Judy A.S. METCALF v. STATE TAX ASSESSOR.
Docket No. Sag-12-207.
Supreme Judicial Court of Maine.
Argued: Nov. 8, 2012. Decided: July 2, 2013.
2013 ME 62, 72 A.3d 261
William J. Schneider, Attorney General, and William H. Laubenstein, III, Asst. Atty. Gen. (orally), Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellant State Tax Assessor.
R. Lee Ivy, Esq., and Michael A. Nelson, Esq. (orally), Jensen Baird Gardner & Henry, Portland, for appellee Judy A.S. Metcalf.
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.
SAUFLEY, C.J.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 1] The State Tax Assessor appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court (Sagadahoc County, Horton, J.) vacating the Assessor‘s decision that upheld a $98,180.31 Maine estate tax assessment imposed against attorney Judy A.S. Metcalf in her capacity as administratrix of a Massachusetts estate. The court held that the Assessor lacked the authority to impose personal liability for unpaid estate
[¶ 2] The following facts are undisputed, unless otherwise indicated.
[¶ 3] Alfred F. Anderson, a resident of Massachusetts, died on January 11, 2004. At the time of his death, Anderson owned three parcels of real property located on Linekin Road in Boothbay Harbor, Maine. Most relevant to this dispute is the 24.2-acre parcel referred to as the “Back Parcel” by the parties.
[¶ 4] In accordance with Anderson‘s will, the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court appointed Martin Gerstmar as executor2 of Anderson‘s estate (the Estate) on Jаnuary 24, 2004. On September 7, 2004, Gerstmar sold the Back Parcel to the Linekin Bay Trust, of which his son was a co-trustee,3 for $170,000. In October 2004, Gerstmar filed Maine and federal estate tax returns valuing the Back Parcel
[¶ 5] In the summer of 2005, the Estate‘s residuary beneficiaries retained Metcalf to pursue their claims against Gerstmar, including an allegation that he sold the Back Parcel to a related party at a price below market value. In October 2005, Metcalf hired Andrew Noyes to appraise the Back Parcel. Noyes estimated that, at the time of Anderson‘s death in 2004, the Back Parcel‘s market value was $355,000.
[¶ 6] In October 2005, the beneficiaries petitioned the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court to remove Gerstmar as executor of the Estate (Massachusetts Action). Metcalf, on behalf of the beneficiaries, filed suit in the Maine Superior Court (Lincoln County) against Gerstmar and the trustees of the Linekin Bay Trust for their actions related to the sale of the Back Parcel (Maine Action).
[¶ 7] On January 17, 2007,4 the beneficiaries entered into two settlement agreements resolving the Maine Action. The first agreement provided that (1) Gerstmar wоuld resign as executor, (2) the beneficiaries would pay Gerstmar an executor fee of $15,000, and (3) Gerstmar would place $30,000 in an escrow account to pay interest and penalties resulting from the difference between the Back Parcel‘s valuation recorded on the 2004 federal and state estate tax returns and the appraisal conducted by Noyes in 2005. Pursuant to the second settlement agreement, the trustees of the Linekin Bay Trust transferred three parcels of land composing a portion of the Back Parcel directly to the beneficiaries.5 On the same day, the beneficiaries entered into a settlement agreement with Gerstmar regarding the Massachusetts Action whereby Gerstmar resigned as executor.
[¶ 8] Also occurring on January 17, 2007, the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court named Metcаlf as administratrix of the Estate. At the time of Metcalf‘s appointment, the Estate‘s bank account held a balance of $1,021,314.75. Soon after her appointment, Metcalf began making distributions from this account that eventually totaled $459,506.88. The distributions included $50,000 to the beneficiaries on January 31, 2007; $15,000 to Gerstmar on January 31, 2007, pursuant to the settlement agreement; $43,150.88 to Metcalf‘s law firm, Eaton Peabody, between January 2007 and Januаry 2008; $42,270 to Roberta Murray, one of the beneficiaries, on February 9, 2007; and $309,086 to Inheritance Funding Co., Inc., for the benefit of the beneficiaries, on February 16, 2007. Thus, by mid-February 2007, the Estate appears to have held assets of approximately $560,000.6
[¶ 9] On February 27, 2007, Metcalf received written notification from the IRS proposing to increase the Back Parcel‘s valuation. In August 2007, the Estate received a notice of deficiency in which the IRS valued the Back Parcel at $1,359,488. Primarily due to the Back Parcel‘s revaluation, the Estate‘s federal taxes increased
[¶ 10] In May 2008, the Estate and IRS settled the deficiency claim. Agreeing to a value for the Back Parcel of $950,000, the Estate consented to pay approximately $340,000 in additional federal estate tax,7 $117,000 in civil penalties, and $134,000 in interest for a total of about $591,000.8 The IRS agreed to pursue Gerstmar for any additional penalties related to fraud. In June 2008, the Estate paid the federal tax, penalties, and interest. Those payments essentially exhausted the remaining Estate assets.
[¶ 11] Seven months later, in January 2009, Metcalf filed an amended Maine estate tax return reflecting the Back Parcel‘s $950,000 valuation аs agreed to in the IRS settlement. The amended return reported an additional $63,005 due in Maine estate taxes. At that time, insufficient funds remained in the Estate to pay the Maine assessment. Metcalf requested that the Assessor seek payment for those additional taxes from Gerstmar.
[¶ 12] The Assessor issued a notice of deficiency to the Estate in February 2009; in July 2010, Metcalf received a notice of assessment for Maine estate tax, as well as interest and penalties, informing her that, as the Estate‘s personal representative, she was personally liable for the $140,755.71 owed by the Estate. In August 2010, Metcalf requested reconsideration of the notice of assessment. On January 24, 2011, the Assessor upheld an adjusted assessment of $98,180.31.9
[¶ 13] In February 2011, pursuant to Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 80C and
[¶ 14] The court vacated the Assessor‘s decision, concluding that the Assessor, and the Superior Court, lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate Metcalf‘s personal liability “as administratrix of an estate governed by Massachusetts law and supervised by а Massachusetts court.” The Assessor filed a timely appeal. Metcalf filed a cross-appeal challenging the Superior Court‘s decision that she controlled assets that could, if she constituted a personal representative pursuant to Maine‘s estate tax laws, subject her to personal liability for the sale of the Back Parcel.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 15] Because the Superior Court undertook a de nоvo review pursuant to Rule 80C and section 151, we review the court‘s decision directly without deference to the Assessor. See
[¶ 16] The Assessor argues that Metcalf meets the definition of “personal representative” provided in
[¶ 17] Metcalf argues that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1, “limits the assessment of Maine estate taxes to Maine assets.” Therefore, according to Metcalf‘s argument, to avoid a due process violation, section 4065(1) must be read as, “The ... tax imposed by this chapter shall be paid by the personal representative to the extent of [Maine] assets subject to his control.” Metcalf asserts that, when she became the personal representative of the Estаte, there were no Maine assets subject to her control.11 She urges us to conclude that the Assessor cannot hold her personally liable for the unpaid estate taxes associated with the Back Parcel.
A. Personal Liability of a Personal Representative Pursuant to Maine‘s Estate Tax Laws
[¶ 18] Taxation of Maine estate property owned by nonresidents is based, in part, on the federal estate tax assessment as determined by the IRS.12
[¶ 20] Chapter 575, governing Maine estate tax, defines the term “[p]ersonal representative,” as “the personаl representative of the decedent or, if there is no personal representative appointed, qualified and acting within this State, any person who is in the actual or constructive possession of any property included in the gross estate of the decedent.”
[¶ 21] Metcalf, as a personal representative appointed by the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court, exercised actual control over the Estate‘s property beginning on January 17, 2007. On that date, the Estate‘s assets totaled over one million dollars. These assets included Maine real property, i.e., the small lot discovered in 2007,15 and proceeds derived from the original transfer of Maine real property, i.e., the approximately $170,000 received from the sale of the Back Parcel. Thus, even construing the language of section 4062(5) “in favor of the taxpayer,” Cmty. Telecomms. Corp., 684 A.2d at 426, Maine‘s estate tax laws apply to Metcalf, who was in actual possession of property included in the Estate and controlled sufficient assets to pay the Maine estate tax assessment. See
B. Satisfaction of Federal Due Process Requirements
[¶ 22] Maine possesses extensive power to regulate and tax the transfer of real property located within the state and may hold personal representatives accountable for the exercise of power over
C. The Extent of Metcalf‘s Personal Liability
[¶ 23] Section 4065 limits a personal representative‘s personal liability “to the extent of assets subject to [her] control.”
III. CONCLUSION
[¶ 24] Pursuant to section 4064, the Estate owes taxes based on the sale of real property located in Maine. Metcalf, as a personal representative appointed by a Massachusetts court, was in actual (or constructive) possession оf the Estate‘s assets and is therefore a personal representative
The entry is:
The judgment of the Superior Court is vacated. Remanded to the Superior Court for entry of judgment against Metcalf.
Notes
A tax is imposed upon the transfer of real property ... situated in this State and held by an individual who dies ... after December 31, 2002 and who at the time of death was not a resident of this State. Maine property is subject to the tax imposed by this section to the extent that such property is either included in the decedent‘s federal gross estate or is Maine elective property. The amount of this tax is equal to that proportion of the federal credit that the value of the decedent‘s Maine real and tangible personal property in this State bears to the value of the decedent‘s federal gross estate.
Emphasizing the third rule, the Court noted that it “is ... essential to the validity of a tax that the property shall be within the [State‘s] territorial jurisdiction” and the “most familiar illustration [is] in ... cases of land which, to be taxable, must be within the limits of the State.” Id. at 489-90 (quotation marks omitted). “The jurisdiction possessed by the States of the situs [is] not partial but plenary, and include[s] power to regulate the transfer both inter vivos and on the death of the owner, and power to tax both the property and the transfer.” Id. at 492.
