Traub v. Zlatkiss

559 So. 2d 443, 1990 WL 41674
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 12, 1990
Docket89-760
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 559 So. 2d 443 (Traub v. Zlatkiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traub v. Zlatkiss, 559 So. 2d 443, 1990 WL 41674 (Fla. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

559 So.2d 443 (1990)

Joan TRAUB, Appellant,
v.
Jerrod ZLATKISS, et al., Appellees.

No. 89-760.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

April 12, 1990.

*444 Carol E. Donahue, Winter Park, for appellant.

Harvey M. Alper of Massey, Alper & Walden, P.A., Altamonte Springs, for appellee Linda Zlatkiss.

Bruce W. Flower, Maitland, for appellee Jerrod Zlatkiss.

COWART, Judge.

At the time of his death Sheldon Traub was friends with his two sons by a previous marriage, Martin and Arnold, but not with his wife, Joan Traub. Divorce proceedings were pending.

For years prior to his death Sheldon, a man of some means, had extensive business relations with his partners and friends, Jerrod Zlatkiss and Jerrod's wife, Linda. The decedent, Sheldon Traub, coowned with Linda certain businesses, rental land and mortgages. Linda acted as a bookkeeper for the jointly owned business interests and collected the receipts from the jointly owned mortgages and deposited them in jointly owned bank accounts. Not long before his death, the decedent conveyed his interest in certain property to Jerrod, and transferred his shares of stock in a certain corporation to that corporation and assigned certain mortgages to his two sons. The jointly owned bank account was transferred to an account in Jerrod's and Linda's names alone.

In his will, the decedent named Jerrod as personal representative of his estate. The widow elected to take the elective share of her deceased husband's estate that is permitted by section 732.201, Florida Statutes. Thus the stage was set for controversy and litigation.[1] The widow objected to the personal representative's inventory as not including *445 the assets transferred by the decedent before his death. Her objection was overruled. She then filed this action against Jerrod, individually and as personal representative, Linda, the two sons and certain business entities. The second amended petition contains 70 paragraphs divided into 10 counts. From an order dismissing Counts 7 and 9, the wife appeals.

In Counts 7 and 9, the petition alleges that prior to his death the decedent conveyed to Jerrod the decedent's interest in certain lands (paragraph 36), transferred certain mortgages to his sons (paragraph 61) and transferred his stock in a certain corporation to that corporation (paragraph 64), all without receiving "a reasonably equivalent value" and with intent to "defraud" the widow of her elective share in the transferred properties and seeks to have all of the transfers set aside to the extent of her statutory share as widow of the decedent and the transferred property be held to be assets of the decedent's estate subject to administration and to the widow's elective share. The petition also seeks an accounting as to one-half of the funds Linda received from the transferred properties declared to be held by her as constructive trustee for the decedent and to have these funds added to the assets of the decedent's estate. We affirm the dismissal of these counts as failing to state a cause of action.

Section 732.206, Florida Statutes, provides that the surviving spouse's elective share of the decedent spouse's estate is calculated by reference to "all property of the decedent ... that is subject to administration... ."

In In re Solnik's Estate, 401 So.2d 896 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981), the court held that the widow's elective share did not extend to joint savings accounts with rights of survivorship that the decedent had established in the names of himself and his daughter. The court noted that by using the term property "subject to administration" in section 732.206, the legislature did not intend to include non-probate assets in the computation of the elective share. In Kelley v. Hill, 481 So.2d 1311 (Fla. 2d DCA 1986), the court, relying on Solnik, held that certain real property owned by the decedent prior to her marriage was not "subject to administration" under section 732.206 where the deed to the property had passed title to decedent's daughter by a previous marriage. The court stated:

Appellant does not attempt to set aside decedent's conveyance on any of the conventionally recognized grounds of rescission or cancellation. He simply attempts to have the value of the property included within the estate for the purpose of calculating his elective share.
We conclude that as long as the deed is viable for the purpose of passing title to the property, the property is not "subject to administration" as provided by section 732.206.
Appellant would have us, in regard to a surviving spouse's elective share, read into chapter 732 a legislative intent to prohibit otherwise valid conveyances that are intended to reduce the assets subject to administration. We perceive no such intent. On the contrary, we would have serious reservations as to the far-reaching consequences such a construction might have in regard to estate planning.

481 So.2d at 1312.

The widow does not allege she is a creditor of her deceased husband or that any of the subject property was homestead property. She does, however, seek to set aside the transfers, claiming her deceased husband's actions in disposing of what otherwise would have been probate assets were done with the intent to deprive her of her elective share.

The widow cites Finley v. Finley, 726 S.W.2d 923 (Tenn. App. 1986) and Matter of LaGarce's Estate, 532 S.W.2d 511 (Mo. App. 1975) as authority for her position but those cases involved statutes which made voidable conveyances made with an intent to defeat the surviving spouse's elective share. There is no such statute in Florida. The widow claims, however, that in the absence of a statute, Maryland permits a surviving spouse to invalidate transfers of a decedent spouse made with the intent of *446 defeating the surviving spouse's elective share. That statement is not exactly correct. In Allender v. Allender, 199 Md. 541, 87 A.2d 608 (1952), the Maryland Court of Appeals explained:

The doctrine of fraud on marital rights represents an effort to balance the social and practical undesirability of restricting the free alienation of personal property against the desire to protect the legal share of a spouse. It has always been recognized that a husband, in the absence of statutory regulation like that in the case of dower, has an unqualified right to give away his personal property during his lifetime, even though the effect is to deprive the wife of her statutory share. But if the gift is not absolute and unconditional and the donor retains dominion and control over the property during his lifetime, the courts have held that the gift is colorable and may be set aside.

In Knell v. Price, 318 Md. 501, 569 A.2d 636, 641 (1990), the Maryland court quoted from an earlier decision declaring that "the only manner in which a widow may now seek to set aside an inter vivos transfer of property made by her husband is by proof that he defrauded her by not absolutely and unconditionally relinquishing control over the property during his lifetime."

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Bluebook (online)
559 So. 2d 443, 1990 WL 41674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traub-v-zlatkiss-fladistctapp-1990.