Court Opinion

ID: 9517336
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-07 00:13:40.196012+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:52:47.110533
License: Public Domain

Black, J.
(dissenting). This case was assigned to former Justice John R. Dethmers. Before leaving the Court he prepared and submitted to us *602the ensuing opinion of the presented issue. I adopt that opinion and submit it in accordance with the mandate of § 6 of the Judicial Article.
Dethmers, J.
The question in this cause is whether the allocation of taxes and expenses of a trust estate between the principal and income shall be in accordance with what plaintiff says the terms of the will creating the trust clearly provide or with the provisions of the Michigan principal and income act, PA 1965, No 340, § 2(a) (2) and §13 (MCLA § 555.52 and § 555.63 [Stat Ann 1969 Cum Supp § 26.79(2) and § 26.79(13)]).
On March 5, 1963, testatrix executed a codicil to her last will and testament wherein she bequeathed the residue of her estate in trust to defendant National Bank of Detroit. The pertinent part of the trust embodied in the codicil reads as follows:
“Second * * * Said trustee shall hold, manage and control said trust estate for the following uses and purposes.
“A. The Trustee shall collect the income from the property comprising the trust estate, pay all taxes and incidental expenses of the trust, and shall remit the net income derived therefrom, in monthly or other convenient installments, to my grandson, Russell Donovan. * * * .
“B. Upon the death of my grandson, the trust shall terminate and the Trustee shall distribute the trust estate in fee to Margaret Morang, if she shall then be living, and if she shall not then be living, the trust estate shall be distributed in equal shares in fee to her daughters, Margaret M. Wonser and Judith H. Morang * * * .
“C. I hereby authorize and empower the Trustee, in its sole and absolute discretion, at any time and from time to time, to disburse from the principal of the trust estate such amounts as it may deem advisable to provide adequately and properly for *603any emergency or extraordinary expense of my said grandson, his spouse and children, including, but not by way of limitation, expenses incurred by reason of illness, disability and education. In determining the amount of principal to be so disbursed, the Trustee shall take into consideration any other income or property which my said grandson may have from any other source, and the Trustee’s discretion shall be conclusive as to the advisability of any such disbursements, and the same shall not be questioned by anyone. For all sums so disbursed, the Trustee shall have full acquittance.
“D. The trust shall be administered under and in accordance with the laws of the State of Michigan, and investment of trust funds shall be limited to types of property approved for investment by fiduciaries under the laws of the said state. Subject only to the foregoing, the Trustee shall have the continuing, absolute, discretionary power to deal with the trust estate as freely as I might in the handling of my own affairs, and no person dealing with the Trustee shall be required to inquire into the propriety of any of its actions.”
Plaintiff, the income beneficiary of this trust, is the grandson of testatrix. The individual defendants are the remaindermen, none related by blood to testatrix. The trust is being administered by the defendant bank as trustee.
Testatrix died on March 30, 1964. Her will was admitted to probate one week later. The above cited Michigan principal and income act was enacted in 1965 and became effective on January 1, 1966.
Pertinent portions of the statute read as follows:
“(a) A trust shall be administered with due regard to the respective interests of income beneficiaries and remaindermen. A trust is so administered with respect to the allocation of receipts and expenditures if a receipt is credited or an expendi*604ture is charged to income or principal or partly to each
“(1) In accordance with the terms of the trust instrument, notwithstanding contrary provisions of this act;
“(2) In the absence of any contrary terms of the trust instrument, in accordance with the provisions of this act; or
“(3) If neither of the preceding rules of administration is applicable, in accordance with what is reasonable and equitable in view of the interests of those entitled to income as well as of those entitled to principal, and in view of the manner in which men of ordinary prudence, discretion and judgment would act in the management of their own affairs.
“(b) If the trust instrument gives the trustee discretion in crediting a receipt or charging an expenditure to income or principal or partly to each, no inference of imprudence or partiality arises from the fact that the trustee has made an allocation contrary to a provision of this act.”
Plaintiff filed a complaint in circuit court seeking a declaratory decree and interpretation of the meaning of Paragraph Second A of the codicil which directs that the trustee “shall collect the income from the property comprising the trust estate, pay all taxes and incidental expenses of the trust, and shall remit the net income derived therefrom, in monthly or other convenient installments, to my grandson, * * * ”.
It will be noted that the statute provides that a trust shall be administered “(1) In accordance with the terms of the trust instrument, notwithstanding contrary provisions of the act; (2) In the absence of any contrary terms of the trust instrument, in accordance with the provisions of this act.” The provisions of the act, if applicable here, provide in *605§ 13 as to the allocation of taxes and expenses of the trust, that certain of the charges shall he made against income and some against principal, specifying them.
Plaintiff’s contention has been that the language of Paragraph Second A of the codicil is ambiguous, that it does riot specify how the taxes and expenses are to be apportioned, or how the net income is to be computed to be remitted to the grandson, and that, therefore, the codicil did not contain any provision regarding apportionment of taxes or expenses which is contrary to the provisions of the act and, consequently, under § 2(a)(2) of the act, the provisions of § 13 thereof as to apportionment do apply here. This view the trial court adopted, buttressing it with the observation that the language of the codicil as a whole, and particularly that of Paragraph Second C, authorizing the trustee to invade the corpus for the benefit of the grandson when the trustee deems necessary or advisable, shows that the grandson was the favored beneficiary in testatrix’s mind and intent, and therefore the charge of taxes and expenses should not be held to have been intended by the testatrix to come entirely from income. Judgment entered for plaintiff.
On appeal by defendants the Court of Appeals affiriried, and, on leave granted on defendants’ application here, the problem now confronts us in this Court.
In answer to the position that the language of the codicil shows that the grandson is to be the favored beneficiary, it may as well be said that the testatrix appeared well able to employ apt language persuasive to the trial court of such preference and, accordingly, would not have been caught short for express words to that effect as to taxes and expenses. Instead, the codicil directs the trustee to (1) “collect *606the income from the property comprising the trust estate”, (2) pay all taxes and incidental expenses of the trust, and (3) remit the net income derived therefrom to plaintiff. This language would seem to make it plain enough what the trustee was to do about collecting, paying and remitting, without need of a crutch in the form of reading into the codicil any conclusion as to whom the testatrix favored and loved the most. And so, defendants say that the trustee is clearly directed by testatrix to pay all the taxes and mentioned expenses from the income. This being contrary to the provisions of the act, defendants say it follows that the terms of the act shall not apply and that the charges shall all be made against income, as they say the codicil directs. We think this is correct.
Plaintiff urges that if all taxes are to be deducted from income, then in case of sale at a profit of trust assets, the capital gains tax would also be charged against income, with the incongruous result that the remaindermen’s benefit from enhancement of the value of the corpus would cause detriment to the income beneficiary by reason of the charge of that tax against his income. This, we say, does not follow. It cannot be so. Even though the assessment against a capital gain be called a tax, it amounts, in reality, to a deduction, in the amount of the governmental exaction, from that gain. Thus it would come, not out of income but out of the corpus. See United States Trust Company of New York v. Jones (1953), 414 Ill 265 (111 NE2d 144); Industrial Trust Company v. Winslow (1938), 60 RI 61 (197 A 185).
In the case of In re Graham Estate (1967), 379 Mich 224, this Court said:
“The intent of the testator must be held to have been what the words employed in his will meant at *607the time of his death. It was not competent for the legislature to change his will in that respect by statutory amendment adopted after his death.”
Hence, it ought not to be suggested that as to a codicil to a will executed on March 5, 1963, by a testatrix who died on March 30, 1964, a subsequent statute, enacted in 1965, which became effective on January 1,1966, could in any way change or affect a substantive right of defendants under the will and codicil, which vested at time of the testatrix’s death, namely, the right to have the mentioned charges made against the income, not the principal.
Reversed and remanded to the circuit court for entry of judgment in accord with this opinion. Costs to defendants-appellants.
Swainson and Williams, JJ., did not sit in this case.