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Decedent died in 1949 leaving a will which he had executed in 1919, some 30 years before his death which was duly admitted to probate.

A New York Probate Lawyer said in Article THIRD, the will created a trust for the life income benefit of testator’s wife. Upon her death, the principal was to be paid to son and if he should predecease to his issue. In fact the son predeceased the testator himself as well as his mother the income beneficiary without issue. It that contingency, the will directed the Trustee to pay over, transfer and deliver the principal of the trust fund to and among my next of kin in equal shares but Per stirpes and not Per capita.

A New York Estate lawyer said that the direction is clearly to distribute the principal among Testator’s next of kin. The issue is as of what date are the next of kin to be determined (1) 1919 the date of execution of the will; (2) 1949 the date of testator’s death or (3) 1975 the date of death of the income beneficiary, testator’s wife?

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A New York Probate Lawyer said that decedents were husband and wife, presumably died simultaneously in a fire in their home on December 13, 1959. Decedents left reciprocal wills which were duly admitted to probate in Wayne County on January 15, 1960. On that day Letters Testamentary on their wills, both late of the Town of Lyons, New York, were issued to the executor of the City of Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan.

The executor petitions for the Judicial Settlement of his first intermediate account in the two estates. In such petitions he asks that this Court determine to whom the $16,813.20 insurance settlement, received on account of the fire loss to the real estate of the decedents at New York, should be paid.

A New York Estate Lawyer said the question before the Court is whether the sum of $16,813.20, which represents the insurance settlement because of the fire loss to the real property should be distributed as part of the residuary estates of the decedents or whether the said sum should be paid to specific devisee of this real property, the Church.

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New York Probate Lawyers said this is a proceeding by the petitioners, and a Bank, for the judicial settlement of their account as surviving trustees of an express trust created by the father in a letter writing dated March 10, 1902, and for the construction of the trust instrument in conjunction with the will of the testator for whose immediate benefit the trust was created.

A Kings County Estate lawyer said that in March, 1902 testator had four sons. On March 10th of that year he established the instant trust in a letter addressed to Joel and a few days later delivered the securities constituting the corpus of the trust to his 2 sons, as trustees.

The settlor augmented the corpus of the trust pursuant to instruments executed in 1905, 1907, 1909, 1910 and 1911. On December 24, 1909 the 2 sons as trustees, properly designated their brother (now a co-petitioner) as a co-trustee.

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A New York Probate Lawyer said that the petition in this probate proceeding describes the respondent, as decedent’s ‘alleged widow’. The latter claims that she married decedent by proxy in a civil ceremony performed in San Mauro La Bruca, Province of Salerno, Republic of Italy, on October 26, 1950, in accordance with the laws of that Republic. Decedent’s five children of a prior marriage question the performance and validity of such marriage.

A New York Estate Lawyer said that a preliminary hearing was ordered on the issues so raised and proof was taken thereon. Nine documents were admitted in evidence without objection in support of the widow’s claim. Exhibit 1, in English, is an application by decedent for the issuance of an immigration visa for the widow’s entry into this country. Exhibits 2 to 9, inclusive, are certified copies of records of the Bureau of Vital Statistics of San Mauro La Bruca aforementioned, which were required by the Civil Code of Italy for the performance of the proxy marriage in question. These documents are in Italian, translated into English and properly authenticated.

Thereafter, decedent executed a power of attorney before a notary public in Brooklyn, N. Y., by which he constituted and appointed his nephew, domiciled and residing in San Mauro (decedent’s native town), ‘to represent him in the celebration of a civil marriage in the Town of San Mauro La Bruca, Province of Salerno, Republic of Italy, between himself and the daughter of the decedent domiciled and residing in San Mauro’. Decedent also executed a petition to the Attorney General of the Court of Appeals of Naples, Italy, seeking permission to marry the said woman in San Mauro by power of attorney granted for that purpose as required by Article III of the Civil Code of Italy, which was granted by the Attorney General pursuant thereto on September 21, 1950.

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A New York Probate Lawyer said that, in this contested probate proceeding, petitioner seeks a declaration that the proceeding was commenced on December 8, 2005, before the commencement of a probate proceeding in Arizona. Objectant seeks an order dismissing the probate proceeding on the grounds that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction (CPLR 3211 [a] [2]) and that there is a prior proceeding pending in Arizona (CPLR 3211 [a] [4]).

A New York Estate Lawyer said that, the decedent died on December 4, 2005, survived by two grandchildren. The decedent was born and raised in Brooklyn. For many years, the decedent and his wife lived in Florida, where his granddaughter lived. At some point, he and his wife moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where his grandson lived. They were living in Phoenix when the decedent’s wife died. The decedent remained in Phoenix until moving to New York in late September 2005. While living in Phoenix, the decedent executed a will, dated April 2, 2004, which left his estate to the trustee revocable trust. On the same day, he executed a trust agreement creating a revocable inter vivos trust. Under the terms of the trust, the estate passes to one of the grand children upon the decedent’s death.

A Brooklyn Probate Lawyer said that, in 2005, the decedent called his sister, and told her he wanted to return to Brooklyn to live with her. she and her daughter visited the decedent on September 27, 2005. At that time, the decedent was 95 years old and suffering from cardiac problems. He asked his sister to take him back to Brooklyn to live with her. According to the said sister, the decedent told her that he wanted to change his will, revocable trust and health care proxy before boarding the plane. On September 30, 2005, the day they were to travel to New York, he visited the offices of the law firm in Arizona and asked her to change the beneficiaries of the 2004 will and trust. The decedent executed a new will, an amendment of the 2004 trust and a health care proxy in the office. The 2004 trust was amended to provide that, upon the decedent’s death, his sister receives one half of the trust principal, his granddaughter receives three eighths of the trust principal and his grandson receives one eighth. The decedent then left immediately for the airport, without stopping to get his glasses, clothes or medicine. They traveled back to New York that day, September 30, 2005.

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A New York Probate Lawyer said this is a probate proceeding where the decedent’s son, who is the sole distributee and the sole income beneficiary of a testamentary trust consisting of the entire residuary estate, seeks to revoke his waiver and consent to probate so that he may conduct SCPA 1404 examinations and file objections to probate, if appropriate; and, seeks for an order directing the preliminary executors to discontinue a pending landlord/tenant holdover proceeding they commenced against him in connection with his occupancy of a portion of real property that appears to be the sole asset available to fund the trust. The movant’s four sons, two of whom are infants for whom a guardian ad litem was appointed, are the contingent remaindermen of the trust.

The relevant facts are the following:

A New York Estate Lawyer offered for probate is the will dated 30 January 2000 along with a codicil dated 20 July 2009. The codicil amended the will to include a newborn grandson. Both the will and codicil were drafted by an attorney and their execution was attorney-supervised; both were witnessed by three witnesses who also executed self-proving affidavits; it leaves all tangible personal property to the son; in paragraph FOURTH (A) and (C), the entire residuary estate is placed in trust, with all net income, payable to the son quarter-annually or at more frequent intervals if necessary during his lifetime, with the remainder divided equally among the decedent’s grandchildren; and, in paragraph FOURTH (B), the “sole and absolute discretion” is vested in the trustees to invade the corpus of the trust in such amounts and at such times as they shall deem appropriate and necessary for the health, welfare, support and maintenance of the son, and directs that such invasion “shall” be made “without considering the effect such invasion may have upon any third persons, including the remaindermen.”

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A New York Probate Lawyer said this is a proceeding where petitioners move to withdraw their petition to probate a copy of a testamentary instrument as a lost will pursuant to SCPA 1407and have letters of administration issue instead.

The pertinent facts are as follows:

A New York Estate Lawyer said on 26 October 2000, J, the decedent died. He left a will apparently executed on 23 March 1995. Under the instrument, the decedent left her estate to her two sisters, JB and AB, or the survivor. She named JB as executor and AB as successor. JB predeceased the decedent without issue. As a result, the entire estate passed to AB.

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New York Probate Lawyer said that on 20 March 2012, the decedent at the age of 107 years old died and left a will dated 1 August 1991. She was survived by three distributees, her daughter and the nominated executrix, OJ, and two grandchildren, AC and CC, children of decedent’s predeceased son, AKC.

A New York Estate Lawyer said that under the propounded instrument, after several pre-residuary cash bequests, the decedent left her real property to her daughter, and if her daughter predeceased her, to her son, the sole residuary beneficiary. On 30 September 1997, the first codicil to the propounded instrument was executed which added a few small pre-residuary cash bequests. On 3 September 1999, the second codicil was executed which again left the decedent’s real property to her daughter but in the event that her daughter predeceased her, such property was to be divided equally among her daughter’s three children subject to a life estate in decedent’s son-in-law, KJ.

Westchester County Probate Lawyers said that consequently, after the decedent’s death, the nominated fiduciary filed the probate petition.

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A New York Probate Laywer said on 17 June 2007, seven months after executing her will, the decedent, AB, died. Her husband predeceased her in 2001, and she never had any children, biological or adopted. The decedent was survived by six distributees: NK, GKH, and EKS (children of the decedent’s predeceased brother, HK; and, DK, BK, and KK (the children of decedent’s predeceased nephew, RK, and who apparently spell their surname differently, with a double last letter). The six distributees reside in Australia.

The proponent and executor, G, had been employed by the decedent as a full-time caregiver who lived in the decedent’s home.

A New York Estate Lawyer said that on 21 September 2007, G filed a petition for probate, stating that the decedent left no distributees, surviving or deceased. Under Paragraph 6(a) of the petition, the “name and relationship” of all persons with a “legacy, devise or other interest, or nature of fiduciary status” is asked. In G’s original probate petition, she stated that she was the decedent’s live-in companion and the beneficiary of the decedent’s entire estate, as well as the designated executor. The only other individual named by G as a person interested in the decedent’s estate is G’s sister, RG, a resident of Ukraine, who is listed as the successor beneficiary of the decedent’s entire estate and the nominated successor executor. The petition reflects 23 Alexander Drive in Oyster Bay, which had been the decedent’s home, as G’s address. In response to question 8(a), which asks whether “any beneficiary under the propounded will, listed in Paragraph 6 or 7 above, had a confidential relationship to the decedent,” G indicated that she, “petitioner,” had a confidential relationship with the decedent.

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A New York Probate Lawyer this is a proceeding where JPM Bank (JPM), co-executor, moved pursuant to CPLR §5015(a)(2) to vacate the decree admitting to probate the decedent’s will dated 24 June 2005 (2005 Will) due to newly discovered evidence. Several charities, the residuary legatees under a prior instrument that are adversely affected by the 2005 Will, join in the application; and, movants seek removal of JPM’s co-executors and appointment of JPM as sole preliminary executor.

The following are the pertinent events that took place:

On 12 September 2005, the decedent died at the age of 93 years. He was survived by two nephews, MF and SF, and the issue of a predeceased nephew. On 21 February 2006, the 2005 Will was admitted to probate by decree and letters testamentary thereupon issued to JPM, MF and ME.

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