In Re Estate of Bernstein

17 A.3d 1172, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 11, 2011
DocketCivil Action 3728-MA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 A.3d 1172 (In Re Estate of Bernstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware 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, 17 A.3d 1172, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44 (Del. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

I. Introduction

This case comes to me by way of two exceptions lodged by the parties to a Master’s Report issued on September 1, 2010 regarding the administration of the estate of the decedent, Barry Bernstein. 1

Mr. Bernstein’s daughter and his estate’s executrix, respondent Carol B. Lo-vett, takes exception to the Master’s calculation of the elective share to which Mr. Bernstein’s surviving spouse and the petitioner, Mrs. Ocie Bernstein, is entitled under Delaware’s elective share statute, 12 Del. C. §§ 901-908. Under that statute, a surviving spouse may elect to receive, in lieu of what, if anything, is devised to her under the decedent spouse’s will, a statutorily calculated amount known as the elective share. Central to that calculation, and to Lovett’s exception, is that if the surviving spouse receives, by virtue of her spouse’s death, value equal to or in excess of the elective share amount, the surviving *1174 spouse’s elective share is deemed to have been satisfied and the surviving spouse is entitled to nothing further. In support of her exception, Lovett contends that the value of a real estate interest, devised to Mrs. Bernstein under Mr. Bernstein’s will, must equal the full unencumbered appraisal value of that interest despite the fact that the real estate interest was at all times subject to a mortgage and subject to sale, and in fact was sold in order to satisfy the debts of Mr. Bernstein’s estate. Mrs. Bernstein thus yielded nothing from the devise of this encumbered interest. Under Lovett’s reading of our elective share statute, then, this court would pretend as if Mrs. Bernstein received value from her devised interest in real estate that exceeds the elective share amount even though after satisfying Mr. Bernstein’s debts Mrs. Bernstein received nothing for that real estate interest. But the elective share statute requires the court to consider “[t]he value of the property transferred to the surviving spouse” which entails a valuation that considers what economic value the surviving spouse actually receives. 2 I therefore conclude, as did the Master, that Lovett’s argument and desired result is contrary to the evident purpose of the elective share statute — to prevent spousal disinheritance — as embodied in the statute’s plain and unambiguous language, and deny Lovett’s exception.

For her part, Mrs. Bernstein takes exception to the Master’s conclusion that Lo-vett is not personally liable for the entire elective share amount. According to Mrs. Bernstein, this court should require Lovett to pay the entire elective share amount because Lovett breached her fiduciary duty as executrix by virtue of her receiving, and allegedly failing to preserve, certain mutual fund accounts that under our law passed to Lovett automatically and immediately upon Mr. Bernstein’s death and that can be called upon as part of Mr. Bernstein’s contributing estate to pay Mrs. Bernstein her elective share. The Master rejected that argument, holding that because the mutual fund accounts which passed automatically by operation of law upon Mr. Bernstein’s death were never a part of the testamentary estate, Lovett, as executrix, owed no fiduciary duty to Mrs. Bernstein in administering them, and as a result there was no reason to hold Lovett liable for the entire elective share. Instead, the Master ruled, in accordance with 12 Del. C. § 908(a), that such liability shall be apportioned pro-rata between Lovett and her late brother Hank, the only other recipient of the so-called contributing estate who can be called upon to satisfy Mrs. Bernstein’s elective share. The Master’s conclusion was proper both as a matter of fact and of law. I therefore also deny Mrs. Bernstein’s exception.

II. Factual Background

Because both parties agree that the facts in the Master’s Report are accurate, 3 I draw the relevant facts from the Master’s Report.

Mr. Bernstein died on October 4, 2007 after a seven year marriage to Mrs. Bernstein. Mr. Bernstein was survived by two children from a previous marriage, Lovett and her late brother, Hank. Letters testamentary were granted to Lovett as executrix of Mr. Bernstein’s estate on November 8, 2007, but disputes relevant to the exceptions about how Mr. Bernstein’s estate should be distributed soon erupted between Mrs. Bernstein and Lovett.

Shortly before his marriage to Mrs. Bernstein, Mr. Bernstein had purchased with Lovett a condominium in New Jersey (the “New Jersey Condominium”) of which *1175 Mr. Bernstein owned a one third interest as tenant in common with Lovett. 4 At the time of Mr. Bernstein’s death, the New Jersey Condominium had an appraised value of $315,000, but was subject to a mortgage balance of $108,815.72. By a codicil to his will, Mr. Bernstein devised his one third interest to Mrs. Bernstein, which, under New Jersey law, passed to Mrs. Bernstein immediately upon Mr. Bernstein’s death. 5 Mr. Bernstein also owned bank accounts, mutual fund accounts, bonds, and life insurance policies. The bank accounts were all jointly owned with either Mr. Bernstein’s two children or with Mrs. Bernstein, which meant that they passed automatically by operation of law, and outside Mr. Bernstein’s estate, at the moment of Mr. Bernstein’s death. 6 The four mutual fund accounts, worth $871,796.24, were also transferrable to his two children in equal shares upon his death (the “TOD Accounts”). In addition to the one third interest in the New Jersey Condominium, Mrs. Bernstein received other assets, including interests in joint property and insurance proceeds 7 valued in the aggregate at $34,240.23.

Because all of the property interests described above passed by operation of law, and not through Mr. Bernstein’s testamentary estate, Mr. Bernstein’s testamentary estate contained only $2,205 worth of tangible personal property including a car, books, a few paintings, and jewelry.

As is often the case, Mr. Bernstein left behind debts that needed to be satisfied, in addition to the expenses necessary to administer his estate. Specifically, the debts included the $108,815.72 mortgage balance on the New Jersey Condominium (of which Mr. Bernstein was liable for one third, or $36,295.24), medical expenses, taxes, funeral expenses (approximately $14,000), and estate administration expenses (approximately $65,000). All in all, Mr. Bernstein’s estate was saddled with $101,420.85 worth of debt. That amount clearly exceeded the $2,205 of personal property and Lovett filed a petition in this court to sell the New Jersey Condominium to pay debts on January 13, 2008. 8

Mrs. Bernstein and Lovett failed to reach an accord and litigation ensued.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.3d 1172, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bernstein-delch-2011.