Dead but Not Gone

In any estates practice one is likely to see more than a few battles motivated by emotion rather than money. Take, for example, the not so unusual scenario of a younger woman who marries an older man and claims against his estate on his death. The son from a previous marriage, being the major beneficiary of the contested Will, vehemently denies the claim and a bitter dispute ensues. Not uncommon for such disputes to go on for years. In one US case, however, the dispute has outlived the husband, the wife and the son, leaving only the estates to battle it out after 15 years of litigation that saw its way into a Houston Probate Court, a Los Angeles Bankruptcy Court, a variety of appeal courts and even the US Supreme Court.

This, of course, is the Anna Nicole Smith (legal name Vickie Lynn Marshall) battle over her elderly husband’s $1.6 billion estate. Smith, a former stripper, and J. Howard Marshall, an oil tycoon, married in 1994 when she was a 26 and he was 89. Marshall died 14 months later.  In a Will that was re-done after his marriage to Smith, the elder Marshall left almost his entire estate to his son E. Pierce Marshall. 

Smith contested the Will in Probate Court in Texas at the same time as an appeal from her bankruptcy proceedings was pending in Federal Court in California.  As part of a counterclaim in the bankruptcy proceedings, Smith was awarded millions against Pierce for tortious interference with a substantial inter vivos gift (worth $300 Million) that she claimed her husband intended to give to her.   

In the latest decision  released on Friday, March 19, 2010, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the Probate Court's decision that the billionaire was mentally competent and under no undue influence when he left nothing to Smith, was the earliest final judgment on matters relevant to the tort proceeding, which precluded the award of damages by the Federal Court.  For more on the background of this case see this 2007 blog.

Pierce Marshall passsed away in 2008.  His wife, Elaine Marshall, continues the battle on behalf of his estate with Smith's ex-boyfriend, Larry Birkhead, and attorney, Howard K. Stern, in charge of Smith's estate. Birkhead and Smith’s 3-year-old daughter, Dannielynn, was named Smith's heir in 2008 after she died of a drug overdose at age 39 in a Florida hotel.

Whether emotion will continue to fuel the litigation remains to be seen but this article in the Washington Post seems to indicate that it is not over yet, with another trip to the US Supreme Court possible in the future.

Thanks for reading!

Sharon Davis

Sharon Davis - Click here for more information on Sharon Davis.

Wills of the Rich and Famous

There has been a lot in the press recently regarding the estates of the famous and the near-famous.  Arguably, too much time has been spent by the media covering the estate issues surrounding the passing of Anna Nicole Smith and the estate implications, Similarly, the estate of James Brown has attracted a lot of media attention.

Presumably, the media is just giving their readers what they want.  The public has a prurient interest in the lives (and deaths) of celebrities.

The Internet definitely panders to this interest.  From an estate point of view, those who are interested in this sort of thing are able to find a wealth of information regarding the estates of the rich and famous.

For example, on the Smoking Gun website , one can find the last will and testament of Katherine Hepburn, John F. Kennedy Jr., Bob Hope, and Marilyn Munroe, amongst others.   At  Celebrity Collectables, surfers can purchase the wills of hundreds of celebrities.  Often, other probate-related documents are available, including asset inventories, death certificates and funeral particulars. Links to may wills can be found at Taxprof Blog. It appears that there is no rest for the famous, or respite from the prying eyes of a celebrity-crazed public.

Paul Trudelle