Football, Fumbled Estate Planning, and a $45 Million Tax Bill

An image of the words "fumbling" written on a white brick wall, to illustrate a plannedgiving.com post on a football family's fumbled estate planning.

If you’ve ever wondered how important good estate planning is, take a look at this terrifying tale of high-net-worth horror. It concerns a football family that lost $45 million—nearly half their estate’s value—to federal taxes. The worst part? The massive tax loss could have easily been prevented with some foresight, planning, and expert advice. Instead, poor estate planning took a hefty toll.

Our story starts in Florida with Joseph Robbie, an attorney, successful businessman, and huge sports fan. After forming a partnership and buying the Miami Dolphins in 1965, he helped turn it into one of the NFL’s most successful teams. Over the next three decades he would build a Superbowl-class stadium with his name on it, win two Super Bowls as the Dolphins’ founding owner, and win five AFC titles.

Now fast-forward to 1990, when Robbie’s unexpected death at 73 ignites a family feud over his estate plan.

A Bad Defensive Line

According to section 2001 of the U.S. Tax Code, estates with assets over $2 million must pay federal taxes. And the tax rates on that exccess can reach up to 46 percent! With careful planning, though, those taxes can be minimized.

But according to the Trust Council, Robbie’s plan was better suited for someone in the middle class, rather than a multi-millionaire. Everything in his estate went into a revocable “inter vivos” trust at the time of his death. The main assets were the football team and the stadium. The intention was that it would provide his wife with income for the rest of her life. Then it would be dispersed to his other named beneficiaries.

His widow, however, felt the income wouldn’t be enough. In 1991, she petitioned to opt for an “elective share,” due to her under Florida law, of the estate.

In other words, rather than leave her interests in the control of the estate’s trustees and receive income, she wanted 30% of the $70 million estate ASAP.

Flag on the Play 

The trustees asked for a delay, because the estate would face a tax bill north of $25 million, plus interest, if she refused the income and opted for the share. To pay it, they would need to sell at least part of the Dolphins.

But Elizabeth Robbie was not concerned about the estate’s losses. The final tax bill climbed to $47 million, and the estate did not have enough liquid cash to pay it. The only solution was to sell the Dolphins and the stadium at bargain-basement prices.

This, understandably, drove an even deeper wedge into the family.

An Avoidable Blowout Estate Tax Loss

Yet careful planning could have prevented the entire debacle. For starters, experts say if Robbie had created an irrevocable life insurance trust with enough value to cover the expected estate taxes, his heirs would not have had to sell anything. He could have gifted out portions of the estate in the years before his death, reducing its value. And he could have established charitable trusts.  

Don’t fumble the ball with poor estate planning, like Joe Robbie and his family.

Work with a trusted financial advisor and estate planner. Consider all your options, including life insurance, charitable gifts, and the charitable donation of retirement accounts. It’s not hard to play by the rules and create a plan that works to maximize your loved ones’ inheritance (and your legacy) while minimizing what the government takes in taxes.

Anything else is just a bad call.

All of our blogs, products and services are proudly conceived, created, reviewed, and disseminated by real humans — not A.I. (artificial “intelligence.”)

Leave a Reply

Please reach out. Note: if you give us your mailing address (or PO Box), we’ll send you a complimentary Planned Giving Gift Comparison Chart. 

Please select one:
How did you hear about us?