21 S.E.2d 691 | Ga. | 1942
1. Where by her will a testatrix exercises a power of appointment conferred by her husband's will over a trust estate left by him, and disposes of her own individual estate, and estate taxes for both are calculated against the estate of the testatrix and paid by her executor, although under the applicable Federal tax statute all such taxes are primarily chargeable to the estate of the donee exercising the power of appointment, and collectible by the government as such, the portion of the estate taxes attributable to the appointed property is not finally payable out of the individual estate of the donee of the power, in so far as the two estates are concerned, in the absence of direction by the donee of the power so to do. Accordingly, the court did not err in overruling demurrers to the executor's petition, which were interposed by the residuary legatee of the appointed property, challenging the right to subject the appointed property to its pro rata share of the estate *256 taxes; and where the ratio between the appointed property and the individual estate of the donee was shown, without dispute, it was not error for the court to direct the apportionment of the estate taxes between the two estates pro rata.
2. Under the circumstances ruled above, the petition of the executor for direction was properly brought.
The Regents of the University System of Georgia filed its answer and general and special demurrers. On the hearing the judge entered judgment as follows: "The general and special demurrers heretofore filed by the University System of Georgia coming on for hearing, and, after argument, the court being of the opinion that Regents of the University System of Georgia is a proper party to said action, and that said estate taxes paid should be borne by Regents of the University System of Georgia and Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company in the proportion of their respective interest under said will and that said proportionate parts should be charged by the executor against said respective interest: it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said demurrers be and the same are hereby overruled." Regents of the University System of Georgia excepted.
1. The main question presented is whether estate taxes paid by the Trust Company of Georgia, as executor of the estate of Mrs. Florence Haile Brownell, should be charged wholly against her individual estate and thereby to her ultimate beneficiary, Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, as *258
trustee, or whether these taxes should be allocated, pro rata, between her personal estate and the Regents of the University System of Georgia, as beneficiary, by virtue of Mrs. Brownell's exercise of power of appointment under her husband's will. A former petition for construction and direction involving these same wills was reviewed by this court in Regents of theUniversity System of Georgia v. Trust Company of Georgia,
In Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Suydam,
While in the Rogers will case and the Suydam case, supra, the decisions turned upon construction of wills of donees of powers of appointment, holding that such donee did not intend to direct payment of the tax out of the donee's own estate upon the property exercised by power of appointment, the result of the decisions cast upon property coming from the donor of the power its proportionate share of taxes. Only indirectly then are those cases applicable in principle to the one now under consideration. But such application *262 is not negatived by the New York or New Jersey statutes existing at the time of the decisions mentioned, or by other arguments advanced in the briefs. See 28 Am. Jur. 136, § 279; 115 A.L.R. 916. In the present case neither the will of Francis E. Brownell nor that of Florence Haile Brownell gives any direction as to how the estate taxes should be borne. Thus, in deciding the question, we have to look to such law as may be applicable. The statute (Code, § 92-3402) can not reasonably be construed to make the personal estate of the donee of a power of appointment ultimately and finally liable for estate taxes upon property passing under power exercised by such donee. Even though such donee's personal estate may be primarily liable for estate taxes including that of property passing under the instrument creating a power of appointment (Internal Revenue Code, § 811 (f); Camden Safe Deposit c. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra) we think such rule for tax purposes in favor of the government itself, without defining property rights, does not destroy the separate entity of the appointed estate in the circumstances of the present case, or prevent apportionment between the two estates in the proper ratio after the taxes have been paid by the donee's estate. To hold otherwise might lead to the inequitable and unjust consequence of swallowing up or dissipating the personal estate of a donee of a power of appointment, to satisfy taxes upon property passing from another than such donee. If a donee of a power of appointment under a will knew that in exercising such power he would be compelled to absorb out of his own personal estate taxes upon the appointed property, it likely would be deterrent to the exercise of the power by the donee. We do not think the law compels such absorption of the tax finally by the donee of the power of appointment. Accordingly, we hold the judge did not err in overruling the demurrers of the Regents of the University System of Georgia to the petition, and in directing the apportionment of the tax.
2. Obviously, from the above, the matter of determining how the estate taxes should be borne or charged was a proper subject for the executor to seek direction from the court by petition.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. *263