Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Sullivan

116 A.2d 908, 142 Conn. 685, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 224, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 220
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 29, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 116 A.2d 908 (Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Sullivan, 116 A.2d 908, 142 Conn. 685, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 224, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 220 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

This case has been reserved for advice to determine from which of two estates a federal estate tax shall be paid. The tax has been as *687 sessed with respect to property disposed of under a power of appointment.

The stipulated facts, taken from the pleadings and exhibits, follow: John Moran died a resident of New Haven on June 17, 1951. He left his wife, Agnes Moran, surviving, but no close blood relatives. He was seventy-eight years old. His wife was eighty-eight. They had been married fifty-four years. His will was dated December 28,1950. After bequeathing his automobile, jewelry and apparel to his wife, and modest sums to four persons who had worked for him or for two corporations in which he was interested, he provided, in article five, for the division of his residuary estate, amounting approximately to $2,000,000, into two trust funds. One, designated trust A, was to provide for his wife. The other, trust B, was a charitable trust in favor of certain religious and charitable organizations. 1 *688 Trust A was set up to provide a comfortable living for Mrs. Moran; all the income from it was payable to her. To make certain that she should not want, John *689 Moran gave bis trustees the power to apply the principal of trust A and so much of the income of trust B as they might deem necessary, without securing the consent of the beneficiaries of trust B, to her maintenance during her lifetime. He also gave her a general power of appointment over the principal of trust A. If she failed to exercise this power, the two trust funds were to be combined into one after her death, and the income was to he paid to the beneficiaries of trust B. None of the income from trust B was to he paid to the beneficiaries thereof until Mrs. Moran died. Thereafter, they were to receive the income until certain stock in The Guilford-Chester Water Company and The Clinton Electric Light and Power Company, two local utilities which John Moran controlled, was sold, or until twenty years after Mrs. Moran’s death, whichever occurred first. The principal was then to be apportioned among them pursuant to percentages stated in the will.

John Moran’s estate was valued for tax purposes at nearly $2,000,000. A federal estate tax of $71,316 has been assessed and paid. It is estimated that the state succession tax will he about $93,000. After all deductions, including federal and state taxes assessed against his estate and payable out of trust *690 B, approximately $971,000 will be allocable to trust A and $798,000 to trust B.

In article eight, at the end of his will, John Moran provided for the payment of inheritance, transfer and estate taxes out of the funds allocable to trust B. 2 The interpretation of this article presents the issue in the case.

Agnes Moran died on March 30, 1952, before her husband’s estate was settled. Neither trust A nor trust B had been set up. She had made a will on July 13, 1951, twenty-six days after her husband’s death, in which, in article six, she exercised the power of appointment given to her in her husband’s will in favor of a brother and eight nieces and nephews. The power having been exercised in this manner, the estate of Mrs. Moran became subject to a federal estate tax estimated to be approximately $271,000. The allocation of the ultimate burden of so much of this tax as is attributable to the exercise of the power of appointment affords the basis for the present controversy. The questions presented in the reservation appear in full in the footnote. 3

*691 The answers to these questions require that we find and effectuate John Moran’s intent with respect to the payment of this tax. We look to the will as an entirety and examine the particular words and language used in the light of the circumstances under which they were written. Chase National Bank v. Guthrie, 139 Conn. 178, 182, 90 A.2d 643. Do they express an intention that the funds in trust B shall be used to pay the federal estate tax assessed against the estate of Agnes Moran because she exercised the power of appointment? The will appears to have been prepared by an expert draftsman. At this point, it is well to state that John Moran disposed of his estate in a manner allowed by law to obviate the payment of large estate and inheritance taxes. The corpus of trust B is exempt as a bequest for charitable purposes. Int. Rev. Code of 1939, § 812(d), as amended, 64 Stat. 959 (1950). By giving his widow a power of appointment over the corpus of trust A, from which she was to receive support during her lifetime, he qualified this corpus for the federal estate tax marital deduction provisions. Int. Rev. Code of 1939, § 812(e) (1) (A), (F), added by 62 Stat. 118 (1948). In default of the exercise of the power, the corpus of trust A would pass to charitable purposes and would likewise be exempt from the federal estate tax.

Succession taxes are payable by the recipients of the property with respect to which the tax is as *692 sessed. Hackett v. Bankers Trust Co., 122 Conn. 107, 126, 187 A. 653; General Statutes §§ 2052, 2060. Prior to 1945, estate taxes were payable out of the general estate; McLaughlin v. Green, 136 Conn. 138, 140, 69 A.2d 289; Ericson v. Childs, 124 Conn. 66, 81, 198 A. 176. Chapter 102 of the General Statutes, enacted in 1945, provides that estate taxes are payable pro rata by the recipients of the taxable property in essentially the same manner as are succession taxes. The operation of these rules can be altered or avoided by testamentary direction. Starr v. Watrous, 116 Conn. 448, 451, 165 A. 459; Sherman v. Moore, 89 Conn. 190, 194, 93 A. 241. The testamentary direction, however, must be expressed in specific and unambiguous language because, in most cases, it can have a very material effect upon those who share in that part of the estate from which it is directed that the taxes are to be paid. McLaughlin v. Green, supra, 142.

In article eight, John Moran directed that “all” taxes “levied or assessed upon or with respect to any property which is included as a part of [his] gross estate for the purpose of any such tax” should be paid solely out of the portion of his estate comprising trust B and that they should not “be prorated or apportioned among or charged against the respective devisees, legatees, beneficiaries, transferees or other recipients, nor charged against any other property passing or which may have passed to any of them.” It is true that the recipients of the corpus of trust A under the power of appointment exercised by Agnes Moran derive their title from John’s, and not from Agnes’, estate. McMurtry v. State,

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Bluebook (online)
116 A.2d 908, 142 Conn. 685, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 224, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-new-haven-trust-co-v-sullivan-conn-1955.