Appeals Court Upholds Exempt Property Allowance, Defeating Disinheritance Provision in Will

A recent decision by the Michigan Court of Appeals is making waves in the probate and estate planning community. In a self-proclaimed issue of first impression, the Court in In re Estate of (Shelby Jean) Jajuga [1] upheld a sole surviving, disinherited child’s claim to exempt property in her deceased mother’s probate estate.

In a case out of Clare County, Michigan, the sole surviving adult child of the decedent was disinherited in her mother’s will, a will that was reaffirmed in a later will amendment, or codicil. The disinheritance provision in the will was very clear: the disinheritance was not for lack of love but because the children had already received compensation and per the testator it was not in their best interest that they received anything further. Beneficiaries other than the children were instead provided for in the will.

Disinherited Child Claims Exempt Property Allowance Under Statute

Following the mother’s death, the surviving child claimed exempt property allowance under the probate code [2]. The personal representative, who was not the child, denied the allowance. The child then filed a petition with the probate court claiming that the personal representative had refused to pay the preempt property allowance. The child claimed certain property from the estate under the statutory allowance which included a car, a tractor, or in the alternative, $14,000 in cash. The estate argued that the child was not entitled to exempt property under the statute because the child was specifically disinherited in the will.

Court Upholds Exempt Property Allowance Claim

The probate court held that, as an issue of first impression (meaning that the issue had never been addressed by the Michigan appeals courts), the child was entitled to the exempt property requested. The probate court concluded that a testator cannot preclude a child from taking exempt property through a disinheriting provision in a will. The court relied on legal interpretation as well as general public policy, specifically that the exempt property statute is for the protection of souses and children and should be liberally construed, opining that the children’s rights to exempt property are equal to those of a surviving spouse.

Checklistattheblackboardwithcopyspace_webThe estate appealed. The Michigan Court of Appeals received the case, agreeing that their was an issue of first impression. The Court rejected that the sole focus should not be the testator’s intent as the statute overrides the intent when it comes to statuary protections including exempt property. The Court even addressed the definition of “entitled” (along with other terms found in the statute), finding that the Michigan Legislature’s use of the word establishes a statutory right to a mandatory transfer of exempt property, not merely a priority right. The Court also sided with the probate court that an adult child does not have an inferior right to exempt property when compared to a surviving spouse.

The Court concluded that it would have been “prudent” for the Michigan Legislature to specifically detail the way in which a disinheritance in a will affects a child’s claim to exempt property but furthered that it is not the Court’s role to do so, even though the statute is silent. The Court upheld the probate court’s decision that the child had the right to the exempt property.

Effect on Estate Planning

The Jajuga decision is appears to be a correct interpretation of the exempt property law without further guidance from the Michigan Legislature. Yet it is another example of courts needing to address laws that should have been drafted with more clarity and less room for conflict in the first place. That said, estate planners are best to heed this decision: that a testator cannot completely disinherit children with just a will. For those testators looking to plan around this decision, the use of trusts will be essential, in taking assets out of the probate estate. GJR

Notes

  1. Michigan Court of Appeals Case No. 322522 (Decided October 20, 2015)
  2. MCL 700.2404.

Legacy Contacts and Digital Assets

You have spent years building your digital self. So what happens to that digital self when you die?

Your Digital Self

People tend to think of assets as physical possession, such as real estate and cars; or in terms of money, whether it be bank accounts, stock, etc. In the modern information age, however, we have digital footprints whether we intend to or not, and it is increasingly becoming more complicated to avoid.

Legacy Contacts
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Who controls your digital self after your death?

Facebook is a good example of the voluntary digital footprint. People identify themselves by or with their Facebook status, posts, and page, and update these things  on a regular basis.  It is an account like any other account and worth protecting from unauthorized users. However, what happens when you no longer can maintain it due to your own death. At this point nobody is legally authorized to access the account, make changes, or shut down the page.

Facebook now allows users to establish a “legacy contact”. According to Facebook website, a legacy contact is someone you designate to monitor your account if it’s memorialized, which is a special account designation by Facebook that remembers you by preserving your profile instead of deleting it. Facebook has instructions on how to create a legacy contact on its website.

Once your account is memorialized, your legacy contact can then: write a pinned post for your profile (ex: to share a final message on your behalf or provide information about a memorial service, respond to new friend requests (ex: old friends or family members who weren’t yet on Facebook), or update your profile picture and cover photo, or download a copy of what you’ve shared on Facebook.

Per Facebook the legacy contact cannot log into your account, remove or change past posts, photos and other things shared on your Timeline, read messages you’ve sent to other friends, or remove any of your friends.

Assuming that a legacy contact is not established – and many people are not aware of it – there may not be legal recourse to have changes made post mortem, and your Facebook page could continue on indefinitely.

Digital Assets

Facebook is used an example here but is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to social media or other digital presences. In fact, so much of our daily lives involved so-called “digital assets”, from social media sites, to banking, to shopping, to email. So how do your trusted loved ones access all of these assets after your death? Personal representatives normally are allowed to access online accounts that are tied to non-digital assets, such as bank accounts that represent financial assets. But when accounts are strictly digital, such as Facebook or email, the issue is more complex and the law has not yet caught up.

A Michigan House Bill introduced in 2012 by State Representative Mark Meadows, 2012-HIB-5929, seeks to amend the Estate and Protected Individuals Code (EPIC) [1] by adding a new section giving personal representatives (executors) in Michigan the explicit power to “take control of, conduct, continue, or terminate, and account of the decedent on a social networking, microblogging or short message service, or electronic mail service website.” EPIC specifically grants a set of statutory powers authorized to personal representatives.[2] While all of these powers are in a single section, they wholly or singly do not encompass the powers proposed in the new Bill. This seems to be an easy addition to personal representative powers in Michigan but has been pending for three years now. Michigan is behind some other states who have already enacted such laws. GJR

Notes

  1. MCL 700.1101 to 700.8206.
  2. MCL 700.3715.

 

 

 

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