Hobbs' Estate v. Hardesty, 14850

Decision Date23 June 1981
Docket NumberNo. 14850,14850
Citation167 W.Va. 239,282 S.E.2d 21
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
PartiesESTATE of Helen N. HOBBS, Dec'd., etc. v. David C. HARDESTY as Tax Commr., etc.

Syllabus by the Court

1. W.Va.Code, 44-2-16a (1959) provides that unless specific direction is given to an executor to pay federal estate taxes from a specific fund, the federal estate taxes shall be apportioned among the beneficiaries in proportion to their pro rata shares. Words in a will giving general direction to an executor to pay taxes from the estate merely restate the general law and such general words do not create a specific fund for the payment of taxes.

2. When decedent dies leaving an estate which includes property taxable in West Virginia the federal estate tax is deductible from the gross estate for the purpose of computing the West Virginia inheritance taxes only to the extent of the federal estate tax chargeable upon property taxable for inheritance tax purposes in West Virginia.

3. Where a West Virginia executor is directed to pay federal estate taxes from a fund in the estate comprised entirely of property taxable for inheritance tax purposes in West Virginia, then and in that event the entire amount of the federal estate tax is deductible from the gross estate for West Virginia inheritance tax purposes.

4. Where a decedent and another have a joint tenancy with right of survivorship in a bank account and the surviving joint tenant swears to the fact that she was a mere trustee, alleges facts to that effect, and actually pays the money to other heirs, the amount in the bank account is taxable to the heirs who actually receive the money and not to the surviving joint tenant who is the legal but not the equitable owner, except to the extent of money actually kept by her for her own purposes.

Chauncey H. Browning, Atty. Gen., C. Page Hamrick, III, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Charleston, for appellant.

Jordan & Wilson, Ronald E. Wilson and Edwin Jeffrey Adams, New Cumberland, for appellee.

NEELY, Justice:

This is an estate tax appeal by the State Tax Commissioner from the Circuit Court of Hancock County. There are two issues upon which we must pass. The first is whether the entire federal estate tax levied upon the estate of Helen N. Hobbs should be credited against the West Virginia inheritance tax notwithstanding that part of the federal tax was attributable to property not subject to West Virginia inheritance tax. On this issue we agree with the tax commissioner, apportion the estate tax credit, and reverse the circuit court. The second issue is whether a person who is a joint tenant with right of survivorship with a decedent in a bank account must pay inheritance tax on the entire amount in the account although she conclusively demonstrates that she was only a trustee and actually paid the money from the account to the other heirs. On this question we hold against the tax commissioner and in favor of the executor, and we affirm the circuit court.

Helen N. Hobbs died testate, a resident of Hancock County, West Virginia, on 20 October 1974. Under her will her beneficiaries were Wilbert F. Hobbs, Jr., a son, Ann Hobbs, a daughter, Mary H. Walker, a daughter, and Richard L. Hobbs, a son. For federal estate tax purposes, the Hobbs' gross estate totalled $286,478.70 and included land located outside of West Virginia valued at $82,000 and insurance payable to beneficiaries of $81,412.86, neither of which was subject to the West Virginia inheritance and transfer tax. For West Virginia inheritance tax purposes the gross estate totalled $123,647.13. The estate paid a federal estate tax of $55,386.12 upon the gross estate, and in calculating the West Virginia inheritance and transfer tax, the full amount of the federal estate tax was deducted before computing the West Virginia inheritance taxes.

I

The executor maintained both before the tax commissioner and the circuit court that the general provision in the will which required the executor to pay the estate and inheritance taxes caused the entire federal estate tax to be a deduction against the West Virginia inheritance tax because the executor was a West Virginia executor charged with the payment of taxes. The pertinent part of the Hobbs will concerning payment of taxes is as follows:

FIRST: I direct that all my just debts, funeral expenses of my last illness and all the expenses of the settlement of my estate, including any taxes which may be assessed by the Federal or State Government, be paid out of my estate by my Executor as soon as conveniently may be done after my decease.

The executor argues that this paragraph makes the entire tax burden a charge upon the residuary estate and that, since all taxes, both state and federal, will be paid from a fund of property located in West Virginia, that the entire federal estate tax should be a credit against the state inheritance tax. We do not cavil with the executor's under standing of the general law. If, indeed, all taxes due and owing on an estate must be paid by funds of that estate located and taxable in West Virginia, then the entire amount of the federal estate tax is credited as a deduction against the West Virginia inheritance tax.

However, in the case before us the will does not provide that both state and federal taxes must be paid from the West Virginia estate. The real question is whether the will provides that a specific West Virginia fund, as for example, the residuary estate if that residuary were composed exclusively of West Virginia property, be charged with the payment of all taxes so that certain specific bequests and devises could be made in a net amount. That was not the structure of Mrs. Hobbs' will. Mrs. Hobbs' will provided only that all of her property went to her husband if he were alive and that if he were dead all of her property should be divided equally, share and share alike, among her four children. Consequently, the children took equal interests in both the West Virginia and non-West Virginia property and the executor was required to apportion the tax burden among the beneficiaries in direct proportion to the amount of property which each took. Absent specific direction in a will with regard to the property from which taxes should be paid, W.Va.Code, 44-2-16a (1959) provides for the apportionment of federal estate taxes and for the fiduciary to deduct the taxes from the shares of the beneficiaries. The direction to the executor to pay funeral expenses, just debts, and taxes was entirely unnecessary since the law requires the executor to do all of those things.

The question, of course, which immediately springs to mind is what happens to the federal estate tax attributable to property outside of West Virginia; does that federal estate tax then evaporate and disappear into the ether to be useless as a credit against the state taxes? The answer, at least with regard to property located in Ohio, is "no." The Ohio tax law, as set forth in Ohio Revised Code, §§ 5731.18 to 5731.19 provides that the estate tax levied upon the transfer of estates of non-resident decedents is computed by first finding the amount of federal credit allowable as if the decedent were a resident with all of his property in Ohio. This figure is then multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the value of the real property in Ohio, tangible personal property in Ohio, and intangible personal property employed in carrying a business in Ohio, if not exempted from taxes under the reciprocal exemption provision, and the denominator of which is the value of the gross estate wherever situated. This figure is then credited with the amount of Ohio inheritance taxes of the non-resident.

Consequently, we see that Ohio allows credits towards the Ohio estate tax pursuant to the same formula which the state tax commissioner has adopted in his Rules and Regulations for the Inheritance and Transfer Tax Division, §§ 2.01 through 2.03. These regulations in turn interpret W.Va.Code, 11-11-1 (1976) which is the general statute imposing inheritance taxes and W.Va.Code, 11-11-5 (1957) which provides:

The market value of property is its actual market value after deducting debts and encumbrances for which the same is liable, and to the payment of which it shall actually be subjected....

It is under this last quoted Code section that the federal estate tax becomes a deduction for state inheritance tax purposes; however, it should be obvious that in the case before us property located in West Virginia was not subject to the debt or encumbrance of the entire federal estate tax, but only of that part of the federal estate tax attributable to property located in West Virginia.

Since there appears to be some perfectly justifiable confusion at the bar concerning what needs to be done in a will to entitle an estate to a full credit for federal estate taxes against the West Virginia inheritance tax a little additional comment on that subject might be in order. A general provision in a will requiring an executor to pay state and federal taxes is entirely nugatory; it does nothing but restate one of the primary legal obligations of an executor. When, however, a specific fund is created under the will for the payment of state and federal taxes, and the executor is directed to pay taxes from that fund only (to the extent that it is sufficient) then if certain other conditions are met it will be possible to deduct the entire federal estate tax before computing the West Virginia inheritance taxes which are payable. Under that set of facts, the requirement of W.Va.Code, 11-11-5 (1957) is met because the entire estate tax encumbers the market value of a specific fund of West Virginia property.

All of this discussion, of course, is entirely irrelevant to an estate where all of the property is subject to West Virginia inheritance tax. It is only where part of the property is located in West...

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2 cases
  • First Nat. Bank of Morgantown v. McGill
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • November 29, 1988
    ...to pay the West Virginia inheritance taxes from the residuary estate. Relying upon this Court's opinions in Estate of Hobbs v. Hardesty, 167 W.Va. 239, 282 S.E.2d 21 (1981), and Dilmore v. Heflin, 159 W.Va. 46, 218 S.E.2d 888 (1975), the trial court held that the testatrix had failed to cha......
  • State ex rel. Smith v. Scott
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • June 23, 1981

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