Prabhat Kumar Sinha v. Amit K. Jain, Personal Representative, etc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 2026
Docket0054251
StatusUnpublished

This text of Prabhat Kumar Sinha v. Amit K. Jain, Personal Representative, etc. (Prabhat Kumar Sinha v. Amit K. Jain, Personal Representative, etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Prabhat Kumar Sinha v. Amit K. Jain, Personal Representative, etc., (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, Malveaux and Frucci UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

PRABHAT KUMAR SINHA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0054-25-1 JUDGE STEVEN C. FRUCCI MARCH 24, 2026 AMIT K. JAIN, PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE, ADMINISTRATOR AND EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF ACHLA KUMAR, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Everett A. Martin, Jr., Judge

Kevin E. Martingayle (Bischoff Martingayle, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Amy L. Leone (SuAnne Hardee Bryant; Davis Law Group, P.C., on brief), for appellee Amit K. Jain, Personal Representative, Administrator and Executor of the Estate of Achla Kumar, and Trustee of the Achla Kumar Revocable Living Trust dated September 24, 1997.

Amy L. Leone (John P. O’Herron; Timothy A. Richard; ThompsonMcMullan, P.C., on brief), for appellees St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and Medecins Sans Frontieres U.S.A., Inc., d/b/a Doctors Without Borders, USA.

This appeal arises from Prabhat Kumar Sinha’s complaint to determine his elective share.

After the death of his wife, Achla Kumar, Sinha received a notice informing him that he was not a

beneficiary of Kumar’s estate, which was worth around $17 million. Sinha contends that the Circuit

Court of the City of Norfolk erred in sustaining Amit Jain’s demurrer and dismissing his complaint

with prejudice. For the following reasons, we affirm the ruling of the circuit court.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

On June 2, 2000, Kumar and Sinha were married, and they remained married without

separation until Kumar’s death on December 14, 2023. Before their marriage, on April 24, 2000,

Sinha and Kumar entered into a premarital agreement (the “Agreement”).1 In the Agreement,

among other things, the parties waived their right of an elective share and agreed that “each party

shall be free to make a Will or other Estate plan without any requirement of making a provision for

the other spouse.” In addition, the parties waived their right to seek disclosure of the other’s assets.

Specifically, both parties handwrote the following provision (hereinafter the “Waiver”):2

In considering our present circumstances, our independence, our desire to live separately at the beginning of our marriage, our continued separate professions & separate interests I am comfortable with neither disclosing to my wife the entirety of my gross assets nor seeking disclosure from her regarding her gross assets. I believe that disclosure of our liabilities is sufficient.

After the death of Kumar, Sinha received a “Notice Regarding Estate” which notified him

that he was not a beneficiary of Kumar’s estate, which was worth around $17 million. Shortly after

receiving the “Notice Regarding Estate,” Sinha filed a notice of elective share, notice of claim for

homestead allowance, notice of claim for family allowance, and notice of claim for exempt property

allowance. Then, Sinha filed the present lawsuit to determine his elective share.

Amit Jain, the executor of the estate, demurred to Sinha’s complaint, and, after a hearing,

the circuit court sustained the demurrer and granted Sinha leave to file an amended complaint. In

addition to sustaining the demurrer, the circuit court entered an order allowing Doctors Without

1 Although dated April 22, 2000—when Sinha signed—Kumar did not sign the Agreement until April 24, 2000. 2 The only differences in the waivers are the replacement of “wife” with “husband” and the use of masculine pronouns in the place of feminine pronouns. -2- Borders, a beneficiary under Kumar’s will, to join the litigation as a party defendant. Following,

Sinha filed an amended complaint.

In the amended complaint, Sinha averred that the Agreement is void and unenforceable

pursuant to Code § 20-151 and that the Waiver within the Agreement is void and unenforceable

pursuant to Code § 64.2-308.14. Specifically, Sinha alleged that:

(1) he did not execute the Agreement voluntarily because he was “subjected to material misrepresentations, fraud, duress, and undue influence”;

(2) the Agreement was unconscionable because he was “not provided a fair and reasonable disclosure of [] Kumar’s property and financial obligations” and he did not “voluntarily and expressly waive the right to a proper disclosure of [] Kumar’s property and financial obligations”;

(3) the Agreement “is contradictory, internally inconsistent, ambiguous, incomplete, and fails to demonstrate a meeting of the minds on all material terms”;

(4) the Agreement “sets forth demonstrably false statements”;

(5) his signature was “obtained by express and/or implied misrepresentations by [] Kumar as to her approximate wealth, justifications for the Agreement, and intentions”; and,

(6) he did not have, and reasonably could not have had, and adequate knowledge of the property or financial obligations of Kumar.

As to Kumar’s alleged material misrepresentations, fraud, imposition of duress, and undue

influence statements, Sinha alleged that: he was told by Kumar to “execute the Agreement

immediately as a condition of marriage”; Kumar stated the purpose of the Agreement “was to

protect Sinha and his children” from a prior marriage; Kumar did not disclose her “substantial

wealth”; Kumar, “through various statements, led him to believe that she did not have significant

wealth or assets”; during the marriage, Kumar “concealed” her substantial wealth and assets; Kumar

had “information about Sinha’s financial condition,” and, because she “knew that her financial

condition was vastly stronger and superior,” she “used her superior knowledge of the parties’

respective financial conditions” to take unfair advantage of Sinha; the parties did not discuss

-3- consultation with legal counsel before signing the Agreement; and, since both Kumar and Sinha are

“Indian-American,” the concept of a premarital agreement “was entirely foreign to Sinha.”

As to Sinha’s contention that the Agreement is unconscionable because of the

“contradictions, ambiguities, incomplete portions and false statements,” he specifically alleged that:

“it is falsely stated that the ‘parties have freely and voluntarily made this Agreement with

competent, independent legal advice and with full knowledge of their rights’” because Sinha did not

execute the Agreement voluntarily, he did not have the benefit of legal advice, and he did not have

“full knowledge of [his] rights”; the Agreement states that each party had disclosed their liabilities

to each other, but no disclosure occurred; although he wrote in the Waiver he was “comfortable”

with the nondisclosure of assets, that statement was false; there is a reference to “property identified

on the attached schedules [that] is property acquired by each respective party prior to the marriage

and shall be deemed separate property” but no schedules were attached; and the parties agreed to

execute estate planning documents in the future so that the marital residence and other marital

property would go to the surviving spouse, but this was an “unenforceable agreement to agree, and

it never happened.”

In addition, Sinha averred that the Agreement was unconscionable because “there was a

gross disparity regarding the assets of the parties when the Agreement was signed.” Sinha also

contended that even if the Agreement was legally valid and binding, it was breached by Kumar by

failing to disclose assets and liabilities and failing to attach schedules to the Agreement. Jain and

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