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What were the facts in Martin B .?, p. 126

What were the facts in Martin B .?, p. 126. Martin B. died in 2001, survived by his wife, Abigail, and a son, Lindsay. Lindsay had two adult children. Martin’s other child, James, predeceased Martin by seven months. James was survived by his wife.

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What were the facts in Martin B .?, p. 126

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  1. What were the facts in Martin B.?, p. 126 • Martin B. died in 2001, survived by his wife, Abigail, and a son, Lindsay. Lindsay had two adult children. • Martin’s other child, James, predeceased Martin by seven months. James was survived by his wife. • James’ widow used his frozen sperm to have two children, born in 2004 and 2006

  2. In re Martin B.,841 N.Y.S.2d 207 (N.Y. Surr. Ct. 2008) In re Martin B. Abigail B. Martin B. Nancy James Lindsay James Mitchell Warren Adult Child 1 Adult Child 2

  3. What were the relevant terms of Martin’s trusts? • Martin B. left seven trusts that gave the trustees authority to sprinkle principal among his issue while his wife, Abigail, was alive • Martin also gave Abigail a special power of appointment to determine the distribution of the principal upon her death • If Abigail did not exercise her power of appointment, the trustees had authority to sprinkle the principal among Martin’s issue • Should the posthumously-conceived children of James count as the issue of Martin?

  4. Could the two children inherit from James? • No. Under NY law, posthumously-conceived children do not share in the intestate estate (p. 127). • Similarly, if James had left a will, the children would not take as “after-born” children unless he stated otherwise in his will (p. 127). • What result under the UPC? • You have a 45-month window to give birth to the child. James died on January 13, 2001, and the first child was born on October 15, 2004, which is 45 months and 2 days after James’ death. If Nancy could show that she conceived by January 13, 2004, then the first child would count as an heir under the UPC.

  5. But we’re dealing with a third-party’s trust • The rules that govern James as decedent do not necessarily apply to Martin • Moreover, the trust interests are future interests. We don’t have the need to wind up a decedent’s estate in a timely fashion (p. 128) • The relevant statutes for future interests include posthumously-born children in the definition of issue, but they did not anticipate posthumously-conceived children

  6. Are James’ children eligible for trust sprinklings? • General trusts and estates principles hold that a child of assisted reproduction should be treated as any other child of the decedent if the decedent considered the child as his or her own (pp. 128-129) • In this view, the two boys are part of Martin’s bloodline, and Martin intended the trusts to benefit all the members of his bloodline • The court observed that under the trust instruments, Martin’s intent was to have the trust “benefit his sons and their families equally” (page 129)

  7. Advancements: Hotchpot Example Advancements: hotchpot example Testator ($50,000) Daughter A ($10,000) Daughter B ($0) Daughter C ($0)

  8. Presumption against treating lifetime gifts as advancements—gifts may reflect a desire to favor the recipient • UPC § 2-109(a) treats gift as an advancement only if • (i) the decedent declared in a contemporaneous writing or the heir acknowledged in writing that the gift is an advancement or • (ii) the decedent's contemporaneous writing or the heir's written acknowledgment otherwise indicates that the gift is to be taken into account in computing the division and distribution of the decedent's intestate estate • Ind. Code § 29-1-2-10 • (1) the decedent declared in a writing or the heir acknowledged in a writing that the gift is an advancement; or • (2) the decedent's writing or the heir's written acknowledgment otherwise indicates that the gift is to be taken into account in computing the division and distribution of the decedent's intestate estate.

  9. Guardianship of Minors • Guardianship of the property • Subject to burdensome and costly judicial supervision and should be avoided. • Conservatorship • A guardian of property with investment powers similar to those of trustees, more flexible than guardianship. • Custodianship • A person is given property to hold for the benefit of a minor under the UTMA or UGMA. Useful for modest funds. • Trusts • Flexible and highly customizable property management arrangement. • Don’t expire when child reaches age 18 or 21

  10. C. Bars to Succession

  11. Two key bars to succession • Slayer rule—if you kill the decedent, you lose your entitlement as an heir or beneficiary (forfeiture) • Disclaimer—you may voluntarily relinquish your entitlement as an heir or beneficiary (waiver) • Usually done to reduce taxes or avoid having one’s share of an estate go to one’s creditors

  12. What were the facts in Mahoney, p.146? • Charlotte Mahoney murdered her husband, who died intestate. • If her husband had died of natural causes, Charlotte would have been the sole heir of her husband’s estate. • If there had been a larger estate, the husband’s parents also would have been heirs • What result under Indiana’s intestacy rules? • Charlotte ¾, Howard’s parents split ¼ • May Charlotte inherit?

  13. In re Estate of Mahoney In re Estate of Mahoney, 220 A.2d 475 (Vt. 1966) Mother Mark Mahoney Charlotte Mahoney Howard Mahoney

  14. Slayer rules (p.146) • Slayer inherits—inappropriate to impose an additional penalty for the crime, plus constitutional prohibition against corruption of blood • Legal title does not pass to slayer—no one should be able to profit from own wrongdoing • Slayer receives share in “constructive trust” for heirs next in line—avoids the rewriting of the statutory laws of descent but ensures that slayer does not profit from wrongdoing (UPC and Ind. Code § 29-1-2-12.1)

  15. Indiana slayer rule • A person is a constructive trustee of any property that is acquired by the person or that the person is otherwise entitled to receive as a result of an individual's death, including property from a trust • Ind. Code § 29-1-2-12.1(a) (emphasis added)

  16. Non-probate transfers • Slayer rules include non-probate transfers. In Indiana, • A person is a constructive trustee of anyproperty that is acquired by the person or that the person is otherwise entitled to receive . . . including property from a trust • Ind. Code § 29-1-2-12.1(a) (emphasis added) • See also Heinzman v. Mason, 694 N.E.2d 1164 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (imposing constructive trust on proceeds from life insurance policy and retirement account)

  17. Who counts as a slayer? • Usually have to have acted intentionally • In Indiana, one is a slayer if the person has been found guilty, or guilty but mentally ill, of murder, causing suicide, or voluntary manslaughter • Ind. Code § 29-1-2-12.1(a)

  18. What happens to the slayer’s share? • Some states will let the slayer’s share pass to the slayer’s heirs • Other states (including Indiana) do not let the slayer’s heirs take

  19. Constructive trust without a conviction • A criminal conviction is a sufficientand conclusive basis for imposing a constructive trust but not a necessary basis—can demonstrate guilt by a preponderance of the evidence in a civil proceeding to impose a constructive trust (e.g., when killer commits suicide after the murder or when killer is acquitted) • UPC § 2-803(g) • Heinzman v. Mason, 694 N.E.2d 1164 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998)

  20. O’s estate goes to sister A; if A disclaims, property goes to niece B, avoiding gift and estate taxes and possibly income taxes—note 9-month time limit for disclaimer under federal tax code (Note 1, page 153) A O Disclaims B

  21. Disclaimer and Representation, p. 154 O C takes ½ and A’s children each take ¼, even if we’re in a modern per stirpes state—don’t want A to be able to reduce C’s share A A A A A A A B Disclaims A1 A2 A3 A4 C

  22. Drye v. United States,528 U.S. 49 (1999) Irma Sue Rohn Disclaims Cannot use disclaimer to evade a federal tax lien—but note that the IRS could not have seized Irma’s estate had she left it to Theresa in a will Theresa

  23. Indiana intestacy law Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), the surviving spouse shall receive the following share:       (1) One-half (1/2) of the net estate if the intestate is survived by at least one (1) child or by the issue of at least one (1) deceased child.      (2) Three-fourths (3/4) of the net estate, if there is no surviving issue, but the intestate is survived by one (1) or both of the intestate's parents.      (3) All of the net estate, if there is no surviving issue or parent. • Ind. Code 29-1-2-1(b)

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