Wednesday, November 24, 2010

A Thanksgiving Checklist as We Count Our Blessings...

More than any other holiday, Thanksgiving is the time when we gather around the table to celebrate with family and friends.  Many of you are traveling to visit your family, and many of you are receiving family and friends for Thanksgiving.  Soon there will be the familiar and anticipated aromas coming from the kitchen and we will gather around the table to enjoy a fabulous meal prepared by loving hands and give thanks for all of our blessings.

This is also the time of year that I suggest for an annual review of your legal life plan because the people you love and want to protect are right there with you.  So this weekend, as you savor the leftovers, ask yourself the following questions.
  • Do I need a Will?
  • If I have a Will, has anything major occured in my life this past year so that I should review it with an attorney?
  • Do I need to look into setting up a trust?
  • Have I reviewed all of my beneficiary designations on such things as life insurance policies and retirement plans?
  • Do I need a living Will?
  • Do I need a Power of Attorney for financial matters?
  • Do I need a Power of Attorney for health care?
  • Do I need a prenuptial agreement?
  • Do I need a postnuptial agreement?
  • Do I need a domestic partnership agreement?
If you would like to discuss your own personal situation with me, review your current legal life plan, or put together a legal life plan that is tailored for your needs, you can get a free 30-minute consultation simply by filling out this contact form. I will get back to you promptly.

From my home to yours, I wish you a very Happy Thanksgiving!  May you and your family continue to be blessed.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Mental Capacity and Marriage in New York, Part 3: The Secret Marriage

Marriage fraud has always had as a consequence the disruption of family estate planning, or even the potential of an unfair result where the state's intestate laws are applied when the decedent dies without a Will.  But if the bride or groom suffers from dementia and their fiance(e) has been in a caregiver position, the resulting marriage could be considered a form of elder abuse because the person suffering from dementia is being exploited for financial reasons.

Consider the case in Matter of Berk, 2010 NY Slip Op 02139 [2d Dept 2010]).  Irving Berk was a very successful businessman, having founded the Berk Trade and Business School.  In 1982, he executed a Will naming his sons Joel and Harvey as co-executors.  Over the next few years, Irving's memory began to fail.  His physical health also deteriorated, and he became wheelchair bound.    In 1997 his sons decided to hire a live-in caregiver. At the time, Irving Berk was 91 years old.  His caregiver, a recent immigrant from China named Hua Wang (also known as Judy Wang), was 40 years old.

Friends of Irving reported that Wang took advantage of Berk's increasing dependency on her, and that she physically and verbally abused him.  By 2005 Irving Berk could no longer recognize his sons who by then were contemplating guardianship proceedings.   As part of this process, Irving was examined in April 2007 by a physician who diagnosed him as having dementia and stated that Berk did not possess the mental capacity to enter into contracts.  His family physician who examined him a short time later found that Irving did not have the mental capacity to handle his social affairs.

Nevertheless, on 17 June 2005 Irving Berk and Judy Wang were married in the civil ceremony in the New York City Clerk's Office.   The marriage was kept a secret.  Neither Berk nor Wang wore wedding bands thereafter, nor did family and friends ever witness displays of affection between them.

On 16 June 2006, Irving Berk died leaving an estate worth more than $5 million.  The day before the funeral, Wang informed his sons of the secret marriage as they drove to the funeral home.  When the Will was read, it was discovered that Irving Berk had never changed his Will to make his new wife a beneficiary.  The named beneficiaries remained his two sons and four grandchildren.  Because Irving had made no provision for his new wife in the Will, Judy was now entitled to ask for the elective share. 

On 29 December 2006, after the Will was filed for probate and within the requisite six months after the Will was probated, Judy Wang Berk petitioned the Surrogate's Court in King's County for a determination of her right to take her elective share as Irving's surviving spouse.  Under New York law, the surviving spouse is entitled to $50,000 or one-third of the decedent spouse's estate, whichever is greater.   The Surrogate found that Judy was married to the decedent at the time of his death and that, as a matter of law, she was entitled to her elective share under EPTL 5-1.1-A [a].

Berk's sons appealed.  The Appellate Division, Second Department found that Judy Wang had married Irving Berk in the full knowledge that he lacked the mental capacity to consent to a marriage.   Under the principles of equity, the court found that Wang should thus not be unjustly enriched because she took unfair advantage of Berk's mental incapacity at the time of their marriage.

Over 5 million people are affected by Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia, and this number is expected to grow.  The time is now to protect your assets and your loved ones.  You cannot afford to wait for a diagnosis because once you have been diagnosed with dementia, your diminished mental capacity will prevent you from taking the necessary legal steps to protect yourself, your property, and your family.

What can you do to protect yourself?  Irving Berk had a Will, after all.  A Will is certainly a good first step, but it is not enough.  Unless the Will has been carefully drafted by an attorney to make sure that it is in compliance with New York Law and contains the necessary language about the elective share so as to mitigate against unscrupulous persons, then the door is left open for a sham marriage or other forms of unjust enrichment to occur.  Do-it-yourself online wills should be used with extreme caution or not at all as a result.

Secondly, you should meet with your attorney at least once a year in the same way that you meet with your doctor for your annual physical exam.  Your attorney will ask you questions to determine what has changed in your personal and legal affairs, and may suggest redoing your Will or adding a codicil based upon your responses.  Your attorney will also evaluate your mental capacity as you answer the questions.  If the attorney determines that there is a doubt about your mental capacity, then your attorney will strongly advise that any codicils or new Will be videotaped during the execution ceremony.  This service is worth its weight in gold.

Next, your attorney may suggest that you place you assets into a trust.  If you go this route, you may want to execute a pour-over Will, meaning that your assets will go directly into the trust at the time of your death, to be administered according to the terms of the trust.  Remember that assets such as bank accounts and property that can be held jointly are vulnerable to sham marriage schemes.  You may want to re-title these in the name of the trust.  Note that trusts are contracts, and that contracts require the highest level of mental capacity in New York.  If you wait too long, you may not have the requisite mental capacity to execute the trust documents.

You will also need full mental capacity to give a durable power of attorney to someone you trust or to your bank so that your affairs can be managed should you lose mental capacity.  Your attorney will discuss these options with you in detail so that you comfortable with your choices.

Finally, your attorney will review your planning for medical decision-making including having a living Will and a health care proxy.  These are known as advance directives.   The case does not disclose whether Irving Berk had these instruments in place.  If he did not, Judy Wang Berk as his legal wife would have been the one to make the decisions about his health care, and not his sons.

If you would like to discuss your own personal situation with me, you can get a free 30-minute consultation  simply by filling out this contact form.   I will get back to you promptly.

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