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WILLS, TRUSTS and ESTATES FRANKLIN PIERCE LAW CENTER

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Community Property ('CP') Regime: Premised on Economic Partnership Theory ... Illusory Transfer Doctrine states that follow Newman v. Dore, a 'control' test ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WILLS, TRUSTS and ESTATES FRANKLIN PIERCE LAW CENTER


1
WILLS, TRUSTS and ESTATESFRANKLIN PIERCE LAW
CENTER 
  • October, 2007

2
Community Property (CP) Regime Premised on
Economic Partnership Theory and Sharing Principle
Borrowed From Civil Law of Continental Europe
(Spain, France)
  • CP exists in 8 states (Arizona, California,
    Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and
    Washington). A Marital Property system
    (essentially community property) is used in
    Wisconsin, based on the 1983 Uniform Marital
    Property Act.

3
Requires classification between 
  • Separate Property SP
  • Consists of (i) assets brought to marriage by
    each party, and (ii) assets acquired by either
    party during marriage by gift or inheritance.
  • Each party has complete testamentary freedom over
    his/her SP unfettered ability of either spouse
    to gift SP during life or make testamentary or
    non-testamentary disposition to persons other
    than his or her spouse.
  • CP
  • Irrespective of titling ( i.e., one spouses name
    alone) each spouse has an undivided one-half
    interest in all earnings of either spouse during
    marriage, and any assets acquired during marriage
    from earnings of either spouse.
  • Complete testamentary freedom over each spouses
    one-half share of CP (i.e., ability by will or
    non-probate transfer to give to persons other
    than surviving spouse), but cannot defeat
    surviving spouses rights to his/ her undivided
    one-half share of CP.
  • Intended to recognize each spouses contributions
    to a collaborative marital enterprise regardless
    of whether the contribution is remunerated (i.e.,
    wages and other earnings) or not (i.e., domestic
    services, child rearing), and conclusively
    presumes that both spouses contributions have
    equal value.
  • CPs eligible for federal income tax cost basis
    step-up in value at first spouses death,
    enabling surviving spouse to sell CP after
    deceased spouses death at little or no capital
    gain tax cost.

Tracing and commingling problems, particularly
upon sales of SP and CP assets and reinvestment
proceeds
4
 Common Law Regime originated in England
(Primogeniture/feudal concept), premised on
title theory (41 states).
  • As regards marital property rights, title to
    property rules, testamentary freedom reigns
    supreme, subject to surviving spouses
    dower/homestead/family allowance/elective share
    (ES) rights, which vary from jurisdiction-to-jur
    isdiction. Trend ES laws across the country
    are gradually evolving in the direction of
    providing more disinheritance protection for
    non-propertied surviving spouses, but this is
    very uneven, and many states ES laws afford
    little (or no) protection, particularly those
    which have not been substantially amended or
    liberally construed by activist judges over the
    last 10 years.
  • Note ES is a concept unique to the common law
    states no ES is necessary in the CP states
    because the CP laws protect the non-wage earner
    spouse by automatically giving him or her an
    undivided interest in all of the wage earner
    carrier spouses earnings during the marriage.

5
Consequences Upon Termination of Marriage by
Death or Divorce Under Two Marital Property
Systems
  • Common Law (Title) Property Regime
  • Upon divorce property settlement which will
    govern the division of marital estate. Modern
    property settlement statutes attempt to implement
    marital partnership theory through equitable
    distribution systems, under which court has
    broad discretion to award each party an equitable
    share of the marital estate which typically
    includes all property and interests in property
    (tangible and intangible) owned by either or both
    spouses. Rule of thumb for the longer term
    marriages (i.e., 15 years or more), particularly
    where children are born, division is often a
    50-50 split a result which is often more
    generous to the non-propertied spouse than that
    which he/she would receive if the divorce
    occurred in a CP state.
  • Marriage terminated by death generally,
    deceased spouse can disinherit surviving spouse,
    subject to surviving spouses ability to take an
    ES (also called a statutory or forced share)
    of deceased spouses elective share estate
    (sometimes the probate estate only but often
    augmented by other assets) in lieu of any
    provision made for surviving spouse in the
    deceased spouses will. Tremendous variation
    among statutes and court decisions in various
    common law states in elective share percentages
    (usually 1/3), statutory definitions of elective
    shares estate and common law gloss, and other
    nuances.
  • Property settlement and elective share rights can
    be waived in every common law state through a
    premarital agreement, but requirements for
    enforceability (conscionability, disclosure of
    assets and liabilities, separate representation
    by independent counsel, etc.) vary from
    jurisdiction-to-jurisdiction. Post-nuptial
    agreements enforced in some jurisdictions, but
    often with more judicial scrutiny for evidence of
    overreaching and fraud.
  • CP Regime
  • Economic partnership means that each spouse is
    awarded his/her 50 share of CP upon divorce, and
    keeps his/her SP.
  • On death community dissolves, and deceased
    spouse can by will give his/her SP, and his/her
    one-half share of CP, to anyone, even to the
    exclusion of surviving spouse surviving spouse
    keeps his/her SP and one-half share of CP.

6
Continuum Illustrating Differences in Statutory
and Common Law Approaches to a Surviving Spouses
Elective Share Rights in Common Law States
  • One Extreme Laws which attempt to mimic
    community property and/or implement
  • partnership theory by providing grater
    disinheritance protection for non-propertied
  • surviving spouse
  • UPC 90 approximation/accrual system (8
    states) could provide surviving spouse with
    much more than similarly situated CP spouse,
    because no segregation what would be SP under CP
    system. Prof. Waggoner suggests extension of 50
    phase-in from 15 to 25 years
  • States which allow personal representative of
    deceased spouse to make election but set
    limitations on elective share amount
  • States which define a 50 elective share
    percentage, and provide expanded definition of
    elective share estate
  • Statutory approaches in New York and Delaware
    generally, one-third federal estate tax gross
    estate (Del.), or net estate (NY) can
    provide substantially more or less protection
    than similarly situated CP spouse, depending on
    various factors in any given case (length of
    marriage, amount of property that would have
    otherwise been considered to be deceased spouses
    SP, etc
  • States which by common law allow elective share
    percentage to apply to non-probate transfers
  • Sullivan v. Burkin (MA. SJC 1984) revocable
    trusts created and funded during marriage
  • Illusory Transfer Doctrine states that follow
    Newman v. Dore, a control test
  • Fraud on the widows share states
  • Common law present transfer test
  • Objective Fraud (badges of fraud) - easier
    proof
  • Subjective Frauddifficult proof
  • 100

7
Continuum Illustrating Differences in Statutory
and Common Law Approaches to a Surviving Spouses
Elective Share Rights in Common Law States
(Contd)
  • 50
  • Pre-Sullivan Massachusetts one-third share
    applicable to probate estate by common law do not
    allow consideration of non-probate transfers
    (Massachusetts pre-1984 Kerwin standard)
  • States which limit surviving spouses guardians
    right to elect statutory share of incapacitated
    surviving spouse (e.g. UPC 69) as necessary
    for support, and 90 UPC (custodial trust))
  • States which allow value of property subject to
    life estate as a credit against statutory share
    (69 UPC, and 90 UPC before 93 amendments)
  • States which disallow election by personal
    representative of surviving spouse who dies
    before election date (both UPCs)
  • States which allow elective share to be satisfied
    completely with life estate Connecticut 1/3
    if probate estate Rhode Island - life estate in
    all real estate
  • Georgia a real outlier, having no elective
    share statute (but the Supreme Courts activism
    in divorce property settlement area gives hope)
  • Other Extreme Laws which implement the support
    theory and/or provide little or no
  • disinheritance protection for non-propertied
    surviving spouses (i.e., strictly follow English
  • title regime). (These laws are most deferential
    to preserving deceased spouse/testators estate
  • plan and protecting the interests of deceased
    spouses beneficiaries).

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