NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0399-99T5
IN THE MATTER
OF HENRIETTA NEUFELD COHEN,
An Adjudged Mental Incompetent,
Argued September 13, 2000 - Decided November
6, 2000
Before Judges King, Coburn and Axelrad.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Chancery Division, Atlantic County.
Charles W. Heuisler argued the cause for
appellant Michelle Cohen (Archer & Greiner,
attorneys; Mr. Heuisler and Arthur H. Jones,
on the brief).
Youngblood, Corcoran, attorneys for appellant
Douglas Cohen; Joseph Youngblood, of counsel,
joins in the brief filed on behalf of Michelle
Cohen.
J. Philip Kirchner argued the cause for
respondent Howard D. Cohen, M.D. (Flaster
Greenberg, attorneys; Mr. Kirchner, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
AXELRAD, J.T.C. (temporarily assigned).
This is an appeal from the Chancery Division judge's August
ll, l999 order enforcing the terms of a purported settlement
agreement, which alters the will and estate plan of Henrietta
Neufeld Cohen ("Henrietta"). Henrietta is a ninety-six year-old
grandmother who is alive but legally incompetent. The appeal is
filed by Michelle Cohen ("Michelle"), Henrietta's granddaughter,
who is age twenty-nine and developmentally disabled, through her
mother, Karen Jorgensen as guardian ad litem. Michelle's appeal is
based on the following contentions: (1) the purported settlement
agreement is an impermissible reformation of Henrietta's
testamentary plan; (2) the purported settlement agreement is an
impermissible gifting plan; and (3) there is no enforceable
settlement since there was a lack of agreement on material terms.
On May 11, 2000 we granted Michelle's emergent application for a
stay pending appeal and acceleration of oral argument.
I
The material facts are as follows. Henrietta, a widow,
presently resides at the Linwood Convalescent Center in Linwood,
New Jersey. Henrietta had two children, Howard Cohen. M.D.
("Howard") and Charles Cohen ("Charles"). Howard is presently
married to Jacqueline and was previously married to Karen
Jorgensen. Two children were born of Howard's marriage to Karen
Jorgensen, Douglas Cohen ("Douglas"), age twenty-seven, and
Michelle. Charles died in l987 and has two children, Alan J.
Cohen, Esquire ("Alan") and Rabbi Bruce Cohen ("Bruce"). Alan is
married to Barbara, and they have two minor children. Bruce is
married to Debra, and they have two minor children.
On August 4, 1992 Henrietta executed estate planning documents
that were drafted by Ronald Wagenheim, Esquire, of Cooper Perskie.
Pursuant to a Revocable Trust Agreement with the predecessor of
First Union Bank, Henrietta divided her approximately $5 million
estate in half between the two sides of her family - the Howard
side and the Charles side. Half of the corpus was to be held for
the benefit of Howard and his children, with seventy percent to be
held in trust for Howard. The remainder of Howard's life estate
was to be evenly divided upon Howard's death between trusts
established for the benefit of Douglas and Michelle. The remaining
thirty percent allocated to Howard's side of the family was to be
divided evenly into separate trusts for Douglas and Michelle. The
other half of the corpus was to be evenly divided between Charles'
sons, Alan and Bruce, free of trust.
Henrietta contemporaneously executed a last will and
testament, which provided bequests to various charities and
bequests of personal property. Henrietta's last will and testament
also directed that her residuary estate be paid to the August 4,
1992 trust and distributed in accordance with its provisions. No
provisions were made in Henrietta's estate plan for Howard's second
wife, Jacqueline.
In October 1996, Howard retained Albert F. McGee, Jr., an
attorney, ("McGee") to investigate Henrietta's existing
testamentary plans. Howard, McGee, and Jacqueline met with
Henrietta to effectuate a new testamentary plan, which they
represented would provide for estate, gift, and income tax savings
to Henrietta and her family. This new testamentary plan would also
contain provisions for Jacqueline.
Alan, who was supervising Henrietta's affairs at the time,
filed a complaint in the Chancery Division, Probate Part, on
January 10, 1997, seeking to declare his grandmother Henrietta
legally incompetent.See footnote 11 Howard, Michelle, Douglas, and Bruce
intervened in the incompetency action. Prior to the finding of
incompetency, there were numerous cross-claims and counterclaims
between the two sides of Henrietta's family. In addition to
Howard's allegations in the first four counts of his counterclaim
of improprieties by Alan acting under the power of attorney which
had been issued, Howard's fifth count also alleged that the 1992
Trust Agreement may have been executed while Henrietta was
incompetent and subject to undue influence. The fifth count of his
counterclaim averred that
the present documents [
i.e., Henrietta's 1992
last will and testament and trust agreement]
do not adequately effectuate her intent as to
the objects of her bounty and may have been
executed when she was incompetent and/or
subject to undue influence. In addition, said
documents do not effectuate the maximum saving
of estate taxes and should be modified for
that purpose as well.
Howard sought authority to implement "more appropriate testamentary
and inter-vivos documents" for Henrietta. More specifically,
Howard attempted to set aside pre-mortem the will and estate plan,
which Henrietta effectuated in 1992 through Wagenheim, and
substitute the plan prepared by McGee.
On May 20, 1997 the0 judge issued an order declaring Henrietta
incompetent and "incapable of governing herself and managing her
affairs as a result of unsoundness of mind." The judge appointed
William Schultz, an attorney, as an independent guardian for
Henrietta's property, and appointed Howard and Alan as co-guardians
of her person. The judge then entered various management orders
concerning Howard's five-count counterclaim, Alan's cross-claim
against Howard, and the fee application dispute of McGee.
Subsequently, J. Philip Kirchner was substituted for Richard
Hyland in the representation of Howard. Jeffrey Waldman was
substituted for John Rosenberger in the representation of Bruce,
and Joseph Youngblood was substituted for Thomas Haynes in the
representation of Douglas. Thomas Haynes continued to represent
Michelle until some time after April 19, 1999, when Charles
Heuisler was substituted for Thomas Haynes on behalf of Michelle
and Karen Jorgensen, Michelle's guardian ad litem.
In a motion dated November 13, 1997 Howard sought to
implement the McGee "comprehensive gift and financial plan" for the
management of Henrietta's estate as a substitute for the
testamentary plan contemplated by the 1992 trust agreement. The
plan was allegedly designed to provide for lifetime care of
Henrietta, distributions to her family, restructuring of her
investment portfolio, centralized investment management, and the
minimization of enormous amounts of generation-skipping transfer
taxes and estate and gift taxes that would have resulted from the
1992 Trust Agreement. The plan formed the basis and the starting
point for all subsequent settlement negotiations among the parties.
The judge adjourned Howard's motion indefinitely to give counsel
and the parties an opportunity to study the McGee plan and to see
whether they could consensually resolve the issues.
At the request of Michelle and Douglas, the court appointed an
expert tax advisor, at the expense of Henrietta's estate, to advise
the parties of the feasibility, benefits, and risks associated with
Howard's plan. The court-appointed expert, Leonard Goldberg, a
prominent New Jersey tax and estate-planning lawyer, prepared a
written report that adopted many of the features of the McGee plan
but differed in certain respects.
On August 3, 1998, following circulation of the expert's
report, the judge convened a settlement conference with all parties
and their counsel present. The parties used a draft of the McGee
plan as the basis for their negotiations. As a result of the
differences of opinion among the parties, respecting the status of
the case, Howard's counsel filed a motion to enforce the purported
settlement agreement, which he contended had been reached as a
result of the August 3, 1998 settlement conference. Howard's
counsel certified that all disputed issues identified at the
beginning of the conference had been resolved at the conclusion of
that conference, and that the only issue left to be resolved was
the issue of reimbursement by Henrietta's estate of counsel fees
incurred by either of the co-guardians of her person.
In a telephone conference and confirming letter, the judge
scheduled argument for October 9, 1998 on the motion to enforce.
The judge suggested that the parties attempt to settle the matter
because if the issues were not "otherwise addressed" by the return
date of the motion to dismiss, he would
sua sponte, determine (a) whether any party
has standing to challenge the incompetent's
will before her death and (b) whether the
creation of a new testamentary plan is
permissible under the circumstances set out
here. This last issue is, I think, closely
related to my request that the parties
consider whether these issues can be settled
and implicates the extent to which
In re
Trott,
118 N.J. Super. 436 (Ch. Div. 1972)
permits the modification of a testamentary
scheme to effectuate tax savings.
The judge heard argument on October 9, 1998; the substance of
his ruling was set forth in an October 23, 1998 order, which reads
in relevant part:
A. The motion of Dr. Howard Cohen to enforce
settlement and for attorney's fees and costs
is denied.
B. Howard Cohen, MD has no present standing
to maintain an action to contest the 1992 Will
and Trust Agreement of Henrietta Cohen;
C. The Court shall hold an evidential
hearing as to Counts 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Dr.
Howard Cohen's counterclaim against Alan
Cohen;
D. The Court shall hold a second evidentiary
hearing to determine the appropriateness of
the "gifting and financial" plan submitted by
Albert F. McGee, Jr., Esquire on behalf of
Howard Cohen, MD, and whether such plan will
generate actual tax savings to the Estate of
Henrietta Neufeld Cohen. The purposes of this
hearing will be to determine:
1. Whether, if Henrietta Cohen had
been presented with such a plan, it
would have been her "probate
intent"See footnote 22 to effect the plan; and if
so
2. Whether such plan provides the
same benefits as the 1992 Will and
Trust plan of Henrietta Cohen to the
beneficiaries named therein; and if
so
3. Whether such plan will actually
generate sufficient surplus funds to
ensure that all beneficiaries under
the 1992 Will and Trust will receive
the same benefits and to permit the
Court to consider the
appropriateness of allowing such
surplus or extra funds to be applied
for the benefit of Jacqueline Cohen
as provided in the proposed plan.
In December 1998, Howard and Alan executed and filed a
stipulation of dismissal with prejudice as to the first four counts
of Howard's counterclaim and Alan's cross-claim. Howard filed a
motion for reconsideration of the judge's order denying his motion
to enforce the settlement agreement on the grounds that the basis
for the court's denial of that motion, the dispute between Alan and
Howard, had been resolved.
Rather than conducting oral argument on April 12, 1999, the
return date of that motion, the judge convened a second settlement
conference among all parties and counsel. According to Howard,
after two days of negotiating, the parties reached a second
agreement, which contained slightly different terms to settle the
entire litigation; they agreed to return to the courthouse the
following day to put their settlement on the record and to consider
minor revisions to which they had agreed during the course of
negotiations on April 13, 1999. However, according to Howard, when
the parties returned to the courthouse the following morning to
review the revised settlement documents prepared by Alan, Douglas
announced that he was not prepared to go forward with the
settlement agreement and that he intended to engage new counsel.
Howard contends that Michelle did not object to the settlement
agreement at that time.
Due to the differences of opinion among the parties regarding
whether a settlement had been reached, an evidentiary hearing was
scheduled for April 19, 1999. On that date, the judge and counsel
engaged in further settlement negotiations in an effort to try to
resolve the issues that arose after April 13. The parties and
their counsel put the facts, but not the terms, of their agreement
on the record. In response to questioning from their respective
counsel, each party acknowledged on the record that the case had
been settled subject to a review of the final document embodying
the settlement.
By letter dated July 8, 1999, counsel for Howard advised the
judge of problems that occurred in the interim and that there was
no longer a consensus among the parties. He requested that the
judge either enforce the April 13 settlement agreement or the April
19 revised agreement.
At the July 12, 1999 hearing, the judge heard argument from
counsel for all of the parties, considered the written evidence
documenting the purported settlement agreement, and heard testimony
from the parties themselves. As a result of the judge's prior
ruling, that Howard did not presently have standing to maintain an
action to contest Henrietta's 1992 will and trust agreement and the
stipulation between Howard and Alan, the only issue before the
judge at that time was count five of Howard's counterclaim.
Howard asserted in count five of his counterclaim that the
testamentary documents did not adequately effectuate Henrietta's
intent regarding the objects of her bounty, may have been executed
when she was incompetent and subject to undue influence, did not
effectuate maximum estate taxes, and requested authority to
implement more appropriate testamentary and inter-vivos documents.
The judge concluded that he was "satisfied the attorneys resolve[d]
this matter," but that he still needed "to find out from the
litigants whether they were involved in the process." He appointed
Karen Jorgensen guardian ad litem for Michelle
nunc pro tunc to the
beginning of the litigation.
In response to the judge's questioning, Alan testified, in
relevant part, as follows:
I saw that the provision of
having Mrs. Cohen's reserve funds
introduce[d] into a family limited
partnership scheme . . . violated
one of the provisions that there
would not be a reduction of the
reserve funds below I believe it was
$500,000 and to do so in removing
the material of the funds from the
reserve fund and putting it in a
family limited partnership, would
automatically reduce the funds to
below I think it was $480,000. So
that put it below the $500,000 mark.
* * * *
I believe the history from the
inception of this litigation, is
this was done in some part for the
protection of Henrietta Cohen and
also protection of other family
members and it was my position with
my attorney, before accepting any
settlement, that I did not want a
settlement put together that was
shoved down the throats of some
members of the family or that they
could not live with. And if that is
the position of other members of the
family that they cannot accept the
terms of settlement and there's
problems with it that Your Honor
recognizes, I would also join in
those objections.
Bruce also expressed concern regarding the settlement agreement.
In response to the judge's inquiry, Bruce testified:
We engaged Baramar Supim who
turned their entire tax department
loose on it [FLP/LLP approach] and
they came back with the analysis
that, first of all, any premise, any
idea that it was necessary to move
money out [of] my grandmother's
reserve share to effectuate or make
viable the plan on the Howard Cohen
side of the trust was completely
without basis in law; that the
partnership could be constructed in
such a manner that no majority
control was given to anyone who held
a certain amount of finances. So
the [sic] said that there was no
real need to do that. And my
recollection, Your Honor, is that
that plan to move that $300,000-and-
some out of my grandmother's reserve
share and place it at somewhat
greater jeopardy or place us also at
somewhat greater jeopardy of being -
- having to carry the lion's share
of my grandmother's maintenance,
that that was unnecessary and it
surfaced afterwards.
Douglas expressed his concerns and doubts regarding the
settlement plan. As far as he was concerned, he did not believe
the case was settled.
THE COURT: Mr. Doug Cohen, I neglected to ask you, you
had also reported this case was settled. What was your
understanding of that settlement?
MR. D. COHEN: I believe that we had an agreement in
principal that we all wanted - - but it was very
preliminary in that terms were going to be - - later. I
know we discussed terms but I had no way to realize that
I was committing to anything.
Additionally, as he indicated in response to Mr. Heuisler, he did
not feel his interests were protected.
Q Were you advised that, in
calculating Jacqueline Cohen's share
upon Howard's death, the
distributions that were made to you
and to your sister prior to the
death of Howard, would be added for
the purpose of evaluating your trust
interest but would not be added back
to Howard's trust in evaluating his
trust - -
A No. There's a lot of things
that are unclear about that issue
and things that were represented - -
to us.
Q Were you advised that if Howard
Cohen, in fact, reduced the value of
his trust below the $555,000
minimum, which is being required
under this agreement, that monies
could be taken from yours and your
sister's trust in order to make up
that difference and get her the
minimum?
A No. Certainly not. I actually
- - I was confused by this but I
felt that one-third, one-third, one-
third was - - didn't include my
sister and my cousin. At any point,
I thought that that was just on
Howard's death and this trust would
be divided - -
Karen Jorgensen responded "no" to the judge's inquiry regarding
whether she believed the matter was settled. Ms. Jorgensen
indicated that neither she nor Michelle was certain of the
implications of the "settlement plan." Ms. Jorgensen testified as
follows in response to Mr. Heuisler's questions:
Q During the course of all of
these negotiations and discussions
back and forth, both - - well, were
you ever advised that Jacqueline
Cohen's guarantee of $555,000 paid
regardless of the amount remaining
in Howard's trust at the time of his
death and that that could require a
contribution from your daughter's
and your son's trust which would
make up that guaranteed minimum?
A No.
Q [W]ere you advised that if
Henrietta dies within three years of
the gifts, and if the discounts are
disallowed by the IRS, that your
children will receive less under
this settlement than they would
receive under the 1992 estate
documents?
A Yes.
Q Okay. Were you advised that in
calculating Jacqueline's share upon
Howard's death, that distributions
made to your two children prior to
his death would be added back in to
their trust for the purpose of
evaluating and doing the one-third
calculation while distributions made
to Howard prior to his death would
not be added back in?
A I was not advised of that.
* * * *
Q Were you advised that if the
gift taxes are paid based upon the
discounted values for gifts to the
FLP or the LLC, and if the IRS
disallows these discounts, that
there will be interest and penalties
as well as additional taxes
assessed?
A I was not advised of that.
Q Were you aware that no reserves
are set up in any of these documents
for purposes of those potential
additional taxes?
A I was not aware of that.
Q Were you advised that the plan
does not specify who will pay any
estate tax with respect to Howard's
general power of appointment over a
portion of the Howard trust?
A I was not - - that was not
discussed with me.
The judge made the following findings:
I've listened to the
representations of Ms. Jorgensen and
Mr. Cohen. This is an extremely
complicated area and I am satisfied
for reasons I'm about to lay out,
that both of these parties agreed to
settle this matter when we were last
in court and, in fact, reported the
matter as settled. Oft times, I
make this observation generally, oft
times when matters are this
complicated, a client does not
expect and does not intend to settle
the matter only with a complete
understanding of the workings of the
tax code, often leaving that to the
attorney for the best deal possible
and then agreeing or authorizing the
attorney [to] enter into a
settlement as that attorney feels
appropriate.
I don't know whether that
occurred here. I suspect it
probably did but I'm certainly not
making that finding. I am
satisfied, however, that as Douglas
Cohen indicated when he was in
court, he thought that they had come
to an agreement in principle and I
take that to be essentially what Ms.
Jorgensen had said. The workings of
that principle are laid out in the
agreement. The real problem here, I
think, is an ultimate change of mind
that we don't want to take a chance
now that IRS might disallow this
agreement although it seems to me
that the only real adverse effect on
that is the utilization of some of
the monies which would otherwise go
to Douglas and Michele during the
life time of Jacqueline. I used the
first names because there's too many
Cohens. Otherwise, without any
disrespect meant.
I'm satisfied when this matter
was last in court, all these parties
agreed that this matter would be
appropriately settled on the terms
which I have laid out and I will
enforce that settlement.
The judge entered an order dated August 11, 1999, which is the
subject matter of this appeal. In his order the judge retained
jurisdiction "for the purpose of interpretation of this Order and
the effectuation of the annexed Settlement Agreement." Similar to
the 1992 testamentary plan, the settlement agreement enforced by
the court provides for the division of Henrietta's estate in equal
shares between Charles' side of the family and Howard's side of the
family. Unlike the 1992 documents, however, the terms of the
settlement agreement, as they relate to this appeal, are the
following. First, Henrietta's 1992 trust agreement is revoked.
Second, there is an immediate division of Henrietta's estate, prior
to her death, into equal family shares and the immediate gifting of
large portions of the estate to the beneficiaries under the 1992
trust agreement. Specifically, the principal part of the fifty-
percent share going to the Howard part of the family will be placed
in a Family Limited Partnership or Limited Liability Company.
Interests or shares in that entity are gifted in trust by
Henrietta's guardian on her behalf to trusts for the benefit of
Howard, Michelle, and Douglas in the same relative percentages as
in Henrietta's 1992 plan, but with the hope that the IRS will
discount the value of the shares or interests for gift tax
purposes.
Third, a distribution is authorized to Jacqueline, who
was implicitly excluded under the 1992 documents as a beneficiary
of Henrietta's estate. Fourth, approximately $1.4 million of
Henrietta's estate is left in reserve in the two family shares to
provide for the continuing comfort, maintenance, and welfare of
Henrietta.
The provision of the settlement agreement, which Michelle
challenges in this appeal, provides for the creation of a Qualified
Terminable Interest Property ("Q-Tip") trust established for
Jacqueline's benefit during her life, if she survives her husband
Howard. Upon Howard's death, instead of the funds in Howard's
trust being divided between the trusts for Douglas and Michelle,
Jacqueline is guaranteed a trust for her benefit in the minimum
amount of $555,000 and in a potentially greater amount, depending
upon the balance in the Howard trust at the date of his death.
Jacqueline has the immediate right to withdraw $250,000 outright
from her trust and to receive annual distributions during her
lifetime. Upon Jacqueline's death, the balance remaining in her
trust will be paid to the Douglas and Michelle trusts.
II
Michelle argues that there was no settlement to be enforced in
this matter since there was a lack of agreement on material terms.
Moreover, she submits that even if a settlement were reached, the
Howard plan is an impermissible alteration of Henrietta's
testamentary plan and an impermissible gifting plan and should not
be enforced by the court. Howard claims that the Q-tip trust for
Jacqueline was the subject of specific and intense negotiations
that resulted in a compromise agreement among all the beneficiaries
of Henrietta's estate, who were all represented by counsel
throughout the litigation. Howard argues that Michelle and Douglas
voluntarily waived their right to a hearing when Douglas and Karen
Jorgensen, on Michelle's behalf, acknowledged their voluntary
consent to the agreement on the April 19, 1999 record.
Additionally, Howard claims that the October 23, 1998 order
contemplated and set forth the schedule for and issues involved in
resolving the motion to approve the Howard plan, which was
contested at the time. He concludes that the need for an
evidentiary hearing to address the gifting and financial plan was
obviated by the settlement plan. Finally, Howard argues that the
parties' settlement agreement, which the trial judge determined was
reached, included an implicit agreement among the parties that
Henrietta would have approved the settlement agreement if it was
presented to her at a time when she was competent. We disagree
with Howard's position.
The concerns expressed by Douglas, Michelle's guardian ad
litem, and other family members about the substance of the
settlement plan at the July 12, 1999 hearing suggest an absence of
a meeting of the minds but are not entirely dispositive of whether
the judge appropriately enforced the settlement agreement. Even if
there was an agreement among all the beneficiaries respecting pre-
mortem reformation of Henrietta's testamentary plan, the judge
would still have been obligated to conduct the second evidentiary
hearing to determine whether the revised financial and gifting plan
was in Henrietta's best interest and consistent with Henrietta's
intent under
In re Trott,
118 N.J. Super. 436 (Ch. Div. 1972).
Contrary to the law and the judge's October 23, 1998 order, no
evidentiary hearing was held regarding the appropriateness of
implementing a new testamentary plan and, therefore, no judicial
inquiry into Henrietta's probable intent was ever made. The
hearing of July 12, 1999 was held solely for the purpose of
determining whether another settlement was reached, even though
that settlement itself called for the implementation by Henrietta's
guardian of a new testamentary plan. Thus, despite his earlier
holding that before a new plan could be implemented Henrietta's
probable intent had to be established, the trial judge enforced the
later settlement plan without any fact-finding to support the pre-
mortem modification of Henrietta's deliberate testamentary plan.
Moreover, the judge did not make a finding regarding whether the
settlement plan provided the same benefits as Henrietta's 1992
testamentary plan or whether the settlement plan would actually
generate sufficient tax savings to justify granting Jacqueline such
an extra benefit. As the judge explained in his denial of
Michelle's request for a stay of his decision, he accepted the
proposition that Michelle and Douglas would receive the same amount
under the settlement agreement as they would under the will, while
providing for Jacqueline. Specifically, he said, "that was the
only basis that I determined that I had the authority to enforce
this kind of plan." We find this to be an inadequate justification
for enforcing the settlement agreement. The mere fact that
Michelle and Douglas may have benefitted from the plan and perhaps,
at some point, even consented to the minimum funding provision for
Jacqueline does not mean that such a plan would have been
Henrietta's probable intent.
A potential settlement among the
beneficiaries of Henrietta's estate does not supplant the need for
the court, as final arbiter and guardian of the incompetent, to
independently determine whether it would have been Henrietta's
probable intent to effectuate such a plan.
See Trott,
supra, 118
N.J. Super. at 440-441. (conducting an independent valuation of
the proposed plan even though the proceeding was jointly initiated
by guardian of incompetent and the sole apparent next of kin and
heirs at law).
III
The judge assumed a herculean task in managing this case, and
it is apparent from his October 23, 1998 order that he recognized
the need for a judicial examination into Henrietta's probable
intent. We find, however, that he erred in omitting the second
step. He did not conduct the evidentiary hearing and make findings
with regard to the
Trott factors before authorizing Henrietta's
guardian to implement Howard's settlement plan. Moreover, he
failed to determine whether he was satisfied under
N.J.S.A. 3B:12-
50, that it was "in the best interests" of Henrietta to authorize
the gifts contained in the settlement agreement. Furthermore,
although the court has the authority to approve pre-mortem gifts,
trusts and other transfers for incompetents in certain
circumscribed situations, we find that such circumstances do not
exist in this case. Accordingly, we reverse the judge's
determination.
"The common law equitable doctrine of substituted judgment
encompasses the view that a court has inherent power to deal with
the estate of an incompetent in the same manner as the incompetent
would if [he or she was] able to function at full capacity."
In re
Labis,
314 N.J. Super. 140, 146 (App. Div. 1998). The doctrine was
applied in
Trott,
supra, which held that, under the doctrine of
parens patriae, the court may intervene in the management and
administration of an incompetent's estate for the benefit of the
incompetent or the estate. 118
N.J. Super. at 440. In that case,
the court permitted a guardian bank to make inter-vivos gifts to
the eighty-five year old incompetent's grandchildren, the sole
heirs under her will, for "the principal if not the sole reason .
. . [of] the possible saving of death taxes."
Id. at 439. The
court set forth a cogent five-part analysis to determine whether to
authorize such gifts from the incompetent's estate, considering
whether:
(1) the mental and physical condition of the
incompetent are such that the possibility of
her restoration to competency is virtually
nonexistent; (2) the assets of the estate of
the incompetent remaining after the
consummation of the proposed gifts are such
that, in the light of her life expectancy and
her present condition of health, they are more
than adequate to meet all of her needs . . . ;
(3) the donees constitute the natural objects
of the bounty of the incompetent . . . ; (4)
the transfer will benefit and advantage the
estate of the incompetent by a reduction of
death taxes; (5) there is no substantial
evidence that the incompetent, as a reasonably
prudent person, would, if competent, not make
the gifts proposed in order to effectuate a
saving of death taxes.
[
Id. at 443-44 (footnotes omitted).]
Title 3B of the New Jersey statutes has expanded the power
previously available to the courts and guardians under prior case
law such as Dufford v. Nowakoski,
125 N.J. Eq. 262 (E. & A. 1939),
aff'd on reargument
126 N.J. Eq. 529 (E. & A. 1939). The courts are
now statutorily authorized to make gifts, as they were not when
Trott was decided, but the Trott qualifying criteria governing when
a court should exercise that power are still applicable. See In re
Labis, supra, 314 N.J. Super. at 147 (authorizing a wife as
guardian for her incompetent husband to make an interspousal
transfer of her husband's interest in the marital home as a
Medicaid planning measure). Labis further explained that "Title 3B
of New Jersey Statutes has incorporated the concepts of Trott."
N.J.S.A. 3B:12-49 provides, in pertinent part:
The court has, for the benefit of the ward,
his dependents and members of his household,
all the powers over his estate and affairs
which he could exercise, if present and not
under a disability, except the power to make a
will, and may confer those powers upon a
guardian of his estate. These powers
include, but are not limited to power to . . .
create revocable or irrevocable trusts of
property of the estate which may extend beyond
his disability or life . . .
N.J.S.A. 3B:12-50 permits the court "to make gifts in trust or
otherwise, or to change beneficiaries under insurance and annuity
policies, only if satisfied, after notice and hearing, that it is
in the best interests of the ward." N.J.S.A. 3B:12-58 provides:
If the estate is ample to provide for the
purposes implicit in the distributions
authorized by this article, a guardian for the
estate of a mental incompetent may apply to
the court for authority to make gifts to
charity and other objects as the ward might
have been expected to make.
Furthermore, N.J.S.A. 3B:12-62 provides that "in selecting assets
of the estate for distribution under this article, . . . and other
powers exercisable by the guardian or a court, the guardian or the
court should take into account any known estate plan of the ward,
including his will, [and] any revocable trust of which he is
settlor . . . ."
Henrietta, who is still alive, although incompetent, prepared
a detailed testamentary plan, including a 1992 trust and pour-over
will. Her plan was deliberate and carefully crafted, recognizing
that it may lead to additional death and transfer taxes. Her
intention in creating the Howard trust was to keep the benefits of
her estate away from his new wife, Jacqueline, and to protect her
grandchildren, Douglas and Michelle. As certified by Ronald
Wagenheim, her longstanding attorney who drafted the documents:
4. Between 1983 and 1994, I met with Mrs.
Cohen on many occasions and discussed her
wishes and desires with regard to her
estate plan. During those visits, I had
an opportunity to explain to her various
estate planning techniques, including
Charitable Remainder Unitrust, GRAT, and
other similar types of estate tax saving
techniques. She had a consistent problem
with each of the plans proposed, all of
which related to her perceived loss of
control over the assets. Notwithstanding
my explanation that her financial
position would never be in jeopardy, she
rejected these proposals.
The meetings referred to above culminated
in the development of her Last Will and
Testament and the Trust Agreement dated
August 4, 1992 . . . .
5. There is no question in my mind that the
terms contained in Mrs. Cohen's Last Will
and Testament and Trust Agreement reflect
her exact decisions and intentions
regarding her estate plan. The decisions
were deliberate and well-thought out by
her. In particular, she insisted that
the portion of her estate which was to be
distributed to her son, Howard, should be
left in trust for him during his
lifetime. I explained to her that such
an arrangement would create substantial
additional generation-skipping taxes and
that it would most inevitably lead to a
division between her family members. I
told her that it was not a common
practice to leave a trust for any person
who was already over the age of 65 years.
She insisted that I retain that provision
in the Will for his protection and most
importantly, for the protection of her
grandchildren to the exclusion of his
new wife.
6. After the documents were signed, I
received a letter from Alan Cohen
indicating that he objected to the
placement of a Trust over Howard Cohen's
share of the estate. Alan Cohen
indicated in the letter that he felt that
the Trust would cause family disharmony
and division . . . .
7. After receiving Alan Cohen's letter, I
discussed his concerns in detail with
Mrs. Cohen on the telephone. Mrs. Cohen
remained firm that the Trust over Howard
Cohen's share of the estate was designed
to insure that Mrs. Cohen's grandchildren
received the remainder of the share held
in trust for Howard. Mrs. Cohen was
concerned that if Howard Cohen's share of
the estate were left to him outright that
his wife might ultimately receive his
wealth as opposed to Mrs. Cohen's
grandchildren. Mrs. Cohen further
advised me that her desire to protect the
Cohen family wealth from Howard Cohen's
wife outweighed the possibility that the
Trust provisions would create family
disharmony. I reported the substance of
my telephone conversation with Mrs. Cohen
in a contemporaneous memorandum dated
August 20, 1992. . . .
8. In late 1996 I visited Mrs. Cohen at the
Linwood Convalescent Center after being
made aware by Albert F. McGee, Jr.,
Esquire that she had reportedly requested
to make changes to the estate planning
documents. During that visit, it was
obvious to me that Mrs. Cohen had
suffered a substantial loss of memory and
did not fully comprehend any proposed
changes to her estate plan.
[Emphasis added.]
Furthermore, as Alan stated in his certification, Henrietta
"did not like Jackie Cohen and expressed again openly the concern
that Dr. Cohen and his wife could not be trusted to make sure Dr.
Cohen's children would receive an inheritance and would be cared
for." Bruce concurred:
Embarrassingly, my uncle [Howard] is estranged
from everyone in our family, including his own
children and his only two nephews. These
traits of my uncle were recognized by my
grandmother long ago in the manner in which
she prepared her testamentary plan which
provided for him, but did not divert his
inheritance away from his own children.
Title 3B authorizes trusts, inter-vivos gifts, and other
distributions, not sweeping changes to an incompetent's
testamentary plan that do not satisfy the last three qualifying
criteria of Trott:
(3) the donees constitute the natural objects
of the bounty of the incompetent . . . ; (4)
the transfer will benefit and advantage the
estate of the incompetent by a reduction of
death taxes; (5) there is no substantial
evidence that the incompetent, as a reasonably
prudent person, would, if competent, not make
the gifts proposed in order to effectuate a
saving of death taxes.
[Trott, supra, 118 N.J. Super. at 443-44
(footnotes omitted).]
Moreover, the proposed changes are not in Henrietta's "best
interests" under N.J.S.A. 3B:12-58 and are not to "other objects as
the ward might have been expected to make" under N.J.S.A. 3B:12-58.
Contrary to Henrietta's testamentary plan, Howard's settlement plan
revokes Henrietta's trust and distributes a substantial portion of
her estate before her death. The principal purpose of the revision
to Henrietta's testamentary plan was not to reduce gift and death
taxes, but for Howard to have more control over the funds to be
held in trust for him and to obtain a benefit for his wife
Jacqueline. As Leonard Goldberg, the court-appointed tax expert
explained in his April 24, 1998 report to the court:
I see no basis for creating a Q-tip Trust for
the benefit of Jacqueline Cohen in the amount
of $555,000. As a "tax-savings measure", this
makes no sense. The maximum amount of
Generation Skipping Transfer Tax payable even
if there are no valuation discounts would be
$117,703. . . . Assuming that Jacqueline
survives Howard by twenty (20) years, the cost
of deferring the receipt for twenty (20) years
of $555,000 would be $437,000 assuming an 8%
present value rate. . . .
The settlement agreement alters the substance of the will and
authorizes a large distribution to someone who is not an object of
Henrietta's bounty as expressed in her will. After a review of the
court records, Goldberg concluded that he found no evidence that
Jacqueline was an object of Henrietta's bounty. He
recognize[d] that annual exclusion gifts of
$10,000 have been made to her in the same
manner as have been made to spouses of other
issue; however, I infer from that Henrietta
desired to augment her gifts to her issue by
making gifts to the spouses of her issue as
well as to her issue. In my judgment, this
evidenced a desire to benefit the issue (and
only indirectly the spouses) and not to
directly benefit the spouse as an object of
Henrietta's bounty.
Moreover, there is strong evidence in the record that including
Jacqueline in the will is contrary to Henrietta's clear
testamentary intent and that she would not have adopted such an
alternative plan. We will not enforce the purported settlement
agreement because that would result in an improper modification of
Henrietta's estate plan.
We reverse and remand without prejudice to any of the parties
proposing alternative plans within sixty days, consistent with the
principles set forth in this opinion. We agree with the Chancery
Division judge's ruling that it would be premature for any party to
contest Henrietta's will and trust while she is alive.
Reverse and remanded.
Footnote: 1 1According to Alan's certification in opposition to the
payment of McGee's fees, Henrietta's deteriorating mental condition
and Howard's actionsSee footnote 3 precipitated Alan's filing of the incompetency
complaint. Alan had "grave concern" about Howard and McGee's
sudden involvement in Henrietta's affairs, particularly regarding
why his grandmother would hire a new attorney when she had been
represented by the Cooper Perskie firm for twenty years, and why
Howard, for the first time ever, was involved in Henrietta's
financial affairs. His other concern was whether McGee had a
conflict of interest representing both Henrietta and Howard,
because the "'interests' of Howard Cohen and his wife were
inconsistent with those of Mrs. Cohen...[as] Mrs. Cohen had
financial and testamentary wishes that were readily observable to
be contrary to what could be assumed to be Dr. Cohen's desires." On
March 6, 1997 the judge issued a restraining order preventing McGee
from further contact with Henrietta, except in the presence of a
court reporter and her guardian.
Footnote: 2 2Apparently, the court meant "probable intent."
Footnote: 3 1According to Alan's certification in opposition to the
payment of attorney's fees to McGee,