Court Opinion

ID: 6595666
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:02:25.681949+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:49.503858
License: Public Domain

Per Cueiam.
After a will contest concerning a codicil to a will, the contesting parties entered into a compromise settlement which the Probate Court accepted. In subsequent proceedings, the Probate Court determined that the state succession tax, General Statutes §§12-340 and 12-341, should be computed and assessed on the basis of the will and the codicil, without regard to the compromise agreement. This ruling was affirmed by the trial court in its dismissal of the plaintiffs’ appeal. It is the only issue on the appeal before this court.
This case is governed by Emanuelson v. Sullivan, 147 Conn. 406,161 A.2d 788 (1960). In Emanuelson, we held that the succession tax should be assessed on the basis of the identity of the distributees named in a purported will, despite a subsequent agreement compromising the contest of that will. Id., 410-11. The only distinction between this case and Emanuel-son is that in this case the compromise agreement antedated the probating of the contested codicil and the Probate Court admitted the will and the codicil to probate subject to the terms of the compromise agreement. As the trial court observed, this is a distinction without a difference.
There is no error.