New legislation expressly authorizes filing pre-death "caveats"

Section 731.110 of Florida's Probate Code allows any person who is apprehensive that an estate will be administered or that a will may be admitted to probate without that person’s knowledge to file a caveat with the court. "Caveat" is a Latin term that means "warning or admonition". In the Florida probate context it refers to a mechanism that compels a local court to give you notice of any petition filed to administer a decedent's estate (and as I wrote here, it's reversible error if a probate judge ignores this obligation).

Especially if you're anticipating a possible will-challenge, caveats are critically important defensive tools: they allow you to block an opposing party from getting him or herself appointed personal representative ("PR") under an invalid will in advance of the litigation. The side that gets appoint PR has significant advantages in any probate case, and once a PR's appointed, the court can't just boot him out [see here, here, here].

Legislative fix:

Probate lawyers often try to file pre-death caveats, but some courts refuse to accept the filings. Neither the Florida Probate Rules nor the Florida Probate Code specifically prohibits the filing of a caveat if the person is not yet deceased; however, both the Code and the rules reference the content of a caveat in relation to a “decedent” and his or her “estate.”

Effective this year, F.S. 731.110 was amended to fix this problem and also generally improve the way caveats are administered. Here's how the legislative fix is summarized in this Legislative White Paper:

EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGE GENERALLY:

The proposed change would permit the filing of a pre-death caveat by an interested person. So as to limit the burden placed upon the Clerk of Court to monitor pre-death caveats, the proposed change would provide that such caveats shall expire two (2) years after filing. The amendment would also exclude the filing of pre-death caveats by creditors of the decedent as the committee did not feel the appointment of a personal representative or the admittance of a potentially invalid will substantially affected the rights of creditors in an estate. The right of a creditor to file a post death caveat is not affected by this amendment. Finally, the amendment would also eliminate the inconsistencies between F.S. §731.110 and Fla. Prob. R. 5.260, bringing the statute in line with the procedural requirements of the rule.

ANALYSIS:

One of the primary purposes of F. S. §731.110 is to permit an interested personto require notice be served upon them and that they be permitted an opportunity to object to a petition for administration before a personal representative is appointed or the decedent's purported last will and testament is admitted to probate. If the interested person is denied information regarding the death of the decedent, the purpose of the statute is defeated if the interested person is not permitted to file a caveat until after the death of the decedent. The clarification that pre-death caveats are permitted to be filed by interested persons assures that wrongdoers may not isolate individuals from their family and then obtain the appointment as personal representative or have a potentially invalid will admitted to probate without the interested person having any ability to require prior notice. The amendment also resolves the present inconsistency between the circuits in the interpretation of the present statute by the clerks of court regarding the acceptance of pre-death caveats. Finally, the amendment will limit the impact on the clerks of court by providing that the caveat will expire two years after filing. It would be the responsibility of the caveator to docket the pre-death caveat for re-filing or renewal at the termination of the two year period. The amendment also eliminates the inconsistency in procedural aspects between the statute and relevant rule and brings the statute in line with the rule.

Can a Venezuelan probate judgment govern a Florida probate proceeding?

Piloto v. Lauria, --- So.3d ----, 2010 WL 4103017 (Fla. 4th DCA Oct 20, 2010)

Increasing numbers of people have connections with one country, but live and work in another, frequently owning property or investments in several countries. So it shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone that every day more and more Florida estates are impacted by multi-national issues.

What's a probate lawyer to do?

Focus on a couple of guiding principles that only apply to multinational estates; then work the case like you would any other ancillary estate under Ch. 734 of Florida's Probate Code. In Nahar v. Nahar, 656 So.2d 225 (Fla. 3d DCA 1995), the court identified the two guiding principles that apply to any Florida court attempting to reconcile the separate arrangements for ownership, taxation, and succession governing multinational estates.

  1. “Administration of an estate is governed by the law of the decedent's domicile”; and
  2. “[w]here a party has had notice and opportunity to be heard and the foreign court has satisfied Florida's jurisdictional and due process requirements[,] their orders will be entitled to comity.” Id. at 229-30.

These principles were very much in play in this case. Here's how the 4th DCA summarized the key facts and foreign probate judgment at issue:

The decedent was survived by his wife and four adult children from a prior marriage. He died intestate, that is, without a will. The probate of his estate occurred in his domicile of Venezuela. A Venezuelan court entered a judgment finding that his wife and children were the sole heirs of his estate. The face of the judgment, however, makes no further findings and does not appoint a personal representative for the estate.

Key take-away points from this summary:

  1. Decedent's domicile: Venezuela.
  2. Decedent died intestate, i.e., without a will.
  3. Limited scope of Venezuelan probate judgment: the Venezuelan probate judgment did NOT appointment a personal representative (PR) for the decedent's estate.

Both the probate judge and the 4th DCA agreed the Venezuelan probate judgment did NOT appointment a personal representative (PR) for the decedent's estate. As such, the key legal issue here in Florida was who should be appointed PR.

F.S. 734.102 governs the appointment of PR's for ancillary estates. According to that statute, if the decedent dies intestate you're supposed to apply the rules generally applicable in Florida for the appointment of PRs, which are found in F.S. 733.301. Under that statute the surviving widow is first in line to be PR, and that's how the Florida probate court ruled. Right answer!, says the 4th DCA. Here's why:

[The] first four sentences [of subsection (1) of F.S. 734.102] all address a situation in which the decedent dies testate, that is, with a will. Subsection (1)'s fifth sentence . . . is the only sentence which addresses what occurs “[i]f the decedent dies intestate.” In that situation, “the order of preference for appointment of a personal representative as prescribed in this code shall apply.” As the circuit court found, that language directs us to section 733.301(1)(b), Florida Statutes (2008), which provides that, in granting letters of administration in intestate estates, the order of preference is “[t]he surviving spouse” followed by “[t]he person selected by a majority in interest of the heirs.” Such an interpretation does not conflict with [subsection (4) of F.S. 734.102]'s insistence that “[a]ll proceedings for appointment and administration of an estate shall be as similar to those in original administrations as possible.” Here, the original administration did not involve the appointment of any personal representative, so appointing the wife as the ancillary personal representative does not conflict with the original administration.

 

New ethics advisory opinion 10-3: when should lawyers voluntarily disclose client information to personal representatives and heirs

As a practicing lawyer, one of the best risk-management tools available to you are the ethics rules. Not because you need someone to tell you it's a bad idea to lie, steal or cheat; but because you need someone to point out the pitfalls that are NOT self evident. As former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld famously put it, it's the "unknown, unknowns" you need to worry about.

Here's how Prof. Michael Schutt makes this same point in his excellent book Redeeming Law:

When I practiced law, I paid attention to the ethical rules only when I was involved in a case involving disqualification for conflict of interest.  . . .  The problem wasn't that I was dishonest but that I had way too much confidence in my own honesty.  . . .  I believed my own high standards as a Christian were well above the rules of ethics -- those rules were for those who wanted to do the bare minimum. I had a higher standard.  . . .  This is a recipe for disaster . . .  Codes of legal ethics are the wisdom of those who have gone before, helping us define the standard. Without the rules of ethics, we don't even know what the issues are.

Proposed Advisory Opinion 10-3:

On September 24, 2010, the Florida Bar's Professional Ethics Committee published Proposed Advisory Opinion 10-3. Emphasis needs to be put on the word "PROPOSED". This advisory opinion is still a work in progress. Click here for information on how to comment on this opinion before it's finalized.

This advisory opinion focuses on an issue that comes up all the time for estate planning lawyers: what to do when your clients die and someone asks for a copy of your file. The answer might surprise you. For example, when the deceased client's personal representative calls you up and asks for a copy of your file, do you automatically say "yes." Wrong answer! Assume the same scenario but the person calling is one of the decedent's heirs, not the personal representative. Do you automatically say "no." Again, wrong answer!

When to disclose client confidences is a question no lawyer should take lightly. Don't trust your "gut" to make the right call. The answer that seems intuitively right to you may be a disaster waiting to happen. Consider these hypotheticals:

[1] Is the Personal Representative automatically entitled to disclosure of all of your estate planning client's secrets? NO

Here's how the proposed advisory opinion addressed this scenario:

The exception to [Rule 4-1.6] most likely to apply in such requests is set forth in subdivision (c)(1): “to serve the client's interest unless it is information the client specifically requires not to be disclosed.” Thus, if a personal representative asks for confidential information relating to a decedent’s estate plan and the decedent’s lawyer determines that disclosure of the information would aid in the proper distribution of the decedent’s estate according to the decedent’s wishes, the lawyer may properly disclose the information to the personal representative, unless the decedent specifically required that the information be kept confidential. For example, in Florida Ethics Opinion 72-40, a client instructed the inquiring lawyer who was hired to assist the client with estate planning to “forget” that the client had a “large amount of bearer bonds, registered jointly with his wife.” The opinion concludes that the lawyer may not disclose the existence of these assets to the bank which was to be the sole executor of the client’s estate unless the client gave consent to the disclosure or unless ordered to do so by a court, whether the inquiry was made before or after the client’s death. The opinion states that “the duty to preserve a client’s confidences survives his death. . . .” Thus, a lawyer must undertake the appropriate analysis under the confidentiality rule, even if it is the personal representative who requests information of the decedent from a lawyer who assisted in the decedent’s estate planning and the information sought relates specifically to that estate plan.

[2] Can you disclose an estate planning client's confidential information to his heirs? MAYBE

Here's how the proposed advisory opinion addressed this scenario:

[I]f a beneficiary or heir-at-law asks for specific information and the decedent’s lawyer determines that voluntary disclosure of the information would serve the decedent’s interests, the lawyer may disclose that specific information. For example, a lawyer might provide a copy of the decedent’s will or disclose information relating to the execution of a will to a beneficiary or heir-at-law if the lawyer reasonably believes that disclosure of the information would forestall litigation by the beneficiary or heir-at-law, thereby conserving assets of the estate in the exercise of the lawyer’s professional discretion. However, information that the decedent specifically required the lawyer not to disclose to others may not be disclosed by the lawyer to the beneficiary or heir-at-law, regardless of whether the information is privileged. For example, a deceased client may have specifically instructed the lawyer not to disclose information to anyone about an illegitimate child or an extra-marital relationship.

I find this second conclusion a bit troubling. In the absence of a subpoena, I don't see myself voluntarily disclosing confidential information about a deceased client to anyone other than his personal representative. And I'm not the only one who feels this way. In a 2003 Florida Bar Journal Article entitled Post-death Confidentiality of Estate Planning Communications Between Attorney and Client, well-known trusts and estates attorney Barry F. Spivey concludes it would be an ethics violation to voluntarily disclose client confidences to an heir who hasn't been appointed personal representative:

In Florida Bar Staff Opinion 20749 (March 9, 1998) [see Appendix 1], the question raised was whether a lawyer who had prepared a former will of a decedent (whose last will was prepared by another lawyer) could voluntarily (i.e., without subpoena) furnish a copy of the prior will to an attorney for a potential contestant of the last will. The opinion implies that no will contest had yet been filed, indicates that the confidentiality rule (4-1.6) applies to the facts of the request (citing the comment to the rule that states that the duty “continues after the client-lawyer relationship has terminated”), and notes that none of the exceptions to the rule applied to the facts (however, keep in mind that the preamble to the Florida Rules of Professional Conduct states specifically that the comments are intended only as guides to interpretation, and do not add obligations to the rules). Although it gives no specific instruction to the inquiring lawyer, the opinion must be read as concluding that voluntary disclosure of the prior will of a deceased client is prohibited by the duty of client confidentiality. This seems evident from a reading of Rule 4-1.6(a).

Well, what seemed "self evident" to Mr. Spivey in 2003 wasn't so clear in 2010 to the drafters of Proposed Advisory Opinion 10-3. Which underscores my initial point: this stuff isn't intuitive; you need to stop, read the ethics rules and related advisory opinions before you even have a chance of spotting the issues, let alone make the right call.

Tags:

Trustee + guardianship litigation + NO evidence = reversal on all grounds

Covenant Trust Co. v. Guardianship of Ihrman, --- So.3d ----, 2010 WL 3564731 (Fla. 4th DCA Sept. 15, 2010)

Clients and lawyers alike must contend with an underfunded court system where procedural due process is often viewed as an unnecessary luxury. So what can you do? First, make sure you do your part to help your judge do his part (see Persuading a Cold Judge). Second, insist on evidentiary hearings (not just argument of counsel) to decide contested issues of fact. Sounds like pretty basic stuff; you'd be surprised how often it doesn't happen: click here, here, here, here.

Evidence, Evidence, Evidence . . .

In this case a probate judge entered multiple orders -- all on issues clearly requiring evidentiary hearings -- based on nothing other than argument of counsel. Not surprisingly the 4th DCA reversed all of these orders. The obvious take-away from this case is that evidentiary hearings matter. The less obvious point -- but really the more important one -- is that it's up to counsel to make sure they anticipate the tendency in probate proceedings to bypass evidentiary hearings and compensate accordingly. Your worst enemy is the rushed 15-minute hearing where the judge ends up entering an order that takes you the next 12 months to get reversed on appeal.

In this case Covenant Trust Company, an Illinois corporate trustee, got sucked into a contested Florida guardianship proceeding when it received a petition in the mail (i.e., no legal service of process) from the Florida guardian accusing it of breaching its fiduciary duties and asking the Florida probate judge to immediately take control of the trust by, among other things, ordering the trustee to pay guardianship-related expenses in Florida and ordering the trustee to no longer use trust funds to pay its lawyers.

Here's how the 4th DCA deconstructed each of the probate court's rulings: all of which were reversed for lack of evidence.

[1] Can a court haul a foreign trustee into a Florida court without evidence? NO

The Illinois trustee argued it shouldn't be subject to the Florida court's jurisdiction because it didn't have enough contacts with Florida to fall under F.S. 48.193, our long-arm statute. Both sides filed conflicting affidavits on this issue, as required under Florida law. Once you have conflicting affidavits, the trial court is required to conduct an evidentiary hearing to sort it all out. That didn't happen.

Here, Guardian's and Covenant's affidavits cannot be reconciled, as Guardian attested Covenant conducted business in Florida, and Covenant denied this. The trial court only held hearings and decided the issue based on the attorneys' arguments. See Ralph v. McLaughlin, 756 So.2d 240, 241 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000) (where trial court only heard the arguments of counsel before deciding the motions to dismiss based on lack of personal jurisdiction, the Second District, pursuant to Venetian Salami, reversed and remanded the case so the trial court could hold a limited evidentiary hearing on the minimum contacts issue to resolve the conflicting affidavits); Sonson v. Hearn, 17 So.3d 745, 747 n. 1 (Fla. 4th DCA 2009) (citing Leon Shaffer Golnick Adver., Inc. v. Cedar, 423 So.2d 1015, 1017 (Fla. 4th DCA 1982)) (unsworn statements by an attorney at a hearing do not establish facts upon which the trial court can rely). Therefore, the trial court erred by not conducting a limited evidentiary hearing to determine if Covenant had the required minimum contacts to expect to be haled into court in Florida. See Golant v. German Shepherd Dog Club of Am., Inc., 26 So.3d 60, 62-63 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010) (with regard to minimum contacts, due process is met if a non-resident defendant would reasonably anticipate being haled into a Florida court).

Even assuming the Florida court had jurisdiction over the Illinois trustee, it still had to contend with Florida's special venue statute for trust litigation: F.S. 736.0205. Under this statute the presumption is that you have to sue foreign trustees in their home states (click here, here, here). According to the 4th DCA, the trial court seems to have skipped this point too.

Assuming the trial court has the requisite in personam jurisdiction, Covenant argues section 736.0205 requires this action be brought in Illinois, unless all parties could not be bound by litigation in the courts where the trust is registered. . . . It is not clear from the record if “all interested parties could not be bound by litigation in the courts of the state where the trust is registered or has its principal place of administration.” Thus, if the trial court determines it has in personam jurisdiction, it will next need to determine if the interested parties could be bound by litigation in Illinois. . . . We reverse and remand the case to the trial court with directions to hold an evidentiary hearing on the issue of jurisdiction over Covenant.

[2] Can a court bar a trustee from using trust funds to pay its legal fees without evidence? NO

In trust litigation one of the biggest advantages a trustee-defendant has is its ability to pay for its legal defense with trust funds, while the plaintiff is left to pay for its side of the litigation out of its own pocket. Plaintiffs can level the playing field by getting the court to enter an order cutting the trustee off from trust funds to pay legal fees. This tactic was so troubling to Florida's trustee community that in 2008 it resulted in a brand new stand-alone statute intended to make sure trustees weren't unfairly treated in these proceedings: F.S. 736.0802(10). I wrote about the lead-up to this statute and its eventual passage here.

A key procedural protection built into F.S. 736.0802(10) is the trustee's entitlement to an evidentiary hearing. Again, that didn't happen. Again, the 4th DCA reversed. Here's why:

To obtain an order prohibiting Covenant from paying any more attorney's fees from the trust assets, section 736.0802(10)(b) states that the “party must make a reasonable showing by evidence in the record or by proffering evidence that provides a reasonable basis for a court to conclude that there has been a breach of trust.” No evidence was provided or proffered showing a breach of trust.  . . . Accordingly, the trial court erred in entering this order without making any such finding of breach of trust.

[3] Can a court force a trustee to pay guardianship fees without evidence of the payments being mandated or the trustee acting arbitrarily? NO 

It's not unusual for probate courts to force the trustees of an incapacitated grantor's revocable trust to pay for some or all of the grantor's guardianship costs. This case demonstrates that although that practice may be common, it's at odds with long-standing Florida law if done over the legitimate objections of the trustees. This is an important point all trustees involved in guardianship proceedings need to remember. Finally, when reading the 4th DCA's analysis of this issue note again how we come back to the "no-evidence" theme.

In Cohen v. Friedland, 450 So.2d 905, 906 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984) (citing White v. Bacardi, 446 So.2d 150, 155 n. 5 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984)), the Third District explained that “[a] trustee, in the strictest sense, holds legal title to property which he administers for the named beneficiary in accordance with the terms of the instrument creating the trust.” The trust agreement provided that the beneficiary would receive the trust income and the trustees had sole discretion to invade the trust principal for the beneficiary's maintenance, comfort, and welfare. Id. But “[i]n the absence of proof that the trustee has failed to perform, or has performed arbitrarily, a court is without authority to remove trust assets from control of the trustee to be administered by the court or other guardian.” Id.

In Giglio v. Perretta, 493 So.2d 470, 470 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986), we held the “trial court erred in requiring the trustee to use trust assets to reimburse the guardian of the trust beneficiary for guardianship administration expenses, attorneys fees, and other costs.” We explained that although paying some of these costs may have been allowed, in the trustee's discretion, these payments were “not legally mandated by the trust provisions,” so the court had “no authority to compel the trustee to make such payments,” nor any authority for the attorney's fees award. Id. (citing Cohen, 450 So.2d 905).

Further, in Johnson v. Guardianship of Singleton, 743 So.2d 1152, 1153 (Fla. 3d DCA 1999), the Third District, citing Cohen, held that there was “no statutory or other satisfactory legal justification for the award” of legal expenses, where the trial court ordered the trustee “to pay from trust assets the legal expenses incurred” by the guardian.

Here, Covenant, as trustee, was granted, within the trust provision, the discretion to make payments from the trust assets. There was no evidence that Covenant acted arbitrarily. Therefore, the court lacked the authority to order Covenant to remove trust assets. As explained in Giglio, these payments were not legally mandated in the trust terms. Further, as in Johnson, there was no statutory or other legal authority for the court to order the payments. Because the trust did not provide for the payment of attorney's fees, and Covenant could make payments in its discretion for Lillian's best interests, the court was without authority to order Covenant to pay Guardian's attorney $10,000 from the trust assets.