Opinion
Docket No. 99748.
Decided August 17, 1988.
Sobieraj Michael (by Rosanne S. Hostnik), for petitioners.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Louis J. Caruso, Solicitor General, and Mary Louise Pridmore, Assistant Attorney General, for respondent.
Before: GILLIS, P.J., and WAHLS and DOCTOROFF, JJ.
Petitioners appeal as of right from the probate court order dismissing their petition to determine heirs and rejecting their claim that the provisions of MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106 violate this state's equal protection clause, Const 1963, art 1, § 2. We affirm.
Decedent died intestate, leaving no surviving spouse, issue, parents, brothers, sisters, children of deceased brothers or sisters, or grandparents or issue of grandparents. Petitioners are decedent's second cousins, being descended from decedent's great-grandparents, and, therefore, were related to the decedent in the sixth degree of kinship.
MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106 provides:
The part of the intestate estate not passing to the surviving spouse under section 105 or the entire intestate estate if there is not a surviving spouse, shall pass as follows:
(a) To the issue of the decedent. If they are all in the same degree of kinship to the decedent they shall take equally, but if of unequal degree, then those of more remote degrees take by representation.
(b) If there is no surviving issue, to his or her surviving parents equally.
(c) If there is no surviving issue or parent, to the brothers and sisters and children of deceased brothers and sisters of the decedent. If they are all in the same degree of kinship to the decedent they shall take equally, but if of unequal degree, then those of more remote degree take by representation.
(d) If there is no surviving issue, parent, brothers or sisters, or children of deceased brothers and sisters of a decedent, but the decedent is survived by 1 or more grandparents or issue of grandparents, 1/2 of the estate shall pass to the surviving paternal grandparents, or to the issue of the paternal grandparents if both are deceased, the issue to take equally if they are all of the same degree of kinship to the decedent, but if of unequal degree then those of more remote degree shall be excluded; and the other 1/2 shall pass to the maternal relatives in the same manner; but if there is no surviving grandparents or issue of grandparents on the paternal or maternal side, the entire estate shall pass to the relatives on the other side in the same manner as the 1/2.
(e) If an eligible survivor is not then known or determinable to take under subdivisions (a) to (d), then to the state by escheat.
Under this statute, petitioners are not eligible to receive any part of decedent's intestate estate because they are related to decedent through her great-grandparents rather than through her grandparents. Therefore, decedent's estate escheats to the state. Under the predecessor to MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106, a decedent's estate escheated to the state only where no surviving relatives could be found; therefore, petitioners, decedent's closest known relatives, would have inherited decedent's estate.
MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106 is modelled after § 2103 of the Uniform Probate Code. The comment to the code indicates that, in line with modern policy, this section eliminates more remote relatives from inheriting.
Petitioners contend that the distribution scheme embodied in MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106 violates this state's equal protection clause because relatives descending from great-grandparents and beyond are not allowed to inherit even though they may be the same or closer in degree of kinship than relatives descending from decedent's grandparents. The probate court applied the traditional rational-basis test and rejected petitioners' claim, finding that the statute prevents "laughing heirs" from sharing in decedent's estate and that, if decedent desired a different distribution of her property, she could have prepared a will.
Petitioners first claim that the probate court erred by applying the traditional rational basis test rather than what petitioners refer to as the "means scrutiny" test derived from Manistee Bank Trust Co v McGowan, 394 Mich. 655; 232 N.W.2d 636 (1975), and Alexander v Detroit, 392 Mich. 30; 219 N.W.2d 41 (1974). Petitioners concede that the strict scrutiny test does not apply.
In Alexander, supra, pp 35-36, our Supreme Court held that the question of whether a legislative enactment violates equal protection is determined by applying the following tests:
(1) Are the enactment's classifications based on natural distinguishing characteristics and do they bear a reasonable relationship to the object of the legislation?
(2) Are all persons of the same class included and affected alike or are immunities or privileges extended to an arbitrary or unreasonable class while denied to others of a like kind? [Citations omitted.]
In Manistee Bank Trust Co, supra, p 668, our Supreme Court noted that the United States Supreme Court had developed a two-tiered approach to equal protection cases. If the interest is fundamental (e.g., right to vote) or the classification is suspect (e.g., race), the United States Supreme Court applied a strict scrutiny test requiring the state to show a compelling interest which justifies the classification. If, on the other hand, the legislation is principally social or economic, the traditional equal protection test is applied. In that case, the party challenging the statute bears the burden of proving that it is without reasonable justification. In fact, it has been held that a statutory classification will not be set aside if any state of facts may be conceived to justify it and the classification will stand unless it is essentially arbitrary. This test is referred to as the rational relationship test.
After discussing the two-tiered approach applied by the United States Supreme Court in reviewing an equal protection claim, our Supreme Court noted that a commentator believed that a third test was emerging as evidenced by the decision in Reed v Reed, 404 U.S. 71; 92 S Ct 251; 30 L Ed 2d 225 (1971). Manistee Bank Trust Co, supra, pp 668-669.
In Reed, the United States Supreme Court struck down an Idaho statute which preferred male administrators to female administrators if they were otherwise equally qualified. The Reed Court, quoting Royster Guano Co v Virginia, 253 U.S. 412, 415; 40 S Ct 560; 64 L Ed 989 (1920), held:
A classification "must be reasonable, not arbitrary and must rest on some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relationship to that object of the legislation, so that all persons similarly circumstanced shall be treated alike." [ 404 U.S. 76.]
We note that in Craig v Boren, 429 U.S. 190; 97 S Ct 451; 50 L Ed 2d 397 (1976), reh den 429 U.S. 1124; 97 S Ct 1161; 51 L Ed 2d 574 (1976), the United States Supreme Court adopted an intermediate level of review when reviewing gender classifications (i.e., the gender classification must be substantially related to an important government interest).
Without the benefit of Craig, our Supreme Court in Manistee Bank Trust Co, noted that the fair-and-substantial-relation-to-the-object-of-the-legislation test or, as it was dubbed by one commentator, the means scrutiny test, had been used in Alexander, supra. The Court then held:
Where a classification scheme creates a discrete exception to a general rule and has been enforced for a sufficiently long period of time that all the rationales likely to be advanced in its support have been developed, a court should fully examine those rationales and determine whether they are sound. [ Manistee Bank Trust Co, supra, p 672.]
We note that Manistee Bank Trust Co, supra, involved a forty-five-year-old guest-passenger statute and that similar statutes in other states had been criticized, amended, repealed, whittled away and struck down.
We agree with the probate court that the traditional rational relationship test rather than the means-scrutiny test should apply because we do not believe that MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106, which was effective on July 1, 1979, is similar to the forty-five-year-old statute in Manistee Bank Trust Co, which had been extensively criticized, allowing all rationales in its support to have been developed.
Under the traditional equal protection test, the classification must be a reasonable one and must bear a reasonable relationship to a legitimate goal of the Legislature. Id. at 671. Moreover, the petitioner must show that the classifications created are so arbitrary that they cannot be supported under any state of facts, either known or which could reasonably be assumed. Automatic Music Vending Corp v Liquor Control Comm, 426 Mich. 452; 396 N.W.2d 204 (1986), dismissed ___ US ___; 107 S Ct 1880; 95 L Ed 2d 488 (1987).
Petitioners do not question the state's ability to enact statutes governing descent and distribution. Labine v Vincent, 401 U.S. 532; 91 S Ct 1017; 28 L Ed 2d 288 (1971), reh den 402 U.S. 990; 91 S Ct 1672; 29 L Ed 2d 156 (1971); Moorman v Moorman, 340 Mich. 636; 66 N.W.2d 248 (1954). While petitioners would rather have the Legislature distribute a decedent's intestate estate by degree of kinship rather than relationship to decedent, we will not sit as a super-Legislature and determine that distributing by degree of kinship might be fairer. Id. Unlike petitioners, we view MCL 700.106; MSA 27.5106 as creating many classes based on the heir's relationship to the decedent. The Legislature attempted to distribute a decedent's property in a manner in which the decedent would have naturally distributed it if he or she had had a will; however, the Legislature preferred the state to those claiming through great-grandparents and beyond. Respondent advances the following reasons for limiting heirs to those related through grandparents: (1) it is restricted to relatives whom decedent probably knew and had an interest in; (2) it solves problems occasioned by unlimited inheritance, such as the expense and difficulty in locating more remote relatives, the threat of frivolous litigation in will contests by so-called "laughing heirs," and administrative problems which may be caused by dividing an estate into many small portions; and (3) the enumerated relatives and, then, the state are more likely to care for decedent than are the decedent's more remote relatives. We note, as did respondent and the probate court, that decedent always had the opportunity to prepare a will to effect a different disposition of her property. Contrary to petitioners' argument, we hold that classification by relationship to the decedent is related to the objectives of the statute as is the classification preferring the state to great-grandparents and relatives claiming through great-grandparents.
Affirmed.