Smail v. Smail

617 S.W.2d 889, 1981 Tenn. LEXIS 447
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 617 S.W.2d 889 (Smail v. Smail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smail v. Smail, 617 S.W.2d 889, 1981 Tenn. LEXIS 447 (Tenn. 1981).

Opinions

OPINION

HARBISON, Chief Justice.

This case involves a controversy between the beneficiary of a marital trust and the executors of her deceased husband’s will. The executors are sons of the testator and are also primary beneficiaries of the non-marital trust. As the case comes to this Court, the dispute centers primarily around the time and the method of funding these trusts.

At the time of his death testator was one of nine directors of the Indiana Telephone Corporation, a closely held corporation whose stock was traded over the counter. He held some 6123 shares of voting stock which was valued at thirty-five dollars per share by the executors on both the federal and the state death tax returns.

Apparently the value of the stock remained unchanged for some ninety days after the death of testator. However, for some time prior to his death he had been active, along with others, in promoting a merger of the corporation with another company which, when consummated, would significantly increase the value of the stock. Several months after his death, news of the merger became public and the price of the stock increased markedly.

The principal contention of the plaintiff, testator’s surviving widow, is that she is entitled to share in the appreciation of this stock occurring after the testator’s death. She insists that the marital trust must be funded with at least fifty percent of the shares owned by testator, valued at the date of his death. In addition, because of [891]*891language in the trust relating to the payment of income to her, she insists that the executors were required to fund the marital trust as of the date of death and, in all events, no later than ninety days thereafter.

The executors have resisted these claims primarily because the bequest to the marital trust was expressed in terms of a pecuniary formula, or amount, rather than a fractional share of the residue, and assets distributed to satisfy that formula were to be valued on their respective dates of distribution, not on date of death. While they concede that the widow is entitled to have her share of the trust income computed from date of death, they deny that the will required actual funding at that time or within ninety days. We sustain the position of the executors as to both contentions.

Although the will is not ambiguous, there are some background facts which might reflect some of the reasons why it was drafted as it was. The testator and the present plaintiff were married on June 26, 1976, the date on which the will was executed. This was slightly more than one year prior to the date of his death on July 1, 1977. Testator and plaintiff had each previously been married. The testator had grown sons by his first marriage, both of whom were in university or graduate school on the date of the execution of the will. A reading of the will makes it rather plain that the welfare of these sons and their families was important to the testator. He made them primary beneficiaries of the estate, as well as the executors. He was an experienced businessman, knowledgeable of and concerned with minimizing death taxes. In our opinion, his bequest to his widow was designed to give her the maximum amount which would qualify for the federal estate tax marital deduction, but not anything more. This is borne out by the fact that on June 17,1976, nine days prior to the execution of the will, the testator and the plaintiff executed an antenuptial agreement in which each expressly released the other from any claim against the estate of the other resulting from their contemplated marriage. Each of the parties had separate estates. Assets belonging to testator on the date of the agreement were estimated at about $704,500, plus life insurance in the face amount of $219,000, together with a contingent one-half interest in a trust created by his first wife, whose estate he was in process of administering. He listed only $24,500 in miscellaneous liabilities. Plaintiff listed assets of $248,500 in addition to life insurance in the face amount of $20,000. She had been married for twenty-three years to Dr. Ellis Harr, who died in 1974. She had four children by that marriage, ranging in age from nineteen to twenty-seven years.

The will in question was obviously written by an attorney familiar with estate planning. It utilized standard language and tested formulas commonly used to qualify assets for the marital deduction and at the same time to give executors maximum discretion in the administration of an estate. The first item of the will directed the executors to pay funeral and administration expenses out of the general estate. They were then directed to pay all death taxes out of the residue. The second item gave to the sons of the testator — not the widow— all of his clothing, jewelry, personal effects, automobiles and household goods.

In the third item of the will the testator created a marital trust for the benefit of the plaintiff in the event of her survival. This will left to the trustee “a pecuniary amount” equal to fifty percent of the value of the adjusted gross estate as finally determined for federal estate tax purposes, less any assets which might have passed to her other than under the terms of the will. The executors were expressly authorized to select and to distribute to the trustee cash, securities or other property, including real estate, to constitute the trust. Most importantly, they were directed to employ for that purpose “values current at the time or times of distribution.” Estate tax values were deliberately and expressly not to be used, nor were any assets to be included which did not qualify for the marital deduction.

[892]*892In Item 7 of the will the two sons of the testator were made co-executors. They were given extremely broad powers, as follows:

“I give my Executors full power and authority to sell all or any part of my real or personal estate at public or private sale at such time or times and upon such terms as my Executors deem best; to execute leases; to borrow money and pledge the assets of the estate to secure the repayment thereof; to invest and reinvest; to hold securities in the name of a nominee; to settle any claim either in favor of or against my estate; and to execute and deliver all proper and necessary conveyances and other instruments of transfer. The powers and authorities given to my Executors may be exercised without order of court. I direct that the receipt of my Executors for the proceeds of any property sold shall be a full discharge to the person paying the same.”

Broader and more sweeping powers to the executors to fund the trust in whatever way they deemed appropriate could hardly be expressed. The testator had not left to the marital trust a fractional share of the residue of his estate or any other specific assets.. He had left a pecuniary sum — an amount which, after being computed in accordance with the federal estate tax proceedings, could be satisfied wholly in cash, wholly in kind, or partly in both. The situation is no different from that which would obtain had the testator left the sum of $500,000, or some other exact pecuniary bequest, to the marital trust. The executors were given authority to sell any assets in the estate for purposes of administration. To this end, in our opinion, they could have sold, or could now sell, portions of the shares of stock now in controversy or other assets out of the estate and pay a sum of money to the marital trust, contingent only upon the final tax computations as to the amount.1

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

Related

Beren v. Goodyear (In re Estate of Beren)
412 P.3d 487 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2012)
Harriet & Henderson Yarns, Inc. v. Castle
75 F. Supp. 2d 818 (W.D. Tennessee, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
617 S.W.2d 889, 1981 Tenn. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smail-v-smail-tenn-1981.