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SURROGATE’S COURT LITIGATION |
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The
firm’s expertise in the area of Trusts
and Estates permits our firm’s attorneys, with their
wide-ranging skills and experience, to represent our clients
in litigation matters before the New York Surrogate’s
Court and the New York Supreme Court. We represent fiduciaries
(executors, trustees and guardians) and beneficiaries of estates
and trusts in a variety of contested proceedings. Trust and
estate litigation for our clients has included will contests,
contested estate and trust accountings, fiduciary removal
proceedings, and various other types of proceedings in the
trusts and estate area. These matters are not always local
and sometimes require our attorneys to represent our clients’
interests both nationally and internationally. Indeed, our
attorneys have successfully litigated estate matters in foreign
jurisdictions as distant as Hong Kong, Lebanon and the United
Kingdom where there have been multi-million dollar estates
abroad.
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In
the Surrogate’s Court, the court and its personnel often
encourage our clients to settle their disputes. A settlement
before trial is reached only after careful consideration of
the myriad of tax consequences inherent in such settlements.
Sometimes, however, our attorneys are required to litigate
such matters, both in jury and non-jury trials. In this area,
our attorneys work closely with our Litigation
attorneys. |
A
sampling of our firm’s work in Surrogate’s Court
Litigation includes the following: |
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Will Contests
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The firm has large experiences in Will Contests. In Will contests, the firm represents clients on both sides of the issue – both the named executors seeking to validate a Decedent’s Will and family members seeking to invalidate a Decedent’s Will. For example, in representing the Decedent’s brother, nephews and nieces in a Will contest, our attorneys successfully settled our clients’ challenge to changes in both a Will and a Trust Agreement which were executed by the Decedent very close in time to when proceedings for the appointment of a guardian in the Supreme Court [on the grounds of the Decedent’s inability to manage his property] had been brought.
In another matter, our firm was counsel to a named executor in which, at the trial level, a jury upheld a Codicil to the Decedent’s Will and threw out objections made to such Codicil by one family member. On appeal, the trial judge’s refusal to set aside the jury verdict was upheld by the appellate court. Matter of Marsh, 236 A.D.2d 404 (2d Dep’t 1997)
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Trust Contests – "Probate" Proceedings |
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With the increased popularity of revocable trusts, "Will Contests" are often being litigated in the form of the alleged execution and funding of a revocable trust. In a relatively novel case, Matter of Hoffman, 6 Misc. 3d 1011A, 800 N.Y.S.2d 342 (Surr. Ct., Westchester 2004), the firm represented a client that was a beneficiary under her husband's Will of a membership in the New York Stock Exchange. However, even before the execution of his Will, the decedent allegedly created a revocable trust agreement for the benefit of a child of a prior marriage and allegedly transferred his NYSE seat to the trust. The NYSE seat had not been transferred to the trust through any assignment process but had been listed on a list of assets of the trust, with the following notation: "1. Membership in the New York Stock Exchange. The NY Stock Exchange does not permit registration of memberships in the name of trustees. Grantor and Trustees recognize this to be the case." Citing the provisions of a relatively new statute, EPTL 7-1.18, lawyers at the firm sought summary judgment against the trustees strictly on the question of the effectiveness of the transfer, arguing, among other things, that the recital of the NYSE seat as an asset of the trust in a schedule was not enough to consummate the transfer. The Cour agreed and dismissed this portion of the trustees' case. |
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Removal
Proceedings – Contested Accounting Proceedings |
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The firm has
had broad experience in the area of proceedings for the removal
of fiduciaries, both in defending fiduciaries and in seeking
such removal. For example, in Surrogate’s Court, New
York County [Manhattan], the firm, at the trial and appellate
levels, successfully represented a beneficiary seeking the
removal of a preliminary executor who had acted improperly
in the administration of the estate. Ultimately, the successor
fiduciary, in properly administering the estate, uncovered
substantial assets not previously disclosed by the former
preliminary executor. Matter
of Marsh, 173 A.D.2d 336 (1st Dep't 1991), app. dismissed,
78 N.Y.2d 990, mot. for lv. to appeal denied, 79 N.Y.2d 751
Later on, in this same estate, we successfully represented
the successor executor at both the trial and appellate levels
in contesting the former preliminary executor’s accounting
and obtaining, amongst other things, surcharges/damages against
that former fiduciary in excess of $1,600,000 for such fiduciary’s
improper disbursement of estate assets. Matter
of Marsh, 265 A.D.2d 253 (1st Dep’t 1999) (unanimous
affirmance of surcharge in excess of $1,600,000 and award
of attorneys fees against former fiduciary in the amount of
$250,000), motions for reargument and for leave to appeal
denied, ___ A.D.2d ___ (1st Dep’t 2000); mot. for leave
to appeal denied, 2000 N.Y. LEXIS 1705 (Ct. of Appeals, June
13, 2000), appeal dismissed, __ N.Y.2d __ (2000). |
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Trust Contests – Invalidation of Trust Amendment |
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In Matter of Goetz, 8 Misc. 3d 200 ( Surr. Ct., Westchester 2005), the Surrogate's Court faced the fairly novel issue of whether an attorney-in-fact could use the authority conferred on her in a power of attorney form to amend a trust created by another person to grant to herself a limited power of appointment over the trust remainder. Pursuant to the terms of the trust in question, the grantor reserved to himself the right to amend or revoke its terms during his lifetime. Representing a client that was adversely affected by the trust amendment, several lawyers at the firm successfully argued that the attorney-in-fact had no authority to make the trust amendment and that the trust amendment was invalid. The Surrogate held, among other things, that although the terms of the subject trust gave the grantor himself the right to revoke the trust or amend its terms, it did not confer the same authority upon the grantor's agent or upon any other person. |
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DNA Issues - Proving Inheritance Rights of Nonmarital Children |
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In our representation of children who were born out of wedlock, the firm, as part of discovery, sought a court order directing DNA testing of the post-humously produced blood serum of the decedent. In an evolving area of the law, the Surrogate's Court conditionally permitted such testing, provided that proof existed of the decedent's "open and notorious" acknowledgement by the decedent of his children. Matter of Seekins, 194 Misc. 2d 42 (Surr. Ct., Westchester 2002). Later on in the case, a settlement was reached in which a DNA test was conducted and the firm's clients received their fair share of their father's estate. |
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Recovery
of Assets – Discovery Proceedings |
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Acting either
for fiduciaries or for claimants, the firm sometimes represents
a client in a discovery proceeding, for which the issue is
typically whether a particular item is an asset of the estate
or belongs to the person in possession of that property. For
example, in Surrogate’s Court, Westchester County, a
discovery proceeding was commenced on behalf of a family member
in order to recover important artwork that the client, during
his mother’s lifetime, had permitted his mother’s
caretaker to use. After the caretaker’s death, the caretaker’s
family did not return the artwork to the owner’s family.
This matter has been successfully settled. |
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Challenge
of Beneficiary Designation – Qualified Plan
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Interpretation
of Decedent’s Will and Accounting Matters |
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In Surrogate’s
Court, Orange County, and on appeal, we successfully represented
the Decedent’s children from his first marriage in litigation
with the Decedent’s surviving spouse in relation to
the surviving spouse’s efforts to obtain an interpretation
of the Decedent’s Will that would have effectively excluded
the Decedent’s children as beneficiaries under their
father’s Will. Matter
of Hickok, 140 Misc. 2d 650 (Surr. Ct., Orange 1989),
affirmed, 158 A.D.2d 690 (2nd Dep't 1990), mot. for lv. to
appeal denied, 76 N.Y.2d 712 |
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Allocation
of Medical Malpractice Award |
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In Surrogate’s
Court, Westchester County, our attorneys represented a surviving
spouse in litigation on the allocation of a settlement award
of over $3 million. The settlement was made before commencing
the trial of a medical malpractice cause of action. Our client’s
wife had died in childbirth, survived by children of her first
marriage and the only child of her marriage to our client.
The executor of the estate, who was our client’s wife’s
first husband, took the position that, for various reasons,
no part of the settlement proceeds should be paid to our client.
This matter has been successfully settled. |
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Interpretation
of Decedent’s Will – Allocation of Estate Taxes
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In representing
a major health care institution, as a beneficiary under a
Will, our attorneys, in Surrogate’s Court, Westchester
County, and on appeal, successfully challenged the Executors’
interpretation of the Decedent’s tax apportionment clause
in her Will, which interpretation would have deprived the
charitable beneficiary of hundreds of thousands of dollars
of its proper share of a multi-million dollar estate. Matter
of McKinney, 117 Misc. 2d 173 (Surr. Ct., Westchester 1982),
affirmed, 101
A.D.2d 477 (2nd Dep't 1984), mot. for lv. to appeal denied,
63 N.Y.2d 607 |
For further
information on our Surrogate’s Court Litigation practice
area, please contact Frank
W. Streng.
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