REVISED OPINION - July 7, 1998
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
_____________________
No. 97-30385
_____________________
SAMMIE BARMAN DELAUNE, Estate; DENISE
LOVELESS, Co-Executors and Transferees
of the Estate of Sammie Barman
Delaune; MAE ACY AMEDEE, Co-Executors
and Transferees of Estate of
Sammie Barman Delaune; WILLIAM R.
SMITH, JR., Transferees of the Estate
of Sammie Barman Delaune;
PHYLLIS ROBIRA ZAPP, Transferees of
the Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune;
BERTHA THOMAS, Transferees of the
Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune;
JANE LEE VAN REENEN, Transferees of
the Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune;
JOYCE B. METCALF, Transferees of the
Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune;
PEGGY ANN GEILER, Transferees of the
Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune;
SAMUEL BUCKMASTER, JR., Transferees
of the Estate of Sammie Barman Delaune,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
versus
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant-Appellee.
_________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Middle District of Louisiana
_________________________________________________________________
June 29, 1998
Before WISDOM, JOLLY, and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges.
E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
This case will demonstrate how, under the Louisiana Law Civil,
the past is not dead; how the past will not die; and how, indeed,
the past is not even past. But first, let us say that this appeal
arises from the district court’s denial of an estate tax refund to
the appellants, the estate and certain heirs of Sammie Barman
Delaune. The dispute primarily involves the purported renunciation
of a Louisiana succession, which both the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue and the district court found to be inadequate as a matter
of federal and Louisiana law. In particular, the district court
held the renunciation to be invalid under Louisiana law because the
Louisiana Civil Code plainly does not provide for the renunciation
of a succession by the heirs of a dead heir on her behalf. In this
case, however, the Law Civil will not let us stop with a plain
reading of the current Code. Because, under the Law Civil, the
Code Napoleon of 1804 adds clarity to the work of Louisiana’s
subsequent Digesters and Redactors, and hence to the Code we read
today, we hold that Louisiana law does in fact provide for the
renunciation of a succession by the heirs of an heir, and therefore
find no state law defect in the renunciation at issue. Because we
further hold that the renunciation was not otherwise defective as
a matter of federal law, we reverse the judgment of the district
court.
2
I
The relevant facts are undisputed. Joseph “Jack” Delaune died
on May 31, 1986. Under his will, his entire estate, with the
exception of $3,000 in special bequests, was devised to his wife,
Sammie.
For some time prior to Jack’s death, Jack and Sammie had been
living in a nursing home. Jack’s brother, William Delaune, had
been handling Jack’s affairs under a power of attorney, and he paid
for Jack and Sammie’s expenses by writing checks out of an account
that belonged to the couple as undivided community property. After
Jack died, William Delaune continued to pay Sammie’s expenses out
of this account, and replenished it on one occasion with $100,000
drawn from another community property account. During this time,
the income from Jack’s estate continued to accumulate as it had
done before, which is to say that it went into the community
property accounts. It is undisputed that the expenses incurred by
Sammie after Jack’s death were less than the income from her
portion of the community property.
Sammie’s will was a mirror image of Jack’s, and devised her
entire estate to him, with the exception of $3,000 in special
bequests. Because Jack had predeceased Sammie, this devise to him
had lapsed, and, unless something were done, their combined
estates, with the exception of $6,000, would pass to Sammie’s heirs
3
by intestacy when she died. As Jack had a separate line of heirs
from Sammie, this was not a good outcome, both as a matter of Jack
and Sammie’s expressed desires for their heirs, and from the
perspective of a long and contentious probate fight.
On January 14, 1987, Sammie met with attorneys to discuss her
estate planning options. Among other things, Sammie’s attorneys
proposed redrafting her will to provide a bequest to Jack’s heirs
or executing a renunciation of some portion of the bequest she had
received from Jack, so that it would pass immediately to Jack’s
heirs by intestacy. Sammie’s attorneys pointed out that the latter
option would be much better from a tax perspective, as it would
allow the property to go to Jack’s heirs with only one level of
estate tax (Jack -Tax-> Jack’s heirs) as opposed to two (Jack -Tax-
> Sammie -Tax-> Jack’s heirs).
Based on the tax advantages, Sammie decided to go with the
renunciation plan, and directed her attorneys to return when they
had drawn up the appropriate papers. The Fell Sergeant1 who
commands our last days waits not for the orderlies, however, and
before the renunciation could be completed and executed, Sammie
lapsed into a coma. She died on January 26.
1
William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act 5 sc. 2.
4
Despite the medical evidence to the contrary, William Delaune
remained convinced that Sammie could be reanimated for a limited
amount of post-hoc estate planning. On February 6, acting in his
capacity as an heir of Jack, he filed a petition in Louisiana state
court for a Rule to Show Cause why the aborted renunciation should
not be given effect. He contended, essentially, that Sammie’s
decision to make a renunciation before she died created a legally
enforceable “natural” obligation in favor of Jack’s heirs that the
court was bound to recognize.
On February 23, a meeting was held with a number of the
attorneys representing various of the interested parties and heirs.
They discussed, among other things, the legality of a renunciation
made on Sammie’s behalf, and agreed on a plan for achieving a more
“equitable” distribution of the combined successions to the two
lines of heirs.
On February 27, a hearing was held on the Rule to Show Cause.
At that hearing, an agreed judgment was signed by all interested
parties (other than Sammie’s estate) and approved by the probate
judge. Under the judgment, Sammie’s heirs purported to renounce,
in her name and on her behalf, a portion of Jack’s succession equal
to two-sevenths of the combined estates.
Sammie’s estate filed an estate tax return in which the
“renounced” portion of Jack’s succession was excluded from her
5
gross estate, on the basis that there had been a qualified
disclaimer pursuant to I.R.C. § 2518. After an audit, the
Commissioner took issue with this exclusion, and declared a
deficiency of $146,728 to cover the estate tax that he felt should
have been paid on the purportedly renounced portion of Jack’s
succession. As the assets in Sammie’s estate had been already
largely distributed, the Commissioner sent notices of transferee
liability to Sammie’s heirs, and, on November 28, 1990, the estate
and heirs paid the deficiency in full.
II
After exhausting their administrative remedies, on April 26,
1994, Sammie’s estate and nine of her fourteen heirs (the
“Delaunes”) filed suit in the Federal District Court for the Middle
District of Louisiana seeking a refund of the entire deficiency.
Eventually, this claim went to trial before District Judge Parker.
At trial, the Delaunes argued that the renunciation had been a
qualified disclaimer under I.R.C. § 2518, such that the renounced
portion of Jack’s succession was properly excluded from Sammie’s
gross estate. In the alternative, they asserted that the natural
obligation to renounce arising from Sammie’s pre-death decision
constituted a claim against her estate for the amount of the
renunciation, and that this amount was therefore also excludable
pursuant to I.R.C. § 2053(a)(3).
6
The Commissioner argued that the renunciation was not a
qualified disclaimer under § 2518 because Louisiana law does not
allow for renunciation by the heirs of an heir, and because Sammie
had accepted the benefits of Jack’s succession for purposes of
§ 2518(b)(3) before the renunciation was made. The Commissioner
also contended that the natural obligation was not a claim against
the estate under § 2053 because it was not enforceable as a matter
of Louisiana law and because it was not contracted for in exchange
for an adequate consideration in money or money’s worth, as
required by § 2053(c)(1). Finally, the Commissioner also argued
that, even if a refund were due, the nine heirs and estate could
only claim the amounts that they had actually paid, not the entire
deficiency.
On March 7, 1997, Judge Parker issued his findings of fact and
conclusions of law. He ruled that § 2518(b)(4) implicitly requires
that a disclaimer be valid under state law before it can be a
qualified disclaimer for federal estate tax purposes, as that
section provides that the interest at issue must pass without any
direction from the disclaimant. Further, Judge Parker held that
the renunciation at issue was not valid under Louisiana law. He
based this conclusion principally on La. Civ. Code art. 1007, which
expressly allows the heirs of an heir to accept a succession on
behalf of the dead heir. Because this provision contains no
7
mention of renunciation, Judge Parker reasoned that renunciation by
the heirs of an heir was prohibited by implication. He therefore
concluded that the attempted renunciation in this case was not a
qualified disclaimer for federal estate tax purposes. In the
alternative, Judge Parker ruled that the attempted renunciation was
also not a qualified disclaimer because Sammie had previously
accepted the benefits of Jack’s succession in the form of the
nursing home expense payments and interest accrual. Finally, Judge
Parker also held that Sammie’s alleged decision to renounce did not
create an enforceable natural obligation as a matter of Louisiana
law, and was therefore not an excludable claim against her estate
for purposes of § 2053. On the basis of these holdings, Judge
Parker sustained the Commissioner’s declaration of deficiencies and
denied the Delaunes’ request for a refund. From this final
judgment the Delaunes timely appeal.
III
We review the decision of a district court in a tax matter
applying the same standards used in reviewing a decision of the Tax
Court. Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 135
F.3d 1017, 1021 (5th Cir. 1998). Findings of fact are accepted
unless clearly erroneous; legal conclusions are reconsidered de
novo. Ballard v. United States, 17 F.3d 116, 118 (5th Cir. 1994).
IV
8
As in the district court, on appeal the Delaunes urge two
alternative theories to justify the exclusion of the “renounced”
portion of Jack’s succession from Sammie’s estate. First, they
argue that the renunciation was a qualified disclaimer excludable
under § 2518. Second, they assert that Sammie’s decision to make
the renunciation gave rise to a natural obligation under Louisiana
law that is excludable under § 2053. Based on the clear terms of
the federal statute and regulations, and the history of the
relevant Louisiana code provision, we hold that the renunciation in
question was a qualified disclaimer for purposes of § 2518.
Because this is sufficient to justify the Delaunes’ exclusion, we
need not reach the merits of their alternative argument.
9
A
In general, § 2518 allows an heir to exclude from her own
gross estate any interest in an inheritance that she disclaims with
a “qualified” disclaimer. There are various requirements for a
disclaimer to be qualified. Among other things, the disclaimer
must be made before the heir has “accepted the interest or any of
its benefits.” § 2581(b)(3). In addition, it must also be the
case that “as a result of the refusal, the interest passes without
any direction on the part of the person making the disclaimer.”
§ 2518(b)(4). See also Estate of Monroe v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 124 F.3d 699, 703 & n.1 (5th Cir. 1997).
The Commissioner argues that the renunciation in this case was
not a qualified disclaimer because it was not valid to pass an
interest under Louisiana law, as implicitly required by
§ 2518(b)(4), and because it was not made before Sammie had
accepted the benefits of the succession, as explicitly required by
§ 2518(b)(3). There is no merit to either argument.
B
The Commissioner first contends that the February 27
renunciation was not qualified for purposes of § 2518 because it
was not valid to pass an interest under Louisiana law. As we
10
understand his argument,2 the Commissioner reaches this conclusion
based solely on his perception that Louisiana law does not allow
the heirs of a dead heir to renounce on her behalf, as was
attempted in this case. We disagree with this construction of the
relevant Louisiana code provision, and therefore hold that the
renunciation in question was a valid one.
(1)
As an initial matter, we do agree with the Commissioner that
state law validity is a necessary prerequisite for a disclaimer to
be qualified under § 2518 in the circumstances of this case. As
the district court also concluded, the clear terms of § 2518(b)(4)
necessarily require that the disclaimer itself be valid to pass an
interest under state law, because only in such a situation can it
2
The Commissioner has not urged that the February 27
renunciation was defective as a matter of Louisiana law on any
other basis--as, for example, a form fault--and we generally do not
consider arguments that have not been raised by the parties on
appeal. United States ex rel. Thompson v. Columbia/HCA Healthcare
Corp., 125 F.3d 899, 903 n.3 (5th Cir. 1998). That said, although
the form of the February 27 transaction was admittedly not in
strict compliance with the procedural requirements of the Louisiana
Civil Code, see La. Civ. Code art. 1017 (requiring that
renunciation be made by public act before a notary, in presence of
two witnesses), it nonetheless appears to fall within the doctrine
of judicial renunciation that has long been recognized by the
Louisiana Supreme Court. See Succession of Tertrou, 47 So.2d 681,
685 (La. 1950) (succession may be renounced by judicial declaration
in addition to the procedures listed in article 1017) (citing Union
National Bank v. Choppin, 46 La. Ann. 629 (1894), and Carter v.
Fowler, 33 La. Ann. 100 (1881)).
11
be said that the interest passes “as a result of the refusal” and
“without any direction on the part of the person making the
disclaimer.” Thus, for example, a naked invalid disclaimer would
be insufficient, as it would not pass an interest. Similarly, an
invalid disclaimer coupled with a valid donative transfer would
also be insufficient, as the interest would not pass “without any
direction on the part of the person making the disclaimer.”3 We
3
Of course, the latter case would nonetheless constitute a
qualified disclaimer under § 2518(c)(3), as that section exempts
the disclaimer itself from the rigors of § 2518(b)(1) & (4) where
it is accompanied or replaced by an effective written transfer of
the interest to the party or parties who would have received it had
a qualified disclaimer been made. The clear language and
legislative history of § 2518(c)(3) strongly suggest that it was
enacted specifically to address the issue in this case, i.e., the
fate of an otherwise unobjectionable disclaimer that is potentially
invalid under state law. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 97-144, at 142
(1981), reprinted in 1981 U.S.C.C.A.N. 241-42 (provision designed
to overcome § 2518(b)(4)’s implicit requirement that disclaimer be
valid to pass interest under state law). Read this way,
§ 2518(c)(3) is also well in keeping with the overall point of
§ 2518, which was, as both parties to this case agree, to bring a
certain degree of federal uniformity to an area of taxation that
had previously been entirely subject to the whims of state law.
See H.R. Rep. No. 94-1380, at 65-68 (1976), reprinted in 1976
U.S.C.C.A.N. 3419-22.
Despite its obvious potential relevance, § 2518(c)(3) is not
implicated in this case because the Delaunes’ attorneys failed to
attempt any transfer of the interest in question apart from the
disclaimer itself. Had they bothered to argue the issue on appeal
(which, perhaps unsurprisingly, they also did not, see note 2,
supra), we would have been forced to agree with the only other
federal court to consider the issue that § 2518(c)(3) requires, at
a minimum, some attempt at a valid written transfer to named
individuals. See Estate of Dancy v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, 89 T.C. 550, 562 (1987), rev’d on other grounds, 872 F.2d
84 (4th Cir. 1989).
12
note in passing that this construction of § 2518(b)(4) accords with
that reached by all of the other federal courts to have considered
the issue.4
As a further predicate, we also agree with the Commissioner
that we are not bound on the state law validity question in this
case by the mere judgment entered by the Louisiana probate court.
In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Estate of Bosch, 387 U.S.
456, 462-65 (1967), the Supreme Court laid down an essentially
Erie-based approach to the analysis of state court adjudications of
state law questions that have occurred in prior aspects of a
federal tax case. Brown v. United States, 890 F.2d 1329, 1341-42
(5th Cir. 1989); cf. Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 54 (1938).
Under this circuit’s longstanding interpretation of the rather
ambivalent majority opinion in Bosch, “unless the highest court in
the state has spoken to the issue, a federal court is to make its
own inquiry into state law.” Brown, 890 F.2d at 1342. In
conducting this inquiry, of course, the lower state court’s ruling
will have some relevance. Id. That relevance will be limited,
4
See DePaoli v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 62 F.3d
1259, 1261-62 (10th Cir. 1995); Estate of Goree v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 1994 WL 379246 (T.C.); Estate of Bennett v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 100 T.C. 42, 66 (1993); Dancy, 89
T.C. at 554. The only arguably contrary decision reached by any
court would appear to be In re Witz, 406 N.Y.S.2d 671, 673 (N.Y.
Sup. Ct. 1978).
13
however, and “‘will vary, depending on the particular tax statute
involved as well as the nature of the state proceeding that
produced the judgment.’” Estate of Warren v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 981 F.2d 776, 781 (5th Cir. 1993) (Garwood, J.)
(quoting Brown, 890 F.2d at 1342). Where, as here, the state court
adjudication arises out of a manifestly non-adversarial proceeding
and the relevant federal tax statute indicates no preference for
the sanctity of the state court’s ruling, we need accord no
particular deference, and must conduct our own investigation of the
relevant state law as declared by the state’s highest court. See
Brown, 890 F.2d at 1342.
(2)
Turning to that question, we begin our inquiry with La. Civ.
Code art. 1007. Under that article, it is clear that “[n]ot only
the person who is entitled to an inheritance may accept it, but if
he dies before having expressly or tacitly accepted or rejected it,
his heir shall have a right to accept it under him.” As the
district court correctly surmised, the core question posed by this
case is whether article 1007 also allows the heirs of a dead5 heir
5
Nemo est hæres viventis; no one is heir to the living. Co.
Litt. 8 (that is, Sir Edward Coke, Commentary upon Littleton 8
(Charles Butler ed., Legal Classics Library 18th ed. 1985) (1628)).
14
to renounce on her behalf, as was attempted here. Based on the
history and logic of the statute, we conclude that it does.
At the outset, we note that this question has not been
squarely addressed by the Louisiana Supreme Court. As such, we
must rely primarily on the history and lineage of article 1007, its
construction by commentators, and its place in the statutory
framework. See Shelp v. National Sur. Corp., 333 F.2d 431, 435
n.13 (5th Cir. 1964) (Wisdom, J.).6
6
As Judge Wisdom noted, the civil law interpretive process is
in some respects fundamentally different from the common law
process with which we are generally familiar. This is particularly
so where the interpretation is of a civil code:
“The problem may be controlled by a code article.
Controversy then will center about the interpretation of
this article. For this there is an elaborate apparatus,
the classic account of which is given by Geny, and by
Savigny in the entire first volume of his System. The
logical interdependence of the various texts, ethical
notions, systematic considerations, contextual
influences, historical factors, consequential effects,
and the like, receive consideration. The important thing
is the elaborate effort to ascertain the genuine
significance of the text. In this there is no mere
reliance upon the holdings of prior decisions. Indeed,
the code civil expressly forbids decisions to be made so
as to form a general rule of law, and anyone who examines
Dalloz and Sirey will not find reference to authoritative
materials other than the code texts. There is no stare
decisis of interpretation. Furthermore, the
interpretative process is not confined to the judges
alone. The chief reliance is rather upon the
theoretician as he has indicated his opinions in
doctrinal writing. Interpretation of statutory texts is
not the esoteric job of judges. It is an intellectual
process in which law teachers have played a greater part
15
Beginning with its history, we can readily see that article
1007 of the current Louisiana Civil Code (of 1870) is an exact copy
of the English text of article 1001 of the Code of 1825.7 The
French text of article 1001,8 in turn, is an almost exact copy of
article 849 of the first title of the third book of the Digest of
1808.10 Like much of the Digest of 1808, article 84 was taken
directly from the French Code Napoleon of 1804. Under article 781
of the Code Napoleon, “[w]hen he to whom a succession has fallen
has died without having repudiated it or without having accepted it
expressly or tacitly, his heirs may accept it or repudiate it under
than judges.”
Shelp, 333 F.2d at 435 n.13 (quoting Franklin, The Historic
Function of the American Law Institute: Restatement as Transitional
to Codification, 47 Harv. L. Rev. 1367, 1377 (1934)).
7
The Code of 1825 was published in both a French and an
English version, but it was originally drafted in French alone.
See Shelp, 333 F.2d at 436-37.
8
“Non seulement celui qui est appelé à une succession, peut
l’accepter, mais s’il est mort, avant que de l’avoir acceptée
expressément ou tacitement, ou l’avoir répudiée, ses héritiers
peuvent l’accepter de son chef.”
9
“Non-seulement celui qui est appelé à une succession, peut
l’accepter, mais s’il est mort avant que de s’être décidé sur le
parti de l’acceptation ou de la répudiation, les héritiers de cet
héritier peuvent, de leur chef, l’accepter.”
10
Which was originally drafted in French as well. See Shelp,
333 F.2d at 436-37.
16
his authority”11 (emphasis added). Obviously, article 781 of the
Code Napoleon, unlike article 84 of the Digest of 1808 or its
successors, expressly allows the heirs of an heir to either accept
or renounce a succession on behalf of the dead heir, and thus would
allow the transaction attempted in this case. The question remains
what significance we should attach to this fact.
Under Louisiana law, it is well established that the French
version of the Code of 1825 is controlling as to articles with a
civilian heritage that have not been changed since that time.
Pickett v. RTS Helicopter, 128 F.3d 925, 931 (5th Cir. 1997)
(citing Shelp, 333 F.2d at 438-39). As we have seen, article 1007
of the current Louisiana Civil Code is an exact copy of the English
text of the civilian article 1001 of the Code of 1825, so the Shelp
rule applies in the resolution of this case.
As Judge Wisdom’s excellent discussion of Louisiana civil code
interpretation in Shelp teaches, however, the relevance of old and
somewhat hoary French law must go even farther in some instances.
“‘The very nature of a code requires that . . . when an article
abstracts the preexisting law the earlier jurisprudence be
considered in cases not covered by the abstract.’” Shelp, 333 F.2d
11
“Lorsque celui à qui une succession est échue, est décédé
sans l’avoir répudiée ou sans l’avoir acceptée expressément ou
tacitement, ses héritiers peuvent l’accepter ou la répudier de son
chef.”
17
at 435 (quoting Dreyfous, Partial Defacement of Olographic Wills,
15 Tul. L. Rev. 272, 273-74 (1941)). As the Louisiana Supreme
Court stated in deciding how to construe another article from the
Code of 1825 that had been taken, like article 1007, directly from
the Digest of 1808:
The re-printing of [the Digest of 1808], together with
the [1824] amendments, [in 1825] has induced some persons
to believe that the whole code is to be taken as a new
enactment, but this is not correct. . . . The article,
therefore, now under consideration, must be governed by
the rules which we have frequently applied to laws passed
antecedent to the constitution [of 1812].
Durnford v. Clark’s Estate, 3 La. 199, 202 (1931); see also Flower
v. Griffith, 6 Mart. (n.s.) 89 (La. 1827) (holding that the
omission in the Code of 1825 of certain articles from the Digest of
1808 did not constitute a repeal of those earlier articles).12
In this case, our investigation of article 1007’s statutory
predecessors leads us to the conclusion that when article 781 of
the Code Napoleon was taken into the Digest of 1808 and thence into
the Code of 1825, it was simply rephrased and abstracted, resulting
12
As is evident from Durnford, this relevance of pre-1825 law
remains despite the fact that the Louisiana legislature attempted
to repeal the earlier law on multiple occasions in 1825 and 1828.
See Shelp, 333 F.2d at 435-36, 437; see also Moulin v. Monteleone,
165 La. 169, 178-84 (1927) (holding that provisions of the Code of
1825 are still properly interpreted according to the legal
principles that prevailed in Louisiana preceding the Code’s
adoption), overruled as to result by 9 to 5 Fashions, Inc. v.
Spurney, 538 So.2d 228, 234 (La. 1989) (Dennis, J.).
18
in the current wording. This reworking resulted in a considerably
more streamlined sentence, but, out of inadvertence or a misguided
desire to avoid unnecessary verbiage at all costs, omitted the
final instance of “repudiate.” This is the only explanation that
makes any sense in the light of the fact that we can ascertain no
indication that the change in wording was intended, desired, or
even authorized to materially alter the effect of article 781 of
the Code Napoleon. See Shelp, 333 F.2d at 433 n.4 (noting that the
Digest of 1808 was entitled “A Digest of the Civil Laws Now in
Force in the Territory of Orleans with Additions and Amendments
Adapted to its Present System of Government” (emphasis added)).13
For this reason,14 we conclude that the entire substance of article
781 of the Code Napoleon was transmitted into the Code of 1825,
including the final instance of “repudiate.” The gist of this
conclusion is that the current article 1007 must be read to allow
13
Although the laws “in force” at the time were technically
those of Spain, not France, because France and Spain are both civil
law countries, and because the chief source of the Code of 1825 was
the Code Napoleon, “[t]he codes of Louisiana can be [best]
explained by assuming that the redactors concluded that in most
respects the law of Louisiana was the same as the law of France.”
Dreyfous, 15 Tul. L. Rev. at 274.
14
Our result is also bolstered by the fact that the one minor
difference in wording between the French text of article 1001 of
the Code of 1825 and that of article 84 of the Digest of 1808
suggests an express allowance for partial acceptances in the Digest
version. See note 9, supra (“le parti de l’acceptation ou de la
répudiation”).
19
the heirs of an heir to either accept or renounce a succession on
behalf of the dead heir so long as the other requirements are met.
This historical reading of article 1007 accords with the
understanding of the principal commentators to have considered the
question. In 1997, Louisiana completed a comprehensive revision of
the law of successions and donations15 that found its inspiration
in a proposal from the Louisiana Law Institute. Article 955 of the
proposal, which was destined to replace article 1007,16 provided:
“If a successor dies without having accepted or renounced
succession rights, his right to accept or renounce is transmitted
to his successors.” Kerry J. Miller, Comment, The New Forced
Heirship Law, its Implementing Legislation, and Major Substantive
Policy Changes of the Louisiana State Law Institute’s Proposed
Comprehensive Revision of the Successions and Donations Laws, 71
Tul. L. Rev. 223, 285 (1996) (emphasis added). Under Miller’s
interpretation, “[p]roposed Article 955 reproduce[d] the substance
of current Civil Code Article 1007 which allows the transmission of
15
This case, obviously, is governed by the prior law.
16
Article 955 did not make it into the final revision.
Beginning in 1999, the Louisiana Civil Code will apparently no
longer have any express provision concerning the renunciation or
acceptance of succession rights by the heirs of an heir. One might
say that this development adds finality to a creeping 200 year
process of eroding the clarity from article 781 of the Code
Napoleon.
20
a successor’s rights to his successors if he dies before accepting
or renouncing.” Id. at 254. Miller’s conclusion is identical to
that reached by two treatise writers in reviewing an earlier
version of the same proposal. See 10 Frederick William Swaim, Jr.
and Kathryn Venturatos Lorio, Louisiana Civil Law Treatise § 7.12
at 161 & n.20 (West 1995).
Finally, the historical reading also accords with common
sense. Succession rights are inherently a binary phenomenon in the
Louisiana statutory scheme; they must either be accepted
(expressly, tacitly, or by presumption) or rejected (expressly
only). See La. Civ. Code art. 977. Just as the repudiation of a
succession will not be presumed, see La. Civ. Code art. 1017, so
too can no one be compelled to accept, see La. Civ. Code art. 977.
In this context, it would be well-nigh meaningless to give an heir
a right to accept without an accompanying right to reject.
The only response that the Commissioner has offered to this
analysis has been to suggest that, even if article 1007 is read to
contain an implicit right to renounce, that right should be
construed as a right to renounce the derivative succession coming
from the dead heir, not a right to renounce the succession going to
that heir on her behalf. The Commissioner bases this argument on
the current text of article 1007, which contains the fairly
21
ambiguous language that “[the heir of an heir] shall have a right
to accept [the succession] under him” (emphasis added).
Unfortunately for the Commissioner, his argument flies in the
face of the clear French text of article 1001 of the Code of 1825,
and is thus invalid under the core holding of Pickett and Shelp.
As noted, the French text of article 1001 provides that, when an
heir dies before accepting or rejecting a succession, “ses
héritiers peuvent l’accepter de son chef.” Although this last
passage was originally translated as “his heirs shall have a right
to accept it under him,” it should more appropriately be read as
“his heirs may accept it under his authority.”17 As noted, the core
holding of Pickett and Shelp makes this more correct translation
controlling, so there is no merit to the Commissioner’s alternate
theory.
Based on the foregoing history, commentators, and logic, we
hold that article 1007 does allow for the renunciation of a
succession by the heirs of an heir on her behalf. Article 84 of
the Digest of 1808 was clearly intended to reproduce all of the
substance of article 781 of the Code Napoleon, and the omission of
the final instance of “repudiate” was likely an inadvertent side
17
In the juridical context, “de son chef” = “under his right.”
Harper-Collins-Robert French~English English~French Dictionary at
117 (2d ed. 1990).
22
effect of the streamlining of the sentence. Every commentator who
has considered the issue has apparently assumed this to be the
case, no doubt because it is the only interpretation that makes any
sense in the light of the statutory framework.
Because Louisiana law does allow for the renunciation of a
succession by the heirs of an heir on her behalf, the renunciation
in this case was valid to pass an interest under state law. The
district court’s ruling that it was not was in error, and we
reverse accordingly.
C
Even conceding this point, however, the Commissioner next
argues that the renunciation in this case was nonetheless not a
qualified disclaimer because Sammie Delaune had accepted the
benefits of Jack’s succession prior to her death. Based on the
Service’s own regulations and letter rulings, we find absolutely no
merit to this argument.
As noted, § 2518(b)(3) requires that the disclaimant not have
accepted the benefits of the interest in order for a disclaimer to
be qualified for federal estate tax purposes. The Commissioner
argues that Sammie Delaune accepted the benefits of Jack’s
succession by allowing her expenses to be paid out of a community
property account and by allowing the interest on the succession to
accumulate therein.
23
Under Treas. Reg. § 25.2518-2(d), “[a]cceptance [of benefits
for purposes of § 2518(b)(3)] is manifested by an affirmative act
which is consistent with ownership of the interest in property.”
See also Estate of Monroe, 124 F.3d at 705. Even if William
Delaune’s actions in this case may be somehow attributed to
Sammie,18 there seems little doubt that the instances cited by the
Commissioner do not constitute “affirmative act[s] consistent with
ownership.” Simply put, it was not “consistent with ownership” of
Jack’s succession for Sammie to pay her own expenses from funds in
a joint community property account to which she had an equal
right,19 nor was it “an affirmative act” for Sammie passively to
“accept” routine interest accrual.
The Commissioner is not wholly unaware of the legally curious
nature of his position in the light of his own regulation, and he
attempted at oral argument to disavow its binding authority. As we
recently held in Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, 135 F.3d 1017, 1024 (5th Cir. 1998), however, “the
18
An attribution we have some difficulty in swallowing, as
William Delaune does not appear to have had any legal authority to
act on Sammie’s behalf.
19
This is particularly so in the light of the fact that
Sammie’s expenses undisputedly never exceeded even her portion of
the income from the community’s property, and the fact that the
Commissioner has been consistently deferential towards withdrawals
from joint accounts in his own private letter rulings in this area.
See, e.g., T.A.M. 86-19-002.
24
Commissioner will be held to his published rulings in areas where
the law is unclear, and may not depart from them in individual
cases.” Although the issue in McLendon concerned a revenue ruling,
its rule applies a fortiori in the case of a bona fide treasury
regulation, and the Commissioner may not escape the effect of
Treas. Reg. § 25.2518-2(d) on the admittedly murky question posed
by this case. Indeed, we are a little perturbed that he would even
try.
Because we find that the Commissioner’s instances of purported
acceptance do not meet the “affirmative ownership act” standard
established in his own regulation, we conclude that Sammie had not
accepted the benefits of Jack’s succession prior to her death. In
the light of our earlier finding that the February 27 renunciation
was effective to pass an interest under Louisiana law, we therefore
conclude that it was a qualified disclaimer for federal estate tax
purposes, and that the declaration of deficiencies was in error.
D
Having held that the declaration of deficiencies was in error,
it only remains to be decided how much the Delaunes may recover in
this case. As noted, only the estate of Sammie Delaune and nine of
her fourteen heirs have sued for a refund. They request, however,
that the entire amount of the deficiency be remitted to their
custody.
25
Under I.R.C. § 6402(a), a refund may only be obtained by the
taxpayer who made the overpayment. As other circuits have
construed this provision in the context of refund actions, it means
that standing is limited to the party or parties who have at least
arguably or derivatively made an actual overpayment, such that they
have a financial interest in the litigation. See Atlas Hotels,
Inc. v. United States, 1998 WL 154465, *2 (9th Cir. 1998); Estate
of Fink v. United States, 852 F.2d 153, 155 (6th Cir. 1988) (both
citing Bruce v. United States, 759 F.2d 755, 758-59 (9th Cir.
1985)); cf. First National Bank of Fort Worth v. United States, 633
F.2d 1168, 1171 (5th Cir. 1981) (quoting a district court
predecessor to Bruce, Scanlon v. United States, 330 F. Supp. 269
(E.D. Mich. 1971), approvingly in a related context); Thomasville
Automotive Parts, Inc. v. United States, 609 F.2d 1136, 1137 (5th
Cir. 1980) (noting that § 6402(a) creates a right of recovery only
in the case of an overpayment).
We agree with our sister circuits on this point, and further
find that a necessary corollary to their rule is that any party’s
standing to seek a refund in a given case is limited to the amount
of his own overpayment. Cf. United States v. Elam, 112 F.3d 1036,
1038 (9th Cir. 1997) (“Spouses who file a joint return have
separate interests in any overpayment [recoverable under
§ 6402(a)], the interest of each depending upon his or her relative
26
contribution to the overpaid tax.”) In this case, it is undisputed
that the parties before this court did not make payment on the
entire deficiency. Their recovery is therefore limited to the
amounts that they paid, which we find to be $75,994 in total.
27
V
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the
district court and RENDER for the Delaunes in the amount of
$75,994.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
28