themes for today’s class the problem of the “dead hand” while there are some limits on donor...
TRANSCRIPT
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Themes for today’s class The problem of the “dead hand”
While there are some limits on donor freedom, trusts and estates law generally is designed to promote the intent of the donor
As in other areas of the law, public policies may trump individual autonomy (e.g., protection of spouses and creditors)
Considerations of professional responsibility Legal duties to intended beneficiaries Conflicts of interest when writing wills or trusts
for both partners in a couple 1
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The dead hand
The organizing principle of the American law of donative transfers is freedom of disposition. Property owners have the nearly unrestricted right to dispose of their property as they please.
American law does not grant courts any general authority to question the wisdom, fairness, or reasonableness of the donor’s decisions … . The main function of the law in this field is to facilitate rather than regulate. The law serves this function by establishing rules under which sufficiently reliable determinations can be made regarding the content of the donor’s intention.
Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §10.1 cmt. c (2003)
(p. 27)
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The problem of the dead hand
Which purposes of a testator are prohibited or restricted? Leaving spouses without a share of the estate Leaving creditors unpaid Restraints on marriage or provisions promoting
separation or divorce (IN case, p.35) Restraints on the alienation of property received
from the estate Racially-based or other invidious restrictions Provisions encouraging illegal activity Maintenance of control far into the future (e.g., rule
against perpetuities)
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Shapira v. Union National BankShapira v. Union National Bank, 315 N.E.2d 825 (Ohio Ct. Common Pleas 1974)
David
Ruth Daniel Mark
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What were the facts in Shapira?
David Shapira wrote a will dividing his estate in three equal shares for his three children
The daughter, who already was married, would receive her one-third share automatically, but Daniel would receive his share only if he married a Jewish woman within seven years of Dr. Shapira’s death A spouse would count as Jewish only if both of her
parents were Jewish (even though Judaism always views a child as Jewish if the mother was Jewish, some branches of Judaism view children as Jewish if either parent is Jewish, and Judaism recognizes conversion)
Another son, Mark, faced substantially similar conditions5
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Did the marriage stipulation violate the sons’ constitutional right to marry?
Recall Loving v. Virginia—states may not forbid blacks and whites from choosing to marry each other
Would a court enforcing Dr. Shapira’s will be denying Daniel his constitutional freedom to choose his preferred spouse? No—upholding the will would not prevent
Daniel from marrying a non-Jewish woman; it would only affect his ability to receive his one-third share
But there is a penalty on the exercise of his right6
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Constitutional right to inherit?
At the bottom of p. 29, the court observed that “the right to receive property by will is a creature of law, and is not a . . . right . . . protected by . . . the United States constitution.” What about Hodel v. Irving, decided 13 years later by the U.S. Supreme Court? That case recognized a right to distribute
one’s property, not a right to receive the property of another person
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Did the marriage stipulation violate the public policy against restraints of marriage?
No—”A partial restraint of marriage which imposes only reasonable restrictions is valid, and not contrary to public policy” (page 30)
When are restrictions not reasonable? A “restraint unreasonably limits the transferee’s
opportunity to marry if a marriage permitted by the restraint is not likely to occur. The likelihood of marriage is a factual question, to be answered from the circumstances of the particular case.”
Restatement (Second) of Property: Donative Transfers §6.2, cmt. a Note the court’s distinction between a restraint on
the religion of the beneficiary’s spouse and a restraint on the religious practice of the beneficiary
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Which changes in the terms of the stipulation would make it an unreasonable restraint
What if the sons had to marry within three years? What if Daniel attended Brigham Young
University in Provo, Utah? What if Dr. Shapira had made the gift contingent
on his sons marrying only a white woman? The court cited Dr. Shapira’s reason for the stipulation
(pages 32-33) and pointed out that he was trying to use his wealth to preserve the Jewish community, either through his children or through the State of Israel
Promoting marriage within one’s religious or ethnic group (e.g., marry a person of Greek descent) probably still okay
Restatement says no to clauses requiring marriage within a religion, but courts so far have tended to say yes
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What about the way Joe Lieberman handled his uncle’s marriage stipulation?
Did he do the right thing? It helped that he could rely on an unsigned
draft of a new will Note the importance of where the
money would go if the gift failed If it would go to the other children, they
might sue to enforce the stipulation But a charity probably would not
Would the State of Israel have sued if the sons had not satisfied Dr. Shapira’s stipulation, but the executor of the will let the sons receive their shares? 10
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The problem of the dead hand
We saw earlier purposes of a testator that are prohibited or restricted. Other purposes are allowed (and conditional gifts usually are made through trusts rather than wills) Education incentives—conditioning distributions on
graduation from high school or college or the attainment of a minimum GPA
Moral incentives—conditioning distributions on the satisfaction of drug testing, the making of contributions to a charitable cause or the having of children
Professional incentives—conditioning distributions on the earning of income, the entering of a particular profession or joining the family business 11
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Simpson v. CalivasSimpson v. Calivas, 650 A.2d 318 (N.H. 1994), p.58
FirstWife
Robert Sr. Roberta
Robert Jr.
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Duties to intended beneficiaries:What were the facts in Simpson?
Robert Simpson, Sr., hired Christopher Calivas to draft his will.
The will left all of the real estate to Robert Simpson, Jr., except a life estate in “our homestead,” which was left to Robert, Jr.’s stepmother.
Did “homestead” include just the house and some surrounding land, or did it also include the full 100 acres of surrounding land, with buildings used in the family business? Despite lawyer Calivas’ notes indicating that Robert,
Sr., only intended to leave a life estate in the house, the probate court awarded a life estate in the full property
It cost Robert, Jr., $400,000 to buy out the life estate13
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Simpson v. CalivasSimpson v. Calivas, 650 A.2d 318 (N.H. 1994)
FirstWife
Robert Sr. Roberta
Robert Jr.
“homestead”
all o
ther
rea
l
esta
te
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Could Robert, Jr., sue Calivas?Why was there a problem with a lawsuit in the trial court’s view?
To bring a malpractice suit, you have to show that the defendant owed a duty of care.
Ordinarily, lawyers owe a duty of care to their clients, and Calivas’ client was Robert, Sr., not Robert, Jr.
Could Robert, Jr., overcome the lack of privity of contract between himself and Calivas? The court invoked the exception to the privity
requirement in cases of reasonably foreseeable harm to intended beneficiaries of a contract
Because harm to intended beneficiaries is reasonably foreseeable from a negligently drafted will, it is appropriate to give intended beneficiaries a cause of action 15
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Duty to intended beneficiaries: The fall of the privity defense
Privity of Contract
No Legal Relationship
Testator
Lawyer
Intended Beneficiary
Robert Simpson Sr.
Robert Simpson Jr.
Christopher Calivas
Devise by Will
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But didn’t the probate court conclude that Robert, Sr., intended to leave the entire homestead to the stepmother?
The probate court was not able to consider the same range of evidence about Robert, Sr.’s intent as was the trial court in the malpractice suit. “Direct declarations of a testator’s intent, however, are
generally inadmissible in all probate proceedings” (p. 61) Moreover, the probate court asked a different
question than the trial court—what was the intent of Robert, Sr., as expressed in the language of the will (emphasis added) Note that there is a trend in trusts and estates law in
favor of allowing probate courts more freedom to consider evidence extrinsic to the language of the will
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Do lawsuits by intended beneficiaries serve the purposes of tort law?
Yes—the harm is suffered by the intended beneficiary, not the testator, and tort law is designed to compensate for injury
From a deterrence perspective as well, it makes sense to give intended beneficiaries a cause of action. If the estate sued, what would its damages be? Liability to intended beneficiaries represents the
majority rule, with about ten states rejecting liability (you may want to practice in Ohio or Texas)
Some states limit liability to cases in which the testamentary intent, as expressed in the will, is frustrated 18
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What’s wrong with this picture? Is this the right way to resolve misdrafting of wills by lawyers?
No—the unintended beneficiary receives a windfall
If the court wants to remedy the mistake, why not correct the will and carry out the testator’s intent? As the notes indicate, trusts and estates law is being
reformed to allow for correction of the will in some circumstances (pp.62-63), which we’ll discuss in future classes
But what problems does that approach leave? If we fix the mistake, what haven’t we addressed? The negligent lawyer escapes liability 19
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Conflicts of interest:What were the facts in A. v. B? (p.64)
Husband and wife retained Hill Wallack’s estate planning department to write their wills The couple waived Hill Wallack’s conflicts of
interest from the representation The couple was warned that information each
provided could become known by the partner, but they did not expressly waive confidentiality
The firm misspelled the couple’s last name in its filing system, so conflicts checks didn’t pick up their representation This became a problem when the husband fathered
a child out of wedlock, and the mother retained Hill Wallack’s family law department in a paternity suit20
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A. v. B.
PaternityPlaintiff
(A.)
Husband(B.)
Wife
Child
A. v. B.,
726 A.2d 924 (N.J. 1999)
Marital Issue
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Conflicts of interest:What were the facts in A. v. B?
When the Hill Wallack family law attorney notified the husband about the paternity suit, he neglected to advise the attorney of the conflict. He then retained another law firm
Meanwhile, the husband and wife executed their wills, leaving their respective residuary estates to each other
Ultimately, part of the wife’s estate might pass from her husband to the child out of wedlock
The conflict became apparent when the Hill Wallack family law department sought disclosure of the husband’s assets, and the other law firm informed Hill Wallack that its estate planning department already had the information.
Having discovered the conflict, Hill Wallack’s family law department withdrew from its representation 22
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May Hill Wallack disclose to the wife that the husband fathered a child with another woman?
On one hand, Hill Wallack had a Model Rule 1.4 duty to inform the wife of material facts relating to its representation of her But wasn’t she a former client?
On the other hand, the firm had a Model Rule 1.6 duty to protect the confidentiality of the husband (as incorporated by Model Rule 1.9 (c)(2))
How do we resolve the conflict? Model Rule 1.6 includes exceptions to confidentiality Under NJ Rule 1.6(c)(1)[now 1.6(d)(1)], lawyers may
disclose information to “rectify the consequences of a client’s . . . fraudulent act in furtherance of which the lawyer’s services have been used”
So maybe Model Rule 1.4 doesn’t really matter 23
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Could Hill Wallack have disclosed to the wife under Model Rule 1.6 or Indiana Rule 1.6?
Model Rule and Indiana Rule 1.6 allow a lawyer to reveal confidential information: “to . . . rectify substantial injury to the financial interests
or property of another that is reasonably certain to result . . . from the client's commission of a . . . fraud in furtherance of which the client has used the lawyer's services;”
According to the court (top p.66), the possibility that the husband will pass to the out-of-wedlock child part of the estate he inherits from his wife does not satisfy the requirement that the lawyer reasonably believe that the husband’s fraud “is likely to result in . . . substantial injury to the financial interest or property of” the wife 24
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What about the court’s point that the husband had a lessened expectation of confidentiality because the firm did not learn of the child from him (page 67)?
The court seems to have confused confidentiality with attorney-client privilege Model Rule 1.6 treats as confidential “all
information relating to the representation, whatever its source” (Comment [3])
The attorney-client privilege protects communications between client and attorney that are made in confidence
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What should Hill Wallack have done to avoid the problems that arose in this case?
When writing wills for both partners in a couple, lawyers should include a “disclosure agreement” in their engagement letter that explains how confidentiality will be treated between the two ACTEC model letter
Of course, lawyers need not share all confidential information—it may not be material to the partner’s interests Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers §
60 Further ACTEC guidance when lawyer learns of
confidential information from one partner 26
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What should Hill Wallack have done to avoid the problems that arose in this case?
Law firms need safeguards to ensure they recognize all conflicts of interest To pick up misspellings of clients, someone can double
check the work of the person entering client names into the computer, and lawyers can audit the system by running a conflicts check on current clients when they work on cases
Conflicts can be missed if important information is not entered at all—Barnes & Thornburg got into trouble when it merged with another firm.
The other firm failed to list an adverse party in its files for a client, and the adverse party was already a client of Barnes & Thornburg.
Because of the omitted listing, Barnes & Thornburg took on the other firm’s client, creating a conflict of interest between concurrent clients
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(p. 62)
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