(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (3)
of this section, the following rules apply:
(a) To the extent that a provision of a decedent's will
provides for the apportionment of an estate tax, the tax must be
apportioned accordingly.
(b) Any portion of an estate tax not apportioned pursuant to
(a) of this subsection must be apportioned in accordance with any
provision of a revocable trust of which the decedent was the
settlor which provides for the apportionment of an estate tax.
If conflicting apportionment provisions appear in two or more
revocable trust instruments, the provision in the most recently
dated instrument prevails. For purposes of this subsection
(1)(b):
(i) A trust is revocable if it was revocable immediately
after the trust instrument was executed, even if the trust
subsequently becomes irrevocable; and
(ii) The date of an amendment to a revocable trust
instrument is the date of the amended instrument only if the
amendment contains an apportionment provision.
(c) If any portion of an estate tax is not apportioned
pursuant to (a) or (b) of this subsection, and a provision in any
other dispositive instrument provides that any interest in the
property disposed of by the instrument is or is not to be applied
to the payment of the estate tax attributable to the interest
disposed of by the instrument, the provision controls the
apportionment of the tax to that interest.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) of this section, and unless
the decedent provides to the contrary, the following rules apply:
(a) If an apportionment provision provides that a person
receiving an interest in property under an instrument is to be
exonerated from the responsibility to pay an estate tax that
would otherwise be apportioned to the interest:
(i) The tax attributable to the exonerated interest must be
apportioned among the other persons receiving interests passing
under the instrument; or
(ii) If the values of the other interests are less than the
tax attributable to the exonerated interest, the deficiency must
be apportioned ratably among the other persons receiving
interests in the apportionable estate that are not exonerated
from apportionment of the tax.
(b) If an apportionment provision provides that an estate
tax is to be apportioned to an interest in property a portion of
which qualifies for a marital or charitable deduction, the estate
tax must first be apportioned ratably among the holders of the
portion that does not qualify for a marital or charitable
deduction and then apportioned ratably among the holders of the
deductible portion to the extent that the value of the
nondeductible portion is insufficient.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in (d) of this subsection,
if an apportionment provision provides that an estate tax be
apportioned to property in which one or more time-limited
interests exist, other than interests in specified property under
RCW 83.110A.060, the tax must be apportioned to the principal of
that property, regardless of the deductibility of some of the
interests in that property.
(d) If an apportionment provision provides that an estate
tax is to be apportioned to the holders of interests in property
in which one or more time-limited interests exist and a charity
has an interest that otherwise qualifies for an estate tax
charitable deduction, the tax must first be apportioned, to the
extent feasible, to interests in property that have not been
distributed to the persons entitled to receive the interests. No
tax shall be paid from a charitable remainder annuity trust or a
charitable remainder unitrust described in section 664 of the
Internal Revenue Code and created during the decedent's life.
(3) A provision that apportions an estate tax is ineffective
to the extent that it increases the tax apportioned to a person
having an interest in the gross estate over which the decedent
had no power to transfer immediately before the decedent executed
the instrument in which the apportionment direction was made.
For purposes of this section, a testamentary power of appointment
is a power to transfer the property that is subject to the power.
[2005 c 332 § 3.]