435 N.E.2d 91 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1980
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from the Probate Division of the Court of Common Pleas of Athens County. This case is essentially a question of the application of R. C.
Fred Beasley was a businessman of some substance. Beasley signed as a guarantor on a promissory note of Gilberts, Inc., a corporation in which he had no interest; and, as a result, Beasley incurred liabilities of several hundred thousand dollars. The corporation ended up in Bankruptcy Court, and it appeared that Mr. Beasley might do likewise. However, an agreement was reached between the creditors of Mr. Beasley and certain members of his family. The agreement essentially provided that Beasley would sell his stock in Beasley Industries for $166,000 to one of his daughters, Mrs. Hively. Mrs. Hively and two others, Mrs. Holzer and Mrs. Bridgewater, each contributed an additional $22,166.67 to the settlement, a total of $66,500. The creditors of Mr. Beasley accepted these cash payments and assigned their claims against Mr. Beasley, in equal parts, to Mrs. Hively, Mrs. Holzer and, eventually, to Mrs. Bridgewater, totaling, approximately, $631,000.
Some years later Mr. Beasley died. Mrs. Hively, Mrs. Holzer and Mrs. Bridgewater presented, as claims against the estate, the claims assigned to them in the previously mentioned transaction. The Probate Court, pursuant to R. C.
The Probate Court found that the determination concerning the court's allowance of the claims against the estate under R. C.
Assignment of Error No. I:
"The Probate Court erroneously determined that the Tax Commissioner of Ohio, when making a final determination of estate tax liability, is bound by an order issued pursuant to R. C.
The Tax Commissioner argues that where claims are made against a decedent's estate and allowed, but the Tax Commissioner is not a party to the proceedings, the decision is not binding upon the Tax Commissioner in his determination as to the extent of the taxable estate. Appellee, on the other hand, argues that if the Tax Commissioner is not bound, he is, in effect, being given the authority to overrule the Probate Court. The duty of the Probate Court under R. C.
Under R. C.
The Tax Commissioner was not given notice of the hearing on the claims, and such notice is not required. Where, as in this case, the Tax Commissioner reaches a different conclusion on the issue of tax liability and exceptions are filed, that issue is then to be presented to the Probate Court, under R. C. Chapter 5731, for a hearing to which all parties would have notice. At the hearing, the prior decision on the claims made under R. C.
Assignment of Error No. II:
"The Probate Court failed to determine that the Tax Commissioner of Ohio correctly applied R. C.
The Probate Court allowed the face value of the creditors' claims assigned to Mrs. Hively, Mrs. Holzer and Mrs. Bridgewater, a total of approximately $631,000. The entire amount was deducted from the gross estate. However, the Tax Commissioner reached a different conclusion, and allowed only $66,500 as a deduction. The Tax Commissioner's conclusion was based on his construction of R. C.
"(A) For purposes of the tax levied by section
"* * *
"(3) Claims against the estate that are outstanding and unpaid as of the date of decedent's death[.]"
Further, R. C.
"The deduction allowed by this section in the case of claims, against the estate, unpaid mortgages, or any indebtedness, when founded on a promise or agreement, is limited to the extent that they were contracted bona fide and for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth, * * *."
The Tax Commissioner's interpretation of these sections is concisely stated in his brief:
"* * * Rather, it (O.R.C.
We cannot agree with the Tax Commissioner's interpretation. The linchpin is on understanding the words "promise or agreement." One asks: whose promise or what agreement? All claims against a decedent's estate, except those imposed by law, such as an adverse judgment in a trial, are founded on a promise or agreement. A note is a promise to pay. R. C.
What then is the purpose of R. C.
This is not the situation we have here. The agreement made here by decedent was with third parties — the creditors of Gilberts, Inc. There was no agreement with the decedent and his heirs. The agreement between the three daughters and Beasley's creditors was a simple assignment. The trial court was correct in allowing the exceptions to the findings of the Tax Commissioner. Assignment of Error No. II is overruled.
Assignment of Error No. III:
"The Probate Court erred in refusing to allow the Tax Commissioner to establish that the Executor of the decedent's estate did not appeal the identical adjustments made to the claims in issue by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in determining the decedent's federal estate tax liability."
On the federal estate tax return the Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the deduction, just as the Tax Commissioner did here. However, the executor, appellee herein, did not contest that decision. The Tax Commissioner argues that the executor's refusal to contest the decision of the Internal Revenue Service is an admission against interest by the executor. In support thereof he notes that Sections 2053(a)(3) and (c), Title 26, U.S. Code, are identical to R. C.
In In re Estate of Kaufman (1978),
The second reason for overruling the third assignment of *137 error is far more practical. A "simple" tax return exasperates the average citizen, and the thought of a contested tax case is disconcerting at best. It would be fair to say that many people feel that, in spite of the rightness of their cause, they simply cannot prevail in a tax case. It is unfortunate, but many people feel the expenditure of time and money to contest a decision of the Internal Revenue Service is simply not worth it. It is, in short, easier to pay than fight.
The Tax Commissioner would have us, in addition, impose upon the taxpayer the further burden of holding his refusal to contest the federal tax authorities as an admission against interest. This would, we feel, create a pernicious whipsaw effect where the executor must either take on all taxing authorities or, obsequiously, pay on demand. An admission must be voluntary. The maxim qui tacet, consentire videtur (he who is silent is supposed to consent), Rose v. State (1897), 7 C.D. 226, 229, affirmed (1897),
Judgment affirmed.
ABELE, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment and in the opinion except in that portion disposing of the third assignment of error. *138