearing?

I.

Apportionment of Taxes

After Peter died in 1976, his Will was admitted to probate. The following portions of that Will are relevant to our consideration of the issue:

"I, PETER PLESKA, being at this time of sound and disposing mind and memory and being of lawful age and a resident of Lake County, Indiana, do hereby make, publish and declare this to be my Last Will and Testament.
# * * J *
"ITEM IIL.
"I hereby direct that all estate and inheritance taxes be paid out of the corpus of my estate by the executor hereinafter provided for.
"ITEM IV.
"I hereby give, devise and bequeath all my property, be the same real, personal, equitable, choses in action or mixed and wherever the same may be located as follows:
. to my cousin, KATHERINE PLESKA, of Chicago, Illinois 50
. to ANASTASIA MENDZIAK of Gary, Indiana 20 %
. to JAMES G. KALLIMANI of 8301 Hickory Street, Gary, Indiana 10 %
. to CEREBRAL PALSY of NORTHWEST INDIANA 2h %
5. to HOOSIER BOYS TOWN of Indiana 2h. %
6. to the UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME 15 %
a) to be used as a memorial fund in the name of 'The Pleska Family Memorial Fund For The Blind
b) I ask that the university officials help by its standards: *
1. Any boy or girl who is blind and is needy and wants to attend the University of Notre Dame
2. The money is to be invested as the university officials see fit and all moneys, including interest, are to be used for helping blind and needy individuals who want to get an education at the | University of Notre Dame."

(Record, pp. 51-52).

value. The value of Peter's probate estate, after payment of expenses, was $57,451.98. Property which passed to Peter's cousin Catherine outside the probate estate, but was included in Peter's gross estate for estate tax purposes totaled $299,155.18 in Federal estate taxes amounted to approximately $76,400.00, 1 the bulk of which was attributable to the property which passed to Catherine outside the Will.

Michael Zakutansky (executor), the executor of Peter's Will, attempted to apportion the federal estate taxes and sought to have Catherine pay the portion of the taxes attributable to the property she received outside of the probate estate. Catherine refused, claiming that Peter's Will required the taxes to be paid from the probate estate. The trial court determined that the apportionment statutes applied. This dispute has involved numerous legal proceedings including a suit filed in federal district court by Catherine and subsequently dismissed, and an appeal taken to this Court by Catherine and subsequently dismissed, in addition to lengthy discovery and numerous hearings in the probate court proceedings which led to this appeal. Finally, the trial court approved the executor's final *748 account over Catherine's objections and Catherine appealed. 2

Catherine contends that Peter's Will requires that all taxes be paid out of the probate property, including any taxes attributable to property which passed to her outside the Will. We disagree. Indiana has long favored apportionment of federal estate taxes. See Stoner v. Custer (1969), 252 Ind. 661, 251 N.E.2d 668. Our present statute governing the apportionment of federal estate taxes among probate and non-probate assets provides:

"Unless a decedent shall otherwise direct by will, the federal estate tax [U.S.C., tit. 26, § 2001 et seq.] imposed upon decedent's estate, shall be apportioned among all of the persons, heirs and beneficiaries of decedent's estate who receive any property which is includable in the total gross estate of said decedent for the purpose of determining the amount of federal estate tax to be paid by said estate, Provided, That no part of the federal estate tax shall be apportioned against property which, in the absence of any apportionment whatsoever, would qualify for any charitable, marital or other deduction or exemption, nor against recipients of such property on account thereof."

IC 1976, 29-2-12-2 (Burns Code Ed.). 3

The personal representative is entitled to recover from each heir or beneficiary their share of the apportioned estate taxes. IC 1976, 29-2-12-8 (Burns Code Ed.); 1C 1976, 29-2-12-6 (Burns Code Ed.). Therefore, federal estate taxes due on Peter Pleska's estate must be apportioned among his probate and non-probate assets unless his Will clearly directs otherwise.

Whether language such as that contained in Item III of Peter's Will renders the apportionment statutes inapplicable is a question which has not yet been addressed in Indiana. Jurisdictions which have construed similar clauses have reached conflicting results, as have courts within the same jurisdiction. See 69 AL 122, 269-272; 42 Am.Jur.2d § 347 et seq. 4 The phrase "all taxes" has been construed as including taxes assessed against both probate and non-probate property or as including only taxes assessed against property passing under the Will:

"A direction that all transfer, estate, inheritance, and succession taxes be paid out of the residuary estate means exactly what it imports. Standing by itself, the word 'all' means all and nothing less than all. It prohibits any apportionment of the death taxes on every form of gift or transfer contained in the gross taxable estate whether passing under the will or outside the will ...
However, there are cases to the contrary, even within the same jurisdictions, particularly under a statute which limits a direction as to apportionment or nonap-portionment to property passing under the instrument containing such direction unless the instrument otherwise directs.

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Bluebook (online)
459 N.E.2d 745, 1984 Ind. App. LEXIS 2338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pleska-v-zakutansky-indctapp-1984.