This case involves the question whether a surviving spouse’s share in the residuary estate of the testator shall bear a proportionate part of the federal estate tax.
The testator, a resident of New Jersey, died on November 18,1955, leaving a will dated May 6, 1948, one month after the marital deduction was adopted by Congress.
The will directed the payment of testator’s debts and funeral expenses, devised his residence to his wife and bequeathed to her all his household goods, furnishings and effects, automobiles, wearing apparel and jewelry and personal effects. It appointed testator’s wife and two sons as executors 1 and directed that they should nоt be required to give bond. The residue of the estate was disposed of in the following provision: “V. I direct that all the rest, residue and remainder of the property, real and personal, of whatsoever nature and wheresoever situated, which at the time of my death shall belong to me or be subject to my disposal by will or otherwise, be divided into two equal parts. I give, devise and bequeath one of such two equal parts to my wife, Adele H. Dodd. I direct that the second equal part be divided into as many equal shares as I have children and issue of deceased children leaving issue me surviving and I give, devise and bequeath one of such equal shares to each child of mine, who shall survive me and one of such equal shares to the surviving issue of each deceased child of mine in equal parts, per stirpes and not per capita.”
The executors calculated the federal estate tax by deducting the widow’s one-half share of the residuary estate without diminution for any part of the federal
The Internal Revenue Code provides that “in determining” the “value” of the interest passing to a surviving spouse for which the marital deduction is allowed, “there shall be taken into account the eifect which” any estate tax “has upon the net value to the surviving spouse of such interest”.2
3
It thus leaves it to state law to determine whether the marital share is to bear any part of the estate tax. Riggs v. Del Drago,
The New Jersey apportionment statute (L.1950 c. 327, N.J.S. 3A:25-30 et seq., N.J.S.A.), adopted in 1950, is inapplicable because it is restricted to cases where the will was executed after January 1,1951. The case is governed, therefore, by the common law of New Jersey. In the leading case of Turner v. Cole, 118 N.J.Eq. 497,
The presumption that the estate taxes should be borne by all of the residue was laid down in Turner v. Cole, supra, at a time when there was no intruding element against doing so. Presumably the residuary estatе was what remained after the testator had made his specific bequests and fairness therefore led to the rule that in the absence of any indication of intention to the contrary, the residue should bear the total estate tax. The reason for a presumption which casts the estate tax on all who share in the residue disаppears, however, when a marital deduction is carved out of the residue. A marital provision frequently is made in the form of a share of the residue because the maximum amount allowable as a marital deduction, which is one-half of the adjusted gross estate, is undeterminable when the will is written. A draftsman whose mind is directly fixed on the marital deduction must usually cast the testamentary provision in the form of a share of the residue, or even replace the well-known usage of testamentary draftmanship with tax lawyers’ language by providing that the surviving spouse’s share shall be a sum equal to a one-half share of the adjusted gross estate as it is ultimately determined on the final settlement of the estate’s liability for federal estate tax. 4
A marital deduction deals only with a surviving spouse, unique among beneficiaries, one who presumably is the primary object of a testator’s bounty and of the same generation as the testator, whose inheritance causes but a temporary postponement of thе tax 5 and of the ultimate inheritance by the children. While New Jersey is a common law and not a community property state it is well known that Congress adopted the marital deduction and split income provisions in 1948 6 to stem the increasing efforts of common law states to secure for their citizens the tax advantages which were available in community property states. 7 We have no doubt that New Jersey would intend its citizens to have the full benefit of the “geographical equalization” which Congress provided by establishing the marital deduction. It would, indeed, be difficult in the usual case, where the proportion of the residue left to the wife does not exceed the allowable marital deduction, to attribute to the testator an intention that his estate should pay an increased estate tax and that his widow’s distributable share should be reduced. In such cases there is no place for the operation of the canon of construction which imposed the burden of the estate tax on all whо shared in the residue.
There is nothing in the few New Jersey cases that have been, decided since the marital deduction was adopted which would indicate that the original common law presumption is still to prevail in cases where a marital deduction is involved.
The government relies on In Re Estate of Green,
The cases which the government relies on, therefore, are no support for a presumption which in this case would cast on the marital deduction a proportionate share of the estate tax payable out of the residue. There are, in fact, a few New Jersey cases which indicate an unwillingness to apply such a presumption in the face of the marital deduction. In Case v. Roebling,
In our view of the New Jersey law the wife’s share of the residue is not required to bear any share of the estate tax.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Notes
. As the case appears here, the executors who have qualified are the wife and one son.
. This method of calculation has been sustained. Harrison v. Northern Trust Co.,
. Internal Revenue Code of 1939, § 812 (e) (1) (E) (i), added by § 361(a) of the Revenue Act of 1948; now Internal Revenue Code of 1954, § 2056(b) (4) (A).
. We do not pause to give a detailed description of such provisions, assuredly unintelligible to most testators, or of thе need to deal with assets passing outside the will but includible in the estate for estate tax purposes.
. United States v. Stapf,
. Revenue Act of 1948, § 301, provided for the splitting of incomes, § 303 instituted the joint income tax returns, § 361(a) added the marital deduction as to estate tax and § 372 made it applicable to the gift tax.
. The intention was to accomplish “geographical equalization” between these states. See 4 Mertens, Law of Federal Gift and Estate Taxation (1959), § 29.01. The search had reached the bizarre extreme where common law states like Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon and Pennsylvania (see Willcox v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
. The taxable estate included specific bequests to the widow and the proceeds of life insurance policies. Their effect on the maximum allowable marital deduction is minimal.
. This is a mathematical certainty which is not disputed, although the precise amounts by which the widow’s distributable share would be increased and the children’s diminished have not been presented to us. It would have been desirable if these details appeared in the record and if the proceedings below indieated concretely the status of the administration of the estate in the probate court and the decision made therein. For as we pointed out in Babcock’s Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
