By Lynda Chung
In the world of trust and estate litigation, claims of undue
influence are nothing new. These suits usually concern a caregiver, mistress,
or other interloper coercing an unfair share of an inheritance from the
deceased. However, far less common are undue
influence cases brought against the wife of the deceased. That is … until a
case earlier this year made it clear that marriage is not a license to steal.
Indeed, all would-be “gold-diggers” should take note, as this decision is a
potential game changer.
In this case, the deceased took the defendant as his third
wife in 1999. After divorcing six months later, the couple remarried in 2005. The
deceased was a retired real estate magnate worth millions, and had multiple
children and grand children from previous marriages, while the defendant had
two children of her own. Needless to say, this type of blended-family can be a powder
keg when it comes to inheritance.
At the time of his marriage, most of the decedent’s real
estate holdings were kept in a trust, which provided for his children and grand
children. However, in mid-2005 (after remarrying Wife No. 3), he began
introducing a series of amendments to the trust, providing his wife with more
and more of his inheritance, and finally giving her the power to disinherit his
own children altogether after his death.
Upon his death, his eldest children brought a suit alleging
the defendant unduly influenced the deceased into modifying his trust, and that
the way in which she freely spent her husband’s money constituted a breach of
fiduciary duty. The court found that the deceased “did not know the extent of
[defendant’s] spending,” and that “while it is not uncommon for a spouse to
spend money or purchase items of which the other is unaware, and the line
between such conduct and financial abuse is not always clear, what [defendant]
did in this case went well beyond the line of reasonable conduct and
constituted financial abuse.”
Widespread financial conflict in blended families is already
quite common, but the result of this decision could have far reaching implications for future situations in
which a new spouse attempts to disinherit the rest of the family.