Swallen v. Commissioner

98 F.3d 919, 1996 WL 616435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 1996
DocketNos. 95-1554, 95-1555
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 F.3d 919 (Swallen v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swallen v. Commissioner, 98 F.3d 919, 1996 WL 616435 (6th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

The executors of the estates of Coyla and Wilbur Swallen have appealed from the decision of the United States Tax Court that Coyla Swallen’s will required that estate taxes be paid from her estate’s residue, rather than being paid according to an Ohio statutory scheme that equitably apportions taxes according to the proportion of the estate taken by each interest. We believe that Coyla Swallen’s will does not clearly intend to burden the residue with payment of the taxes, as is generally required by Ohio courts to avoid the application of Ohio’s equitable apportionment statute. We therefore reverse the decision of the Tax Court.

I

All facts in this case were stipulated for purposes of the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment before the Tax Court. Coyla Swallen died testate on June 27, 1987, survived by her husband, Wilbur Swallen. Wilbur Swallen died testate on February 21, 1988. At all times relevant to this matter, both the Swallens and the executors of their estates were residents of the state of Ohio. Two legal instruments bear upon the disposition of Mrs. Swallen’s assets: a trust document, and her will.

The Swallen Trust (the “trust”) was created by Mrs. Swallen as an irrevocable inter [921]*921vivos trust on October 13, 1972. The trust established Mrs. Swallen as the grantor, and included a considerable amount of stock as its principal asset. The trust provided that Mrs. Swallen was to receive the trust’s income and principal, as needed during her life, and, upon her death, her husband Wilbur was to have the same rights during the remainder of his life. Upon the death of both Swallens, the trust was to be distributed according to its terms.

Coyla Swallen executed a Last Will and Testament “the will” on December 20, 1985, in which she designated S. Paul Mathews and Robert Davis as executors of her estate. The will generally provided bequests to some separate trusts benefitting Mrs. Swallen’s children and their heirs. Significantly, the will declared that the residue of Mrs. Swal-len’s estate was to pass to her husband, Wilbur. There are thus only two beneficiaries of the will: (1) the Swallens’ children, who benefit from the trust; and (2) the estate of Wilbur Swallen, which takes the residue.

In addition to offering the will for probate in the Court of Common Pleas (“Probate Court”) for Hamilton County, Ohio, the executors filed a timely Federal estate tax return on behalf of Mrs. Swallen’s estate on March 24,1988. The return reported a gross estate of $3,298,745, and a taxable estate of $1,922,-241. The return indicated that the taxable portion of the estate consisted solely of Mrs. Swallen’s interest in the trust. The estate claimed a marital deduction in the amount of $1,222,278 that was computed by valuing the residue passing to Mr. Swallen.1 The federal estate tax due from Mrs. Swallen’s estate was paid solely from funds of the Swallen trust. The executors allocated none of the tax burden to the residue of the estate that passed to Mr. Swallen. The appellants in this ease, the executors of Mrs. Swallen’s estate, contend that this apportionment of the estate’s tax burden was required by the Ohio apportionment statute.

Litigation then began on two separate tracks; in the Ohio state court system and in federal court. When the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued a notice of deficiency based upon its contention that the estate tax, according to the will, should have been paid with funds from the residue, the executors filed a will construction action in the Probate Court.2 The purpose of this action was to establish whether or not the executors had acted properly by paying the estate taxes from the trust fund instead of from residue funds. The probate court adopted a referee’s report and concluded that the executors had acted properly in apportioning the estate tax according to the Ohio apportionment statute, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2113 et seq. (Baldwin 1993). The executors also petitioned the Tax Court to reverse the decision of the IRS taxing the estate under the assumption that the taxes had to be paid by residue funds. It is from the Tax Court’s denial of their petition that the executors now appeal.

The sole issue in this appeal is whether the Tax Court correctly decided that the Ohio apportionment statute did not apply to Mrs. Swallen’s will, and that the correct source for the payment of the estate taxes was the residue. On this subject, Mrs. Swallen’s will states, in pertinent part:

ITEM I. Payment of Debts, Taxes and Expenses.
(A) I direct my Executor, to pay from the residue of my estate, or. from funds [922]*922available to my Executor from other sources, all my just debts (including all expenses for my medical care), funeral expenses, and costs of the administration of my estate, except as limited by the following Section (B). I further direct my Executor to pay from the residue of my estate, or from funds available to my Executor from other sources, all inheritance, succession or estate taxes, that may be lawfully levied by reason of my death upon the inheritance of, succession to or transfer of all property which may be included in my estate, or in the list of property used in the tax computation under the terms of any such tax law, together with all interest on any such taxes. * * * Except as required under Section (B) below, I further direct that no tax or interest thereon paid by my Executor shall be charged by my Executor against the share of the principal or income of any surviving joint tenant, donee, legatee, devisee, insurance beneficiary, or trust beneficiary, so long as the funds or property in the hands of my Executor, or made available to my Executor, are sufficient to pay the same.

Joint Appendix at 111 (emphasis added). In addition to this language concerning the administration of her estate, Mrs. Swallen’s will contained the following section:

ITEMV:

(B) In the administration of my estate, the Executor shall have, in addition to or, if inconsistent therewith, in lieu of the powers and duties conferred [or] imposed upon the Executor by law, all of the powers and duties conferred or imposed upon the Trustees by the Irrevocable [sic ] Trust Agreements referred to in ITEM II, of this Will, to the extent the same are applicable, and said provisions of said Trust Agreements are referred to hereby and incorporated herein with like effect as though the same had been set forth herein in full for this purpose only. Such powers and duties shall be exercised without the approval or order of any Court.
I hereby authorize the Executor, in the Executor’s sole discretion:
(1)To join with my husband, WILBUR H. SWALLEN, or the representative of his estate, in any federal or state income tax return or other tax return which my estate, or the representative thereof, is permitted by applicable tax law to file jointly with my said husband or his estate or the representative thereof.
(2) To disaffirm any joint return which the applicable tax law permits the Executor to disaffirm, but the Executor shall not be required to disaffirm any return.

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ESTATE OF
98 F.3d 919 (Sixth Circuit, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
98 F.3d 919, 1996 WL 616435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swallen-v-commissioner-ca6-1996.