Schoukroun v. Karsenty

937 A.2d 262, 177 Md. App. 615, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 11, 2007
Docket1689 Sept. Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 937 A.2d 262 (Schoukroun v. Karsenty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoukroun v. Karsenty, 937 A.2d 262, 177 Md. App. 615, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 153 (Md. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

MURPHY, C.J.

During its 1989 annual conference, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved and recommended for enactment the Uniform TOD Security Registration Act (the Uniform Act). The Commissioners’ Summary of this Act included the following highlights:

• Allows owners of investment securities to designate death beneficiaries when the issuers provide such a service to their customers.
• Frees issuers of any liability for a good faith transfer to any beneficiaries.
• Preserves the rights of a deceased owner’s creditors in securities that are transferred to any beneficiaries.
• Preserves a customer/owner’s control over the securities, including the power to revoke any beneficiary designation, during the life of that customer/owner.
• Provides that TOD transfers are nontestamentary transfers.
• Does for investment securities what POD (Pay on Death) statutes have done for cash accounts in almost every state.
Section 9 of the Uniform Act, in pertinent part, 1 provides:
(c) A transferee ... is subject to liability to any probate estate of the decedent for allowed claims against that estate and statutory allowances to the decedent’s spouse and children to the extent the estate is insufficient to satisfy those claims and allowances. The liability of a *618 ... transferee may not exceed the value of [TOD] transfers received by that transferee.

Clarke A. Gravel, Esq. of Burlington, Vermont, was on the Commissioners’ Committee that drafted the Uniform Act. When Vermont adopted that Act, Mr. Gravel authored a Vermont Bar Journal article in which he stated:

Under the uniform law, the transfer-on-death form retains for the owner of the property (such as stocks, etc.) all control until the owner’s death. The TOD designee has absolutely no power over the securities until that occurrence.
Existing creditors’ interests do not change. If a creditor had any interest in or to the assets of the deceased, those rights carry over to the new owner of the same assets. The new owner must satisfy the creditor’s claims.
In addition to protecting creditors’ claims, the Act protects statutory allowances to the decedent’s spouse and children to the extent the estate is insufficient to satisfy those claims and allowances.
This Act provides an effective, efficient and thus useful tool for the probate practitioner.

Clarke A. Gravel, The Uniform Transfer on Death Security Registration Act (No. 23, Acts of 1999), 25-SEP Vt. B.J. 14 (1999).

The Vermont statute that was the subject of Mr. Gravel’s article included the following provision:

(b) A transferee of a nonprobate transfer is subject to liability to any probate estate of the decedent for allowed claims against that estate and statutory allowances to the decedent’s spouse and children to the extent the estate is insufficient to satisfy those claims and allowances. The *619 liability of a nonprobate transferee may not exceed the value of nonprobate transfers received by that transferee.

West’s Vermont Statutes Annotated, Title Nine, Part 5, Chapter 134, § 4359(b).

Maryland has adopted some — but not all — of the provisions of the Uniform Act. Maryland TOD transfers are controlled in part by the Maryland Uniform TO D Security Registration Act (the Maryland Act), Title 16 of the Estates and Trusts Article. Although the Maryland Act does not include a provision similar to Section 9 of the Uniform Act, § 16 — 109(b) provides that “[t]his title does not limit the rights of creditors of security owners against beneficiaries and other transferees under other laws of this State.”

Included in the legislative history of the Maryland Act, which took effect on October 1, 1994, is an article authored by Professor Richard V. Wellman of the University of Georgia Law School, in which Professor Wellman notes that “the valid contractual protections ... for the issuer of a TOD registration ... might not protect an account beneficiary against being compelled to make restitution to a deceased owner’s creditor or spouse claiming the protection of a domiciliary law against the deceased owner’s nonprobate gifts at death.” In a 1987 Georgia Law Review article, Professor Wellman stated:

The effectiveness of a TOD directions against claims of a deceased registrant’s creditors, the right of a registrant’s spouse to elect against any will ... are untested against the will-like effect of a TOD registration.

Tmnsfer-On-Death Securities Registration: A New Title Form, 21 Ga.L.Rev. 789, 823-24 (1987). This appeal from the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County presents the question of whether the “statutory share” of a decedent’s surviving spouse includes the decedent’s Transfer-On-Death (TOD) accounts. For the reasons that follow, we answer “yes” to that question.

Background

Two of the parties to this appeal — Kathleen Sexton Schoukroun (Kathleen), appellant/cross-appellee, and appellee/cross *620 appellant Bernadette Schoukroun (Bernadette) were married to the late Gilíes H. Schoukroun, who died on October 18, 2004. The third party to this appeal, Maryse L. Karsenty, is Mr. Schoukroun’s sister and is the Personal Representative (PR) of his estate, which was opened in the Orphans’ Court for Anne Arundel County on February 2, 2005.

Mr. Schoukroun and Bernadette were married on October 10, 1987. On April 20, 1990, Bernadette gave birth to their only child, Lauren Schoukroun. Mr. Schoukroun and Bernadette were divorced by a judgment of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County that was entered on September 5, 1995. On June 23, 2004, Mr. Schoukroun (1) executed the final version of his Last Will and Testament, (2) created a revocable trust, the Gilíes H. Schoukroun Trust (hereinafter “Trust”), of which he was the trustee and settlor, and (3) transferred assets from three financial accounts into the Trust.

In his will, Mr. Schoukroun designated his sister, Maryse L. Karsenty, appellee, the Personal Representative of his estate. Clause Three of the will stated: “I give all my tangible personal property, together with any insurance providing coverage thereon, to my wife, KATHLEEN M. SEXTON, of Crofton, Prince George’s County, Maryland....” In Clause Four, Mr. Schoukroun bequeathed the “rest, residue and remainder” of his estate to the Gilíes H. Schoukroun Trust.

When Mr. Schoukroun created the Gilíes H. Schoukroun Trust (the “Trust”), he named himself settlor and trustee, appointed appellee Maryse L. Karsenty trustee of the Trust upon his death, 2 and designated Lauren as the sole beneficiary of the Trust. Clause Two of the Trust, in pertinent part, provided:

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Related

Karsenty v. Schoukroun
959 A.2d 1147 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
937 A.2d 262, 177 Md. App. 615, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoukroun-v-karsenty-mdctspecapp-2007.