In Re Estate of Bernstein

3 A.3d 337, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 507, 2010 WL 3429475
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 2, 2010
Docket08-PR-1294, 08-PR-1400, 09-PR-530
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 A.3d 337 (In Re Estate of Bernstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Bernstein, 3 A.3d 337, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 507, 2010 WL 3429475 (D.C. 2010).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Chief Judge:

This case comes to us after almost ten years of legal wrangling primarily surrounding the question of whether David M. Albert and his counsel were properly denied compensation for litigation expenses arising from Mr. Albert’s efforts to administer the estate of Ruth F. Bernstein. For the reasons articulated below, we find that Mr. Albert is entitled to remuneration for the estate litigation expenses because he pursued the litigation in good faith and with just cause as required under D.C.Code § 20-752 (2001). Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order requiring Mr. Albert to reimburse the estate for the legal fees he incurred in the course of the litigation and remand the case for the recalculation, consistent with this opinion, of the amount of compensation owed to Mr. Albert.

I.

Bernstein died on January 8, 1999. She bequeathed her home to her nephew, Dr. Bruce D. Burtoff and his then-wife, Susan S. Burtoff (“Mrs. Burtoff’), and made specific bequests to several charities. She also left $1 million to be kept in trust (the “Trust”) for the Burtoffs’ children and designated Dr. Burtoff and Mrs. Burtoff as trustee and successor trustee. Dr. Burtoff also received all tangible personal property and Mrs. Burtoff was left the residue of the estate. Mr. Albert was designated in the will as personal representative of the estate, and he assumed that role in an unsupervised capacity on March 2, 1999.

Shortly after beginning his inventory of the estate, Mr. Albert became aware that approximately $4 million had been transferred out of Bernstein’s accounts in the three years leading up to her death; approximately $1.7 million in several inter vivos transfers to Dr. Burtoffs accounts, and approximately $2.3 million transferred three weeks prior to her death as part of an annuity agreement (the “Annuity”) with RB Investments, a limited liability company created by Dr. Burtoff for that purpose. The circumstances surrounding these transfers suggested to Mr. Albert that Bernstein, who was suffering from senile dementia and Alzheimer’s disease before her death, had been taken advantage of by Dr. Burtoff. For example, Bernstein received a single prorated quarterly payment pursuant to the Annuity agreement, before dying, in the amount of $12,273 on December 31, 1998. Indeed, Mrs. Burtoff wrote Mr. Albert a letter on March 23, *339 1999, through her counsel, claiming that the signature of her name on the Annuity agreement was a forgery, that Bernstein was mentally and physically incapable of consenting to the transaction, and because the transaction depleted her residual interest in the estate, urging Mr. Albert to recover the Annuity principal for the estate. Also, Dr. Burtoff did not pay taxes on or disclose these transfers, which he avers were gifts or, in the case of the Annuity, a valid transaction, to the Internal Revenue Service. As a consequence of both the approximately $4 million depletion in assets and the potential tax liability to the estate of the unpaid taxes, Mr. Albert concluded that the estate lacked sufficient assets to fund the specific bequests in the will, and the Trust in particular.

Accordingly, on August 31, 1999, Mr. Albert filed suit to recover for the estate the monies transferred by and to Dr. Bur-toff before Bernstein’s death. In this effort, he was initially encouraged by Mrs. Burtoff because her marriage to Dr. Bur-toff had collapsed around mid-1998, and the inter vivos transfers depleted the residuary estate to which she was entitled. Dr. Burtoff vigorously fought Mr. Albert’s efforts through multiple objections and motions, counter-suits, and general un-cooperativeness. There were settlement negotiations that failed to result in a settlement. 1 Ultimately, Mr. Albert voluntarily dismissed the suit, a move which was also aggressively opposed by Dr. Burtoff because he did not want Mr. Albert to be able to refile the suit. In approximately mid-2001, however, the Burtoffs reached a divorce settlement which apparently provided for Mrs. Burtoffs withdrawal of her support for Mr. Albert’s litigation against Dr. Burtoff. This was made known to Mr. Albert in a letter dated August 22, 2001, in which both Burtoffs asked Mr. Albert to cease his pursuit of the $4 million transferred by Dr. Burtoff on the ground that they were the only interested parties under the will, and therefore, Mr. Albert’s only duty was owed to them, not the Bur-toff children. Subsequently, on December 14, 2001, Mr. Albert refiled his suit against Dr. Burtoff to recover the Annuity premium for the estate because he believed that he was obligated to fully fund the Trust irrespective of Dr. Burtoffs instructions as trustee to the contrary. The parties agreed to stay that action pending a decision from this court in a related matter.

On December 18, 2001, Mr. Albert filed a Petition for Aid and Direction (“Aid Petition”) pursuant to D.C.Code § 20-742 that outlined the conflict of interest between Dr. Burtoff, who naturally opposed Mr. Albert’s efforts to recover from him, and the Burtoff children, whose Trust would apparently not be fundable absent that recovery. The Aid Petition requested unspecified direction from the court as to whether the litigation should be pursued, and specifically called for the appointment of a guardian ad litem to protect the Burtoff children’s interests. The court nominally denied the Aid Petition, but did recognize the potential conflict of interest between Dr. Burtoff and his children’s interests and appointed a guardian ad litem on January 28, 2002. The guardian’s March 18, 2002 report found that the children were in need of a guardian ad litem and stated that “[i]t is in the best interest of the minor children for the $1 *340 million [Trust] to be funded ...; therefore, any good faith efforts to retrieve sufficient funds to establish the [Trust] should be pursued.... ” Dr. Burtoff vehemently opposed appointment of the guardian ad litem, and filed a civil suit against Mr. Albert as well as various motions to have Mr. Albert and the guardian ad li-tem removed from their respective positions. On July 8, 2002, Mr. Albert resubmitted the Aid Petition, which the trial court denied on September 10, 2002 while noting that D.C.Code § 20-742 must be read as “granting the personal representative permission to act in matters where there is not a specific grant of authority, or in matters where there may be an ambiguity,” but that any further direction from the court would constitute the impermissible giving of legal advice. The trial court then held that its dismissal of the Aid Petition necessitated dismissal of the guardian ad litem, and as an aside, that the Burtoff children’s only interest — and therefore, their standing — in the proceedings was generated by the civil litigation concerning the “financial transactions that took place prior to the creation of the estate” and consequently did not arise under the probate code. 2

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.3d 337, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 507, 2010 WL 3429475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bernstein-dc-2010.