In the Matter of the Revocable Trust Agreement created by the Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar Dipa Sarkar v. Anuradha ("Mili") Sarkar Naugle

84 N.E.3d 666
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 20, 2017
DocketCourt of Appeals Case 84A01-1701-TR-67
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 N.E.3d 666 (In the Matter of the Revocable Trust Agreement created by the Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar Dipa Sarkar v. Anuradha ("Mili") Sarkar Naugle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 the Matter of the Revocable Trust Agreement created by the Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar Dipa Sarkar v. Anuradha ("Mili") Sarkar Naugle, 84 N.E.3d 666 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Crone, Judge.

Case Summary

Eighty-six-year-old Dipa Sarkar, the surviving spouse of Anil Kumar, Sarkar, appeals the trial court’s entry of summary judgment -in favor of Anuradha Sarkar Naugle (“Mili”) as successor trustee of the Anil Kumar . Sarkar Revocable Trust Agreement dated August 23, 1993 (“the Trust”). In short, at the time of Anil’s death, his probate estate had minimal assets because the lion’s share of his assets, totaling dose to $2,000,000, had been placed in or diverted to the Trust. However, the Trust provided for Dipa, Anil’s wife of fifty-six years, to receive only $50,000 or roughly 2.5% of his total assets. Similarly, Anil’s will (“the Will”) made little provision for Dipa, bequeathing her only his clothes and tangible personal property while providing that the remaining assets, if any, be transferred to the Trust.

Dipa filéd a petition to docket the Trust, which made numerous allegations regarding the validity of the Trust as well as questions regarding the propriety of certain assets being diverted to the Trust (rather than to Dipa personally or to the probate estate) in an attempt to disinherit Dipa. Thereafter, while that proceeding was pending, Dipa filed an election to take against the Will. Mili subsequently moved for surhmary judgment on Dipa’s petition to docket the Trust, but she did not address Dipa’s election to take against the Will. Dipa then filed a motion for leave to file a second amended petition to docket the Trust, bringing her election to take against the Will to the trial court’s attention, and alleging more specifically her claims regarding the validity of the Trust. The trial court denied Dipa’s motion to amend, simply concluding that it would be prejudicial to Mili to allow Dipa to amend her petition. The trial court made no statement as to the timeliness of Dipa’s election. Thereafter, .the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Mili on the narrow issue of whether the Trust was the proper beneficiary of a certain asset, and further declaring that such order disposed of all outstanding issues between the parties. The trial court failed to address Dipa’s election to take against the Will or the timeliness thereof.

On appeal, Dipa asserts that her election to take against the Will was timely, and because it is a statutory right of a surviving spouse, the trial court erred as a matter , of law in failing to honor the election. We agree and conclude that: (1) Dipa made a timely election to take against the Will; (2) the trial court abused its discretion in denying Dipa’s motion to amend her petition to docket the Trust; and (3) genuine issues of material fact remain, precluding summary judgment. Accordingly,' we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

Facts and Procedural History 1

Anil and Dipa Sarkar were married in 1958, and remained married for fifty-six years until Anil’s death on February 24, 2015. They had one child, a daughter named Rumu. Anil had two children from a brief previous marriage, daughter Mili, and son Ashoke. During their marriage, Anil and Dipa, who were both medical doctors, operated a private pathology practice in Terre Haute called Sarkar Medical Corporation.

In 1993, Anil, created the Trust, which was restated in its entirety on March 31, 1997. The stated purpose of the Trust was “a simplified means of accomplishing both lifetime and death transfers” of Anil’s assets. Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 27. Anil amended the Trust seven times, with the seventh and final trust amendment occurring on March 14, 2014. From the original form through to the fourth amendment, Anil made no provision for distribution of any Trust assets to Dipa, stating “[b]ecause my spouse, [Dipa], has more assets than I have and will not need my money or property to support herself, I choose to leave nothing to her.” Id. at 35. Beginning with the fifth amendment through the final amendment, Anil provided for Dipa to receive $50,000. Specifically, in the final amendment, he named Mili as successor trustee and directed her to distribute $250,000 to Rumu, $30,000 to Ash-oke, $50,000 to his brother Sekhar, and $50,000 to Dipa if she survived him by thirty days. The remainder of the Trust assets were to be distributed to Mili, or if she w^s then deceased, to her descendants per stirpes. Id. at 46.

The Trust was funded by two investment accounts owned by Anil. One- account, titled in the name of the Trust and held by Anil as trustee, consisted of stocks and bonds and was valued at $924,635 at the time of Anil’s death (“the- Morgan Stanley Trust Account”). During his later years, Anil had his monthly social security payments diverted into the Morgan Stanley Trust Account. The second account that funded the Trust was an Individual Retirement Account valued at $1,007,614 (“the IRA”). In December of 2003, Anil designated the Trust as the .sole beneficiary of the IRA. . . ■

On January 20, 2014, Anil executed the Will. In the Will/Anil appbinted Rumu as personal representative and directed ’that his body be disposed of without ceremony of any kind. He directed that his probate estate should be used to pay all his debts, medical expenses, funeral expenses, estate administration expenses, and “all inheritance, estate, and like taxes ... payable by reason of [his] death and in connection with any property, whether passing under [the Will] or otherwise” without reimbursement from any person. Id. at 66. Anil made no provision for Dipa or his children in the Will other than stating that his clothing and tangible personal property would go to Dipa, if she survived him by thirty days; otherwise, the property would be transferred to the Trust. The Will provided that anything left in his net residuary estate would be transferred to the Trust.

Shortly after Anil’s death, on March 10, 2016, Rumu filed a petition to probate the Will. The Will was admitted to probate and Rumu was appointed as personal representative the following day. Also on March 10, Dipa filed a “Petition to Docket Trust and for Relief.” Id. at 18. Dipa averred that: (1) the Will had been admitted to probate and provided that Anil’s residuary estate be distributed to the Trust; (2) at the time of Anil’s death, the couple had been married for fifty-six years; (3) on the date of Anil’s death, nearly all of his assets were owned by the Trust; (4) the Trust was created in 1993, restated in 1997, and amended seven times; (5) one of the Trust assets consists of an IRA and because Dipa signed spousal consent regarding the beneficiary of the IRA under duress, the IRA should be removed from the Trust; (6) prior to his death, Anil diverted his social security payments to the Trust, which has left the probate estate with no assets. 2 Based upon these facts, Dipa requested for the Trust to be docketed by the probate court and for her petition to be heard. She further requested the court to freeze the assets of the Trust and to remove the IRA from the Trust. The trial court set a hearing on Dipa’s petition for April 24, 2016.

On March 20, 2016, Dipa filed a motion to remove Mili as trustee or require her to post a bond to ensure that she performed her duty to pay the estate’s unpaid claims and expenses.

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84 N.E.3d 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-revocable-trust-agreement-created-by-the-settlor-anil-indctapp-2017.