Estate Planning Attorneys Oak Brook : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Oak Brook, IL

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Oak Brook, Illinois

Oak Brook Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Results for: estate planning attorneys Oak Brook. Browse listings to find an Elder Law or Probate Lawyer in Oak Brook, IL.




Bott & Associates, Ltd.

TEL (847) 818-9084 |  Rolling Meadows, IL

Maritess focuses her practice on estate planning, asset preservation, probate, business law, taxation and succession planning. She is experienced in integrating business, tax, asset protection an...(more)

Daniel O. Hands, P.C.

TEL (630) 574-0123 |  Oak Brook, IL

TEL (847) 462-0123 |  Cary, IL

Dan Hands has been serving the legal needs of clients in suburban Chicago for more than 15 years. His practice is now ...(more)

Przybylo and Kubiatowski

TEL (773) 631-2525 |  Chicago, IL

Chester M. Przybylo has been meeting the legal needs of Chicago-area clients since 1968. A partner in the law firm of Przybylo & Kubiatowski, Mr.Przybylo focuses his practice on estate and busines...(more)

Hedeker & Perrelli, Ltd

TEL (847) 913-5415 |  Lincolnshire, IL

Dean Hedeker is a leading Chicago-area authority on estate and tax planning, business law and investments. A long-time resident of north suburban Lincolnshire, Dean has more than 25-years experi...(more)



Other Oak Brook, Illinois Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)

Michelotti & Associates, Ltd., Oak Brook, IL  (630) 928 0100


Oldfield & Fox, P.C., Oak Brook, IL  (630) 495-3377





ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Ethics and Estate/Probate Attorneys

Last week I wrote (here) about the question of "who's the client?" in the estate planning context. As one reader pointed out to me in an e-mail, this issue also arises in the estate administration or probate context.

Let's say that you are approached by an individual who is named as Executor in the Will of John Smith. Do you as attorney represent:

-the Executor?
-the Estate of John Smith?
-the beneficiaries?
-some combination thereof?

This can be a tricky question to answer -- most model rules of professional conduct were not written with estate planning or probate in mind. However, The American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC) publishes commentaries to these rules. Here is what ACTEC has to say on this issue (the emphasis is mine):

A minority of cases and ethics opinions have adopted the so-called entity approach under which the fiduciary estate is characterized as the lawyer's client. However, most cases and ethics opinions treat the fiduciary as the lawyer's client and the beneficiaries as persons to whom the lawyer owes some duties. See ACTEC Commentaries on MRPCs 1.2 (Scope of Representation), 1.4 (Communication), 1.6 (Confidentiality of Information) and 1.7 (Conflict of Interest: General Rule). The lawyer and the fiduciary, following full disclosure by the lawyer, may agree that the fiduciary estate and not the fiduciary shall be the lawyer's client. Such an agreement may significantly affect the extent of the lawyer's duties to the fiduciary, including the duty of confidentiality. However, such an agreement may not limit the duties that the lawyer or the fiduciary otherwise owe to the beneficiaries of the fiduciary estate.

My engagement letter and other correspondence makes it clear that the fiduciary is my client, but I also make the fiduciary consent to my reporting of any wrongdoing by the fiduciary. Still, this may not be a perfect situation, as my e-mailer points out. If there is a problem with the fiduciary, then the beneficiaries have to pay twice: they pay the fiduciary's attorney, and then they hire their own attorney to go after the fiduciary.

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» Chang v. Lederman: Estate Planning Malpractice Case

Here is an interesting summary of a California legal malpractice case, Chang v. Lederman. The case involved an attorney named Gregory Lederman, his client Raphael Schumert, and Mr. Schumert's girlfriend (later wife), Myung Chang.

Chang alleges in her complaint that in February, 2005, Schumert instructed Gregory Lederman, as his attorney, to revise the trust to provide for distribution of the entire estate to Chang, with the exception of $250,000 to be distributed to his son. According to the complaint, Lederman refused to do the amendment stating that an Etti Hadar would sue Schumert and also advised that a psychiatric evaluation be done before any changes be made to his estate plan. Schumert died on March 17, 2005.

Estate planning is a big area for legal malpractice claims. Many of these claims are brought by beneficiaries of an individual's estate plan (as the article mentions, the privity of contract required in other malpractice actions is relaxed for an action against an estate planner).

It's hard for me to fault Mr. Lederman here. It's one thing to say "I as beneficiary am receiving less because you the attorney screwed up my husband's Will." But Ms. Chang appears to be saying "I as beneficiary am receiving less because you the attorney weren't sure if my husband was competent to sign his Will." Ms. Chang is essentially asking Mr. Lederman to put her interests above the interests of his client, Mr. Schumert. Put another way (in the article):

To extend liability in favor of a beneficiary who alleges that the testator meant to provide for him would place counsel in the awkward position of being sued for doing what a testator had actually asked him to do.

On a slightly different topic, the words "psychiatric evaluation" caught my eye in this article. I'm not a doctor in real life, nor do I play one on TV. But I do view it as my duty to make sure, in my own possibly clumsy way, that a client seems competent to execute his or her estate plan.

Let me give an example: a few weeks ago I met with a potential client. The meeting took place at his niece's home, where he lives. The niece was also the one who set up the meeting. The potential client was in bed for the entire meeting, seemed disoriented, and didn't seem to know about or be interested in signing a Will. While he seemed to want to leave his property to his niece (once I explained his options to him), I didn't feel confident that he understood what he owns and what would happen to that property at his death. So, I decided to pass on this potential client. I am certainly not saying that the niece did anything wrong, or that the potential client was totally incapable of signing a Will. Rather, I was saying that I wasn't going to be the one to draft it.