In this action challenging defendants’ collection of probate fees under MCL 600.871, plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s grant of summary disposition in favor of defendants. We affirm.
This Court reviews de novo the trial court’s decision to grant summary disposition.
Hamade v Sunoco, Inc (R&M),
The only issue on appeal is whether the probate fee mandated by MCL 600.871(1) is properly assessed against the full value of all assets of the estate without regard to any security interests held in the assets. Plaintiff contends that, under a plain reading of MCL 600.871(1), the value of an asset must be reduced by the amount of any debt that the asset secures. We do not agree.
Under MCL 600.871(1), whenever a decedent’s estate is probated, the probate court is requirеd to collect a fee for the expense of administering the estate, which fee is assessed “on the value of all assets” as of the date of the decedent’s death. Because the fee is based on the “valuе” of all assets held by the estate, resolution of this issue depends on the meaning of the term “value” as used in the statute. In construing statutory language, it has long been the rule in this state that courts will normally give the words used in a statute their plаin and ordinary meaning.
Green v Graves,
1 Doug 351, 354 (Mich, 1844);
Koontz v Ameritech Services, Inc,
The cоmmon understanding of the word “value,” as used in the phrase “the value of all assets,” refers to monetary value, i.e., the amount of money that a ready, willing, and able buyer would pay for the asset on the open market, which is essentially synonymous with “fair market value.” See
Detroit/Wayne Co Stadium Auth v Drinkwater, Taylor & Merrill, Inc,
267 Mich App
625, 633;
Nevertheless, plaintiff contends that the “value” of an asset to the estatе must be ascertained by determining the worth of the asset to the beneficiaries of the estate. Plaintiff explains that an asset whose fair market value is $100,000 would have a value of $25,000 relative to the beneficiaries of the estate if the asset is subject to a mortgage for $75,000. However, plaintiff fails to explain why this assessment of value — as determined by reference to one of many potentially interested parties — should control the valuation of an asset for purposes of calculating the probate fee. 4 It would be just as logical to value the asset on the basis of its relative worth to the creditor who holds the security interest in the asset. Furthermore, plаintiffs assumption that an asset has no value to an estate or its beneficiaries to the extent that it secures a debt is invalid. Even an asset that secures a debt that exceeds the asset’s fair market value will benefit an estate. This is because the money raised by the sale of the asset will retire a portion of the debt that would otherwise be unsecured. 5 This leaves a correspondingly greater portion of the remaining assets available tо pay other creditors or to pass to the beneficiaries of the estate. Thus, assets that secure debts benefit the estate to the full extent of their fair market value. 6
This ordinary understanding of the term “value” is also, contrary to plaintiffs contention,
Plaintiffs definition of “value” reduces the fair market value of the estate’s assets, which accordingly reduces the amount of the fee assessed, even though the assets whose values are reduced must still be administered by the probate court. Hence, plaintiffs interpretation reduces the probate fee without a corresponding reduction in the probate court’s workload. This result can best be illustrated by an example. Suppose that there are two estates and that each has one asset worth $500,000 and creditors whose claims far exceed the value of the asset. Assume also that the first estate has one creditor who holds a security interеst in the asset for the amount of $475,000, but the creditors of the second estate are all unsecured. Under plaintiffs interpretation of MCL 600.871(1), the “value of all assets” of the first estate would be $25,000 and the “value of all assets” of the second estate would be $500,000. Hence, the second estate would pay a substantially higher probate fee based on the sole — and somewhat arbitrary —difference that the only asset of the first estate was used to securе a debt of $475,000. 8 This is despite the fact that the estates will likely require the same amount of work and expense on the part of the probate court. This anomalous result does not occur when the term “value” is given its ordinary meaning. In that case, the “value of all assets” is the same for both estates (i.e., $500,000), and both estates will pay the same probate fee. Thus, plaintiffs understanding of the term “value” is not only contradicted by the plain and ordinary sensе of the word, but also is inconsistent with the purpose of the statute.
Finally, we note that MCR 5.307(A) was recently amended to state, in relevant part, that “[i]n calculating the inventory fee, deductions shall be allowed for secured loans on property listed on the inventory, but no other deductions shall be allowed.” See
MCL 600.871(1) requires probate courts to collect a fee based on the total value of all assets held by an estate that is subject to probate. The statute does not define the term “value” to exclude security interests in the assets and does not otherwisе provide for deductions based on security interests held in the estate’s assets. Because this statute is not ambiguous, it must be enforced as written, Macomb Co Prosecutor, supra at 158, and without reading into the statute deductions that are not “within the manifest intent of the Legislature as derived from the words of the statute itself.” Roberts, supra at 63. Therefore, plaintiffs claim based on a contrary reading of MCL 600.871(1) must fail as a matter of law. The trial court properly granted summary disposition in defendants’ favor.
Affirmed.
Notes
We disagreе with defendants’ contention that the Oakland County Probate Court’s interpretation of this statute is entitled to any particular deference. In support of this contention, defendants rely on cases that reiterate that cоurts will give “great deference to the construction placed upon a statute by the agency legislatively chosen to enforce it.”
Breuhan v Plymouth-Canton Community Schools,
This Court may consult dictionary definitions to ascertain the ordinary meaning of a term not defined in a statute.
People v Perkins,
We reject plaintiffs contention that the references to “an estate of value” in MCL 600.871(l)(a) through (g) somehow alter the meaning of the word “value” as used in MCL 600.871(1). The plain language of these subsections indicates that the fee is to be determined by reference to the value of the estate as determined under MCL 600.871(1). MCL 600.871(1) states that the probate court shall collect a fee based “on the value of all assets, as of the date of death of the decedent. .. .” Hence, the value of an estate is determined by totaling the value of all assets held by the estate. This total value is then applied using MCL 600.871(l)(a) through (i) to determine the applicable fee.
It is irrelevant to a determination of the costs of administering an estate that the assets will largely or even wholly be distributed to creditors. The probate court must still ensure that the estate is properly administered on behalf of all interested persons.
Generally, the personal representative of an estate must pay all unsecured claims before distributing assets to the beneficiaries of the estate. See MCL 700.3805; MCL 700.3807; MCL 700.3815.
We further disagree with plaintiffs contention that the requirement that the personal representative prepare an inventory that lists both the fair market value of all assets and the type and amount of any encumbrance that may exist with reference to each listed item, see MCL 700.3706(1), indicates that “value” means fair market value minus encumbrances. The function of the inventоry list is to summarize all the information about the assets of an estate. This requirement is not inconsistent with the assessment of the probate fee based on the total value of all assets without regard to any security interests held in the аssets.
Former MCL 701.17 was the predecessor of MCL 600.871(1).
We note that, because the assets of both hypothetical estates are insufficient to pay the estates’ creditors, relative to the decedent’s devisees and legatees, the estates essentially hаve no value. Nevertheless, even under plaintiffs understanding of the meaning of the word “value,” the first estate would have a value of $25,000. This further illustrates the difficulty with assigning a value based on the relative worth of an asset to a particular interested party rather than the objective fair market value.
