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Probate is a legal process that involves distributing a person’s assets and covering their debts and taxes after they die. Assets held or titled solely in the decedent’s name will generally go through the probate process before being distributed to the heirs or beneficiaries.

PROBATE LAW

Probate is a legal process that involves distributing a person’s assets and covering their debts and taxes after they die. Assets held or titled solely in the decedent’s name will generally go through the probate process before being distributed to the heirs or beneficiaries.

Locate the Original Will. Under Florida law, the original of the will needs to be probated. If the original cannot be located, it is presumed destroyed with the intent to revoke the will. Under Florida statute 732.901, the original will is supposed to be deposited with the clerk of court where the deceased resided within 10 days of receiving information that the testator is dead. If the original will cannot be located, but the presumption of revocation is overcome, testimony of at least one disinterested witness will be required to admit the will to probate if a copy can be located, under Florida statute 733.207. If a copy cannot be located, the testimony of two disinterested witnesses is required.

Florida law requires that a Notice of Administration be provided to beneficiaries named in the will, as well as surviving spouses. The Notice of Administration provides important information, such as the deadline for challenging the validity of a will, and alerts the spouse that he or she must claim certain spousal entitlements, such as elective share and family allowance. Known creditors must be given a Notice to Creditors, stating that the creditor has 90 days within which to file a creditor claim in the estate. Notice to Creditors must also be published in the local newspaper, alerting such creditors of the deadline for filing creditor claims.

Once the estate has been opened and letters of administration issued to the personal representative, the personal representative should take custody of the assets of the deceased that are properly part of the probate estate. For bank accounts, brokerage accounts, annuities, and insurance payable to the probate estate, the personal representative should retitle such accounts into the name of the estate and/or move such accounts into new accounts in the name of he estate. Normally, positions in stocks would be turned into cash (or reduced) so as to avoid any losses on estate assets. Real estate would be insured, secured, and listed for sale (or distributed to the beneficiaries). Homestead property of the deceased is not normally considered an estate asset so is handled differently. During this process, normally at the beginning, an estate inventory is filed with the probate court and sent to all of the beneficiaries.

These are the things that cause estate to be tied up for years and consume large amounts of money. Creditor lawsuits can go on for years. If the estate is subject to the estate tax, it will require a minimum of two years to close the estate, usually longer. If someone challenges the validity of the will, that process could take years as well and be very expensive. If the estate must deal with real estate, business interests, patents, art, or a wrongful death claim, such could tie up the estate for years. Some estates have all of these issues and more. If the estate has none of these issues, the estate should be able to be closed in under one year, sometimes even faster.

The personal representative makes distribution to the beneficiaries after all of the difficult and messy issues are resolved. The personal representative might make interim distributions during the administration of the estate, or might wait and only make final distribution to the beneficiaries. For the final distribution, the personal representative can issue a plan of distribution and final accounting to the beneficiaries, to which they can object. In estates with good harmony, the personal representative might only issue an informal accounting and informal plan of distribution, to which they could agree with by signing a waiver or similar document.

The personal representative, at the conclusion of the estate administration, will file a final accounting, plan of distribution, and petition for discharge with the probate court. If the accounting and plan of distribution was waived by the beneficiaries, those documents would not be filed. The clerk’s office at the probate court will review the petition for discharge to ensure that all requirements of a proper probate administration have been complied with, such as filing the inventory, paying (or successfully disputing)all creditor claims, and filing either the final accounting and plan of distribution (or waivers signed by the beneficiaries for such documents).

The surviving spouse takes the following portion of an estate (Florida Statute Section 732.102):

  1. If there is no surviving descendant of the decedent, the entire intestate estate.
  2. If there are surviving descendants of the decedent, all of whom are also lineal descendants of the surviving spouse, and the surviving spouse has no other descendants, the entire intestate estate.
  3. If there are surviving descendants, one or more of whom are not lineal descendants of the surviving spouse, one-half of the intestate estate.
  4. If there are one or more descendants of the decedent, all of whom are also descendants of the surviving spouse, and the surviving spouse has one or more descendants who are not descendants of the decedent, one-half of the intestate estate.

The part of the intestate estate not passing to the surviving spouse, or the entire intestate estate if there is no surviving spouse, as follows (Florida Statute Section 732.103):

  1. To the descendants of the decedent.
  2. If there is no descendant, to the decedent’s father and mother equally, or to the survivor of them.
  3. If there is none of the foregoing, to the decedent’s brothers and sisters and the descendants of deceased brothers and sisters.
  4. If there is none of the foregoing, the estate shall be divided, one-half of which shall go to the decedent’s paternal, and the other half to the decedent’s maternal, kindred in the following order:
    1. To the grandfather and grandmother equally, or to the survivor of them.
    2. If there is no grandfather or grandmother, to uncles and aunts and descendants of deceased uncles and aunts of the decedent.
    3. If there is either no paternal kindred or no maternal kindred, the estate shall go to the other kindred who survive, in the order stated above.
  5. If there is no kindred of either part, the whole of the property shall go to the kindred of the last deceased spouse of the decedent as if the deceased spouse had survived the decedent and then died intestate entitled to the estate.

Under Florida inheritance laws with no will, for the non-spouse heirs, the first three provisions are easy:  “down” (to children and/or grandchildren); if no children, then “up” (to parents); and if no parents, then “sideways” and “diagonally” (to siblings and the children of deceased siblings, who would be nieces and nephews).

After that, the Florida inheritance laws with no will get a little trickier.  The decedent’s estate would go to grandparents, if alive.  If there are no living grandparents, then the estate goes to the aunts and uncles of the deceased and their descendants. Finally, the estate passes to the family of the last deceased spouse of the decedent.

  1. To the descendants of the decedent.
  2. If there is no descendant, to the decedent’s father and mother equally, or to the survivor of them.
  3. If there is none of the foregoing, to the decedent’s brothers and sisters and the descendants of deceased brothers and sisters.
  4. If there is none of the foregoing, the estate shall be divided, one-half of which shall go to the decedent’s paternal, and the other half to the decedent’s maternal, kindred in the following order:
    1. To the grandfather and grandmother equally, or to the survivor of them.
    2. If there is no grandfather or grandmother, to uncles and aunts and descendants of deceased uncles and aunts of the decedent.
    3. If there is either no paternal kindred or no maternal kindred, the estate shall go to the other kindred who survive, in the order stated above.
  5. If there is no kindred of either part, the whole of the property shall go to the kindred of the last deceased spouse of the decedent as if the deceased spouse had survived the decedent and then died intestate entitled to the estate.

The following is a draft letter sent from a Florida probate lawyer to a client who is serving as the Personal Representative.  The letter sets forth the duties and responsibilities of the Personal Representative in Florida Probate.

Dear Client:

As personal representative of an estate in Florida, you should be aware of your duties and responsibilities.  The functions described here are often referred to under the term “settling the estate.”  The process of settling the estate is a legal process, and as your attorney, I will counsel and advise you.

The process of probate, or administration of the estate, or settlement, depending upon the term you prefer, begins with the preparation and filing of a petition for administration, and after various procedures which are my responsibility, the Judge will sign Letters of Administration, copies of which you will receive.  The Letters of Administration are evidence of your legal authority to act as personal representative. The Letters of Administration may be enclosed with this letter or you may receive them soon.

Once the administration procedure has begun, it will pass through several stages.  The first stage of the administration, after the Letters of Administration are issued, is giving notice to those persons who are involved or interested in the estate.  Beneficiaries of the estate will receive the required notice by certified mail unless they sign waivers.

Once the Letters of Administration are in hand, a useful first step is to redirect the deceased’s mail to your address using a change of address form at the post office.

Probate Estates require a taxpayer identification number; therefore we can obtain one for you, if you wish.  You will use this number to open the estate account at the bank. In order for us to obtain a TIN (or sometimes called EIN) for you, we will need your social security number. Otherwise, you can obtain an EIN by going online to IRS.gov and locate ‘Apply for an EIN online’, then click Apply Online Now. Simply follow the online directions.

For the period of the administration of the estate, you are entitled to possession and control of all of the assets of the estate.  Your duty is first and foremost to protect and preserve the assets.  Therefore, the next stage of administration involves identifying, collecting, inventorying, valuing, securing and investing the assets of the estate.  Most custodians of assets will require that you produce Letters of Administration before allowing you to control or remove assets.  Some will also require a death certificate.  We will work with you to assist you in dealing with asset custodians who may have issues or questions regarding your authority.

If the decedent owned a vehicle, do not drive it. The estate could be liable for any damages caused by the driver; therefore, wait until the vehicle is transferred to the rightful heir before it is driven.

An important part of making certain that assets are secure is arranging for adequate insurance coverage for tangible personal property or improved real property.  A list of all of the assets and their values must be filed with the court in the form of an inventory, and, if the estate is of a size sufficient to require the filing of an estate tax return, similar information must be provided for the state of Florida and for the Internal Revenue Service.

 

Throughout the estate proceeding, management of the assets is an important concern of the personal representative.  Management of the assets includes investment of the assets, whether in bank accounts, government bonds or other prudent forms of investment, to the extent that the estate has excess cash.  A further and important consideration is liquidity management.  The personal representative is required to sell assets or borrow money on behalf of the estate to meet the cash requirements as they arise, if cash available to the estate is not otherwise sufficient.  Cash requirements of the estate include the payment of creditors, payment of expenses of administration and the payment of taxes. Be sure to keep a record of all transactions and keep all bank statements. If the deceased had a primary residence in Florida, the Personal Representative may, but is not required to, take custody of the residence and secure it.

You may continue to receive government checks or pension checks after the date of death of the decedent.   Do not assume that these are estate assets.  You may need to return these funds to the payers. It may take several months for these payments to stop.

As your attorney, I will work with you in preparing a formal inventory and preparing the necessary documents that need to be filed.  Please provide statements from the source (i.e. bank institution) with the date of death value to be included on the Inventory, within 30 days of your appointment as personal representative. The deadline for filing the Inventory is 60 days from your appointment as Personal Representative. You will need to get documentation from the source as to the date of death value along with the bank statement. We will prepare the Inventory for your signature upon receipt of the statements from you.

One of the duties as Personal Representative is to keep track of all assets of the decedent and keep a record of all transactions pertaining to the estate account and the assets of the decedent. An accounting is required on all formal probate administrations unless it is waived by all interested persons. Therefore, keep all bank statements for the estate; proof of all accounts that were closed – showing the amount closed and ultimately transferred to the estate account; copies of all checks written from the estate account; and copies of all checks consisting of deposits made to the estate account. Keeping detailed records will make the preparation of the accounting efficient and keep the cost of preparing the accounting at a minimum.  Having our firm track down missing statements, copies of checks, verifications of deposits and other missing information greatly increases the cost of preparation. You must keep receipts for all expenses. If you do not, you may be personally liable for expenses.  It is strongly recommended all payments be made by check with an adequate description in the memo line.

Almost every estate has creditors.  For example, the power company and the telephone company are creditors to the extent that the bill incurred during the month of death was not paid (or even received) as of the date of death.  Also, the funeral home is a creditor to the extent of services performed.  There may be additional estate creditors.  However, except for the funeral claim, claims are limited to amounts that were owed by (even though not yet billed to) the decedent as of the moment of death.  It is easy to understand this by assuming what the decedent would have paid if death had not intervened.  Debts that are incurred after death in connection with the estate administration are not included in this category and are handled in another manner.

One very important duty that the law requires of you is to determine the name and the address of each creditor in existence as of the moment of death.  By simply having the mail forwarded, you will receive all the bills.  But, many times there are creditors who do not send bills.  You must make a “diligent search” of all available sources to determine the creditors.  Attached to this letter is a 10 point checklist of procedures that may be followed to determine the creditors.

Once the name and address of the creditors are determined, one of two things must be done.  First, for small and ordinary debts (for example, the power company’s final bill) we can list such items on a Personal Representative’s Proof of Claim, which states that you intend to pay these items.  For all other items, you are required to notify the creditors of the requirement of filing a claim.  This is accomplished by sending a copy of the Notice to Creditors to each creditor. When you receive a bill, forward it to us or make a detailed list of the bills with account numbers, addresses, phone numbers, so we can send a copy of the Notice to Creditors to the creditor.  If you send the bill to us, you may want to keep a copy of the bill for your records. When you furnish us with the list or copy of the bill, we will see to this notification on your behalf.  It is, however, your responsibility to make a diligent search to determine a complete list of creditors and to furnish us with that list or send us a copy of the bill.

You must accomplish this promptly because the legal notification must be sent to the creditors within 60 days after your appointment as personal representative.  Receipt of this notice by the potential creditor (with some minor exceptions) allows them only 30 days in which to file the claim or be barred by law from collecting the amount from the estate.  If we fail to send the notice to the creditors within the time allowed, this will have the result of extending the time in which they may file their claims against the estate.  It is in the best interests of all who are interested in the estate that we end the creditor’s filing period as soon as legally allowed.

We are also required to prepare a statement under oath for your signature that you have conducted such a diligent search, and entered on the statement will be the result of that search.

As Personal Representative, you may be required to file tax returns and pay taxes for the estate.  There may be many required tax returns; however, the most common are income tax returns for the decedent, which may not have been previously filed and income tax returns for the estate if the estate will likely have income in excess of $600 during its tax year. You will need to hire an accountant or tax preparer to handle the final income tax return of the deceased prior to death and to prepare income tax returns for the estate. We do not typically prepare income tax returns.

For estates where the total taxable value exceeds $5,340,000, an estate tax return will need to be filed.  Our firm typically prepares the estate tax return.

After expenses, including taxes, have been paid, the next stage of the administration is the procedure involving distribution of the estate to the beneficiaries.  As your attorney, I will review the applicable dispositive direction and will advise you of the provisions of the law that apply in order to identify the persons who are properly beneficiaries of the estate and who are entitled to distribution.  You will then calculate the distributive shares after the deduction of any taxes attributable to each share.

Distribution of the assets of the estate then occurs to the persons entitled, sometimes by distributing the assets directly in satisfaction of a bequest, and other times by selling those assets and converting them to cash, and then distributing the cash.

The final stage of the estate is closing out the probate.  In this procedure the court enters its order discharging you as personal representative after your duties have been completed.  In order to accomplish the estate closing, it is necessary to report to the court on all legally significant activities which occurred in the estate and to furnish evidence that the creditors have been paid and that certain taxes have been paid, and that the remaining property has been distributed to the persons entitled to that property in proper shares.  When this evidence has been presented in proper form, which is again my legal responsibility, the Judge will sign an order which discharges you as personal representative and terminates your obligations with regard to the probate.  The final stage of this procedure is that it is your responsibility for the filing of any final income tax return that the estate is obligated to file for the year in which the final settlement occurs.  It should be remembered when the estate is closed that the estate may have had taxable income for that year or otherwise be responsible for the payment of taxes, and sufficient funds must be retained by you in order to enable you to pay those taxes that might be due.

It is difficult to predict with precision how long it will take to probate this estate.  Many factors impact on the answer.  By state statute, a Florida probate estate must be closed within twelve months after it is opened unless the Judge grants special permission for an extension of time.  Extensions are only granted for good reason.  Good reasons to extend the time include such things as pending litigation by or against the estate, liquidation of assets for distribution, disputes with taxing authorities and similar matters either out of the personal representative’s control or that would work a disadvantage upon the estate if time were not extended.

In Florida, a personal representative is classified under the law as a “fiduciary.”  A fiduciary is a person who has been selected for a position of special faith, trust, and reliance.  A “trustee” is another type of fiduciary and the duties and responsibilities which you have in the settlement of this estate are quite similar to the duties and responsibilities that a trustee would have.

As personal representative of the estate, in accepting that office and that trust, you also agreed to be personally responsible financially for certain matters.  Initially, of course, you have personal responsibility for proper administration, investment, and subsequent distribution of the assets of the estate.  As I pointed out earlier, should you fail in this duty you may be sued by any person who has been injured by your failure.  More important, however, is certain hidden liability which you have assumed, and of which you should be aware, for the payment of various taxes that were owed by the decedent or that may subsequently be owed by the estate.  Upon the failure to pay these required taxes, the law permits the Internal Revenue Service, and in some situations, the State of Florida, to collect the taxes from your own assets.  Those would include the right to freeze your personal bank account or place liens on real estate or other property that may belong to you personally.  This, of course, occurs only if you fail to pay taxes from the estate that are required to be paid by you in your capacity as personal representative.

The persons to whom you owe these duties are, first, any creditors of the estate, and second, the beneficiaries of the estate.  If your duties are not properly or competently performed, you may have to answer to any of these persons who have been harmed as a result.

You will be furnished with copies of the papers you sign so that you may create a file of your own.  Most clients find it useful to set up a file at the beginning for the estate and to keep all the papers in one location.

Life insurance, annuities, IRA’s and retirement accounts will typically give the owner of the asset the ability to name a beneficiary upon the death of the owner. An asset with a beneficiary designation will not be a probate asset (unless the probate estate is listed as the beneficiary).

What assets are probate assets, subject to probate administration, is an initial question in every probate administration in Florida. Probate assets are assets owned by the deceased at death – but only those assets that do not transfer automatically to someone else upon death.

The easiest way to understand which assets are subject to probate administration and which are not is to start with those assets which are not probate assets. Download the Assets of the Deceased Diagram for easy reference.

The title of an asset, which typically denotes ownership, in the name of two or more persons. Real estate and bank accounts can be titled jointly with right of survivorship. When one owner passes, the remaining owner automatically becomes the owner of the asset. An asset that is titled jointly with right of survivorship is not a probate asset.

In some instances, it is not clear whether or not the joint title is intended to be one of survivorship, as opposed to a tenancy in common, or a convenience bank account.

Assets within a revocable trust will be distributed by the trustee of the trust to the named beneficiaries as stated within the trust document. The assets in the revocable trust will not be probate assets.

Banks and brokerage firms typically offer the ability to include a “pay on death” or “transfer on death” designation. Upon the death of the original owner, the bank or brokerage will simply give the account to the listed pay on death owner of the account.

If a married couple owns an asset together, it will be treated as a tenancy by the entireties asset. The surviving spouse will become the owner of the asset upon the death of the first spouse. Any jointly owned asset will be treated as a tenancy by the entireties asset unless the asset is specifically titled in another fashion.

The primary residence of a Florida resident will be treated as Florida homestead property. Homestead property has its own set of of complex rules that will apply if the deceased had a surviving spouse or minor child at the time of death.

If an assets does not transfer to new owners by one of the methods set forth above, the asset is likely a probate asset, and will need to be administered in the probate process.

Probate in Florida generally takes:

  • 3 months or less for simple estates
  • 1 year for standard formal administrations
  • 2 or more years for complex and litigated estates

In simple estates, probate can take as little as a few weeks to as long as a few months. If the estate qualifies for summary administration, the time for probate can be a few weeks. The estate can qualify for summary administration if the value of the estate is less than $75,000 and there are no unpaid creditors or if the deceased has been dead for more than two years. Not every estate that technically qualifies for summary administration should be handled through summary administration. In a summary administration, there is no personal representative appointed, which means that the estate cannot deal with creditors or taxing authorities, and cannot handle complex or messy probate issues.

If the estate does not qualify for summary administration yet is fairly simple, the probate can be resolved in about five months. There is a 3 month creditor period during which the estate has to wait for creditor claims to be filed. the three-month creditor window starts from the first publication date of the notice to creditors. From the time that a client engaged the probate attorney to the time that the first notice of creditors is published can take about a month. (During that time period the paperwork to open the estate is prepared and filed, and a hearing before the probate judge must be had to open the estate.)

Assuming that the assets are easy to administer and that no accountings have to be prepared because the beneficiaries waive their rights to accountings, the estate should be able to be closed several weeks after the creditor period expires. If there are no creditors, the process to make final distribution to the beneficiaries and close the estate can begin. The time for this process should be in total about five months.

In estates where accountings have to be prepared and filed, the time for probate can typically go about one year. Each beneficiary is entitled to an accounting, has an opportunity to object and a hearing can be held on the objections, if any. If there are no other complexities with the estate the one year target can usually be met in Florida.

Many Florida probate orders can be appealed.  If there is inheritance litigation and then an appeal is filed, add another year and one half to the time for the probate to conclude.  Therefore, the answer to “how long does probate take in Florida” can vary from several months to several years, depending on the size of the estate, and if there is any litigation.

Being the personal representative of a Florida estate carries with it certain fiduciary duties, including the duties of honesty, loyalty, prudence, and a duty to account.

Here are 6 ways to avoid breaching your duty as a Florida personal representative:

  • Avoid Self-Dealing: Self dealing occurs when the personal representative engages in transactions between the personal representative and the estate, taking advantage of the personal representative’s position and acting in furtherance of the personal representative’s own interests instead of the beneficiaries’ interests.  Self-dealing can be anything from misappropriating assets, or usurping opportunities for the personal representative’s own benefit.
  • Obey Court Orders:  Failure to obey court orders is a ground to remove a Florida personal representative. Courts will often enter orders with deadlines for the personal representative to complete a certain act, such as filing an accounting. If the court orders you to do something, do it, and do it within the time frame required.  Read Personal Representative In Contempt of Court – Due Process Trumps Breach of Fiduciary Duty.
  • Do Not Invest Improperly:  The Personal Representative of a Florida estate is required to invest the assets of the estate cautiously and conservatively. When estate assets are invested improperly by the personal representative and loss is caused to the estate, a breach of fiduciary duty may have occurred. The breach of fiduciary duty can be remedied by an action for breach of fiduciary duty, which is sometimes called a surcharge action. The personal representative could be held personally responsible for the loss to the estate.
  • Do Not Overly Compensate Yourself:  Personal representatives are entitled to reasonable compensation as set forth by the Florida Probate Code (see here), based off of the size of the probate estate and certain other factors if relevant. If the Florida personal representative takes a fee greater than what the court deems reasonable, the Florida probate court can reduce the compensation paid to the Florida personal representative.
  • Do Not Commit Fraud: Although this one seems obvious, do not steal from the estate or otherwise commit intentional acts of fraud, deceit, and dishonesty. A personal representative has a fiduciary duty of honesty and loyalty.
  • Follow the Florida Probate Code and Florida Probate Rules:  The Florida Probate Code provides detailed rules governing the conduct of the personal representative. The Florida Probate Rules govern the procedural requirements for administering an estate, and must also be carefully followed. When a Florida personal representative violates these rules, an inheritance can be jeopardized, and the personal representative can be found to have violated his fiduciary duties.

The easiest way to avoid breaching your duties as a Florida personal representative is to follow your Florida probate lawyer‘s direction, follow the court’s orders, and communicate openly and honestly with the estate beneficiaries about the assets of the estate and the status of the administration.  To learn about the responsibilities of the personal representative, click here.

Ancillary probate in Florida is required to pass ownership of assets in Florida to beneficiaries, where the decedent was living in another state at the time of death.  If the state of residence has (or had) a probate administration, the ancillary administration can proceed in Florida.  If there was no probate administration in the home state, the procedure in Florida is technically called non domiciliary probate.

When the decedent owned real estate in Florida, ancillary administration will be required to pass ownership of the real estate to the heirs.  The statute governing administration, Section 734.102, provides:

If a nonresident of this state dies leaving assets in this state, credits due from residents in this state, or liens on property in this state, a personal representative specifically designated in the decedent’s will to administer the Florida property shall be entitled to have ancillary letters issued, if qualified to act in Florida.

Ancillary administration applies to assets, not creditors.  Therefore, a creditor, if located in Florida, may file a claim in the domiciliary estate of the decedent.  If there are also assets located in Florida, the creditor could, as an option, open ancillary administration in Florida – especially if the heirs of the estate are being dilatory or are otherwise acting to defeat claims through the passage of time.

Ancillary administration follows the same procedure as a regular domiciliary estate in Florida, including terms of bond, notice to creditors, and the ability to sell property and pay debts.  The biggest difference is that, at the conclusion of the ancillary administration, the assets can be distributed to either the beneficiaries or to the domiciliary estate, for further administration there.

If the property owned by the decedent in Florida is valued at less than $50,000 and the decedent died with a will, the personal representative in the domiciliary administration may be able to conduct a “summary” ancillary administration as set out in Florida Statute Section  734.1025.  In order to conduct the “summary” ancillary administration, the domiciliary personal representative needs to file an authenticated or exemplified copy of the foreign probate administration showing the will and beneficiaries with the clerk of court where the Florida property is located. The domiciliary personal representative will then need to notice the creditors of the decedent in accordance with the Florida Probate Rules. If any creditors file a statement of claim, the administration must be conducted as a traditional ancillary administration with a personal representative appointed. If no statements of claim are filed within the appropriate time period, the assets can be distributed to the domiciliary estate.

Regarding the appointment of a personal representative in the Florida ancillary estate, Section 734.102 sets forth an order of preference.  A person named in a will to administer the Florida estate has first preference, followed by a person appointed as the domiciliary personal representative, assuming the person is otherwise qualified to serve.  In the absence of the prior two preferences, a distinction is made between testate estates (where the majority in interest of the beneficiaries decides if persons named cannot or will not serve) and intestate estates, where the surviving spouse has preference.
In Piloto v. Lauria, 45 So. 3d 565 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2010), the court handling the domiciliary estate in Venezuela held that the children of the decedent were a majority of the heirs.  The estate was intestate and no personal representative had been appointed in Venezuela.  The children sought to name the ancillary personal representative in Florida, and the surviving spouse also sought appointment.  In ruling in favor of the wife, the court explained: Subsection (1)’s first four sentences all address a situation in which the decedent dies testate, that is, with a will. Subsection (1)’s fifth sentence (underlined above) is the only sentence which addresses what occurs “[i]f the decedent dies intestate.” In that situation, “the order of preference for appointment of a personal representative as prescribed in this code shall apply.” As the circuit court found, that language directs us to section 733.301(1)(b), Florida Statutes (2008), which provides that, in granting letters of administration in intestate estates, the order of preference is “[t]he surviving spouse” followed by “[t]he person selected by a majority in interest of the heirs.” Such an interpretation does not conflict with subsection (4)’s insistence that “[a]ll proceedings for appointment and administration of an estate shall be as similar to those in original administrations as possible.” Here, the original administration did not involve the appointment of any personal representative, so appointing the wife as the ancillary personal representative does not conflict with the original administration.
regarding creditor claims, intestate succession, interpretation and meaning of language, and even the formalities for making a will, which state’s law applies can determine the outcome of a dispute where probate in more than one state is taking place. The starting point is the United States Supreme Court decision of Jones v. Habersham, 107 U.S. 174 (1883), which holds that the law of the state in which real estate is located controls the disposition of such real estate. Regarding creditor claims, if Florida is the ancillary estate, Florida Statute Section 734.102(7) provides that “No property shall be sold, leased, or mortgaged to pay a debt or claim that is barred by any statute of limitation or of nonclaim of this state.” Clearly, an out of state creditor cannot pursue a late (in Florida) claim against a Florida ancillary estate.  But Section 734.102(6) provides that the ancillary property in Florida may be distributed to beneficiaries or transferred to the domiciliary estate.  So what happens when a creditor seeks to collect its claim in Florida when the claim would be viewed as untimely under Florida law?
In Staum v. Rubano, 120 So. 3d 109 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2013), the court held that the creditor with a late claim could still pursue its claim under the laws of the domiciliary estate, which a little “help” from the rules governing Florida ancillary administration. The decedent died domiciled in New York, owning property in Florida.  A nursing home in New York sought to collect on its bill for care, and filed claims in both the Florida and New York probates.  The claim would be considered late under Florida law, but was not late under New York law. The nursing home sought to compel an accounting of the Florida ancillary estate, and to compel the ancillary estate in Florida to transfer its assets to New York, so it could be paid under its timely claim filed in the New York probate.  The Florida court agreed, as follows:
However, to the extent the circuit court found that the nursing home’s pending claim against the New York domiciliary estate was untimely, we reverse. We are aware of no authority providing a Florida court with jurisdiction to determine that a creditor’s pending claim against a foreign domiciliary estate is untimely.
Because the nursing home’s claim against the New York domiciliary estate remains pending, we reverse the court’s second finding that the nursing home is not an interested person. The distribution of the ancillary estate’s assets may adversely affect the domiciliary estate’s ability to satisfy the nursing home’s New York claim. See § 734.102(6), Fla. Stat. (2011) (HN5 “After the payment of all expenses of administration and claims against the estate, the court may order the remaining property held by the ancillary personal representative transferred to the foreign personal representative or distributed to the beneficiaries.”).
Thus, regardless of the untimeliness of the nursing home’s claim against the ancillary estate, the nursing home remained an “interested person” in relation to both the ancillary estate and the domiciliary estate, and had standing to file its petition to compel an accounting of the ancillary estate and to transfer the ancillary estate’s assets to the domiciliary estate. See Smith v. DeParry, 86 So. 3d 1228, 1235 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012) (HN6 “Under the probate code, the term ‘interested person’ refers to a person’s or entity’s standing, i.e., the right to notice and an opportunity to be heard in a particular proceeding pending in a probate or guardianship matter.”); Fla. Prob. R. 5.150(b) (2011) (“On the petition of an interested person . . . the court may require the personal representative . . . to file an accounting or return not otherwise required by statute or rule.”). Based on the foregoing, we reverse the circuit court’s order granting the personal representative’s motion to dismiss the nursing home’s petition to compel an accounting of the ancillary estate and to transfer the ancillary estate’s assets to the domiciliary estate.

A personal representative of a Florida probate estate is required by the Florida Probate Code to file an estate inventory.  The inventory sets forth those assets that are probate assets in the hands of the personal representative.

The inventory is required to be filed no later than 60 days after the issuance of letters of administration to the personal representative.  The filing of the inventory is one of the key deadlines and timelines in Florida probate, but is often extended after motion to the court.

Probate assets should be included in the inventory.  These include assets that the personal representative takes possession of.

Included would be bank accounts, brokerage account and investments which do not contain (i) a pay on death, transfer on death or similar designation, and (ii) which are not jointly titled with right of survivorship.  An account which is titled jointly with the right of survivorship would become the property of the survivor, not the estate.  Likewise, a bank account with a pay on death designation become the property of the person listed, not the estate.  Life insurance policies payable to a named beneficiary would similarly not be included as a probate asset.  To see what assets are typically probate or non-probate assets, see the Assets of the Deceased chart.

The inventory is required to list real estate owned by the decedent, other than real estate titled as joint with rights of survivorship.  If the real estate is homestead property, it is not technically a probate asset, but Florida Probate Rule 5.340 nevertheless requires that the homestead property still be listed in a separate section of the inventory.  Read the Complete Guide to Florida Homestead.  Real estate outside of Florida, though not a Florida probate asset, is also required to be listed in a separate part of the inventory.

Florida Probate Rule 5.340 requires that the inventory be sent to the surviving spouse, each heir at law in an intestate estate, each residuary beneficiary of a testate estate, and any other interested person who requests it in writing.

Florida Probate Rule 5.340 permits each beneficiary to request a written explanation if how the inventory value of each asset was determined.  If an appraisal was obtained, a copy of the appraisal must be furnished.

There is no stated time frame to file a written objection to the inventory.  The inventory can suggest, however, certain actions that might be undertaken.  For example, if there is an issue as to whether an asset is a probate asset, and the personal representative, as shown on the inventory, takes the position that the asset is not a probate asset, proceedings could be undertaken to collect the alleged probate asset.

The value of property shown on the inventory in a Florida probate could be highly relevant if the personal representative is required to distribute different property to the residuary heirs.  For example, if there are two equal beneficiaries of an estate consisting of real estate and cash, and the personal representative proposes distributing the real estate and some cash to one beneficiary and cash to the other, the value of the real estate would be highly relevant as to how to divide up the cash.

A personal representative of a Florida probate estate is required by the Florida Probate Code to file an estate inventory.  The inventory sets forth those assets that are probate assets in the hands of the personal representative.

The inventory is required to be filed no later than 60 days after the issuance of letters of administration to the personal representative.  The filing of the inventory is one of the key deadlines and timelines in Florida probate, but is often extended after motion to the court.

Probate assets should be included in the inventory.  These include assets that the personal representative takes possession of.

Included would be bank accounts, brokerage account and investments which do not contain (i) a pay on death, transfer on death or similar designation, and (ii) which are not jointly titled with right of survivorship.  An account which is titled jointly with the right of survivorship would become the property of the survivor, not the estate.  Likewise, a bank account with a pay on death designation become the property of the person listed, not the estate.  Life insurance policies payable to a named beneficiary would similarly not be included as a probate asset.  To see what assets are typically probate or non-probate assets, see the Assets of the Deceased chart.

The inventory is required to list real estate owned by the decedent, other than real estate titled as joint with rights of survivorship.  If the real estate is homestead property, it is not technically a probate asset, but Florida Probate Rule 5.340 nevertheless requires that the homestead property still be listed in a separate section of the inventory.  Read the Complete Guide to Florida Homestead.  Real estate outside of Florida, though not a Florida probate asset, is also required to be listed in a separate part of the inventory.

Florida Probate Rule 5.340 requires that the inventory be sent to the surviving spouse, each heir at law in an intestate estate, each residuary beneficiary of a testate estate, and any other interested person who requests it in writing.

Florida Probate Rule 5.340 permits each beneficiary to request a written explanation if how the inventory value of each asset was determined.  If an appraisal was obtained, a copy of the appraisal must be furnished.

There is no stated time frame to file a written objection to the inventory.  The inventory can suggest, however, certain actions that might be undertaken.  For example, if there is an issue as to whether an asset is a probate asset, and the personal representative, as shown on the inventory, takes the position that the asset is not a probate asset, proceedings could be undertaken to collect the alleged probate asset.

The value of property shown on the inventory in a Florida probate could be highly relevant if the personal representative is required to distribute different property to the residuary heirs.  For example, if there are two equal beneficiaries of an estate consisting of real estate and cash, and the personal representative proposes distributing the real estate and some cash to one beneficiary and cash to the other, the value of the real estate would be highly relevant as to how to divide up the cash.

Read Responsibilities Of the Personal Representative In Florida Probate to learn about the other duties of a Florida personal representative

Payment of Creditors, Expenses And Beneficiaries

Attorney fees are paid in connection with Florida probate, for administration and litigation purposes. Fees can be paid to the attorney for the personal representative, as well as attorneys for beneficiaries and litigants.  Download the Complete Guide To Attorneys’ Fees In Florida Probate. Florida law states that the attorney for the personal representative, for ordinary administration services, is entitled to compensation pursuant to Section 733.6171.  Section 733.6171(3) states that a percentage of the value of the estate is presumed reasonable if calculated based on the percentage schedule: Compensation for ordinary services of attorneys in formal estate administration is presumed to be reasonable if based on the compensable value of the estate, which is the inventory value of the probate estate assets and the income earned by the estate during the administration as provided in the following schedule: (a) One thousand five hundred dollars for estates having a value of $40,000 or less. (b) An additional $750 for estates having a value of more than $40,000 and not exceeding $70,000. (c) An additional $750 for estates having a value of more than $70,000 and not exceeding $100,000. (d) For estates having a value in excess of $100,000, at the rate of 3 percent on the next $900,000. (e) At the rate of 2.5 percent for all above $1 million and not exceeding $3 million. (f) At the rate of 2 percent for all above $3 million and not exceeding $5 million. (g) At the rate of 1.5 percent for all above $5 million and not exceeding $10 million. (h) At the rate of 1 percent for all above $10 million. Florida Attorney Fee Calculator (Ordinary Services, Percentage Method, Section 733.6171)

In Florida probate, the court appointed personal representative, also known as the executor, is entitled to a personal representative fee.  The Florida probate statute that governs personal representative fees in Florida is Section 733.617, which allows a percentage fee, as well as extraordinary fees.

The percentage personal representative fee is computed as follows:

  • 3% of the first $1 million
  • 2.5% for amounts above $1 million up to $5 million
  • 2% for amounts above $5 million up to $10 million
  • 1.5% for amounts above $10 million

The percentage amounts set forth above are based upon the inventory value of the probate estate.  This means that the value of protected homestead is excluded from the percentage calculation of personal representative fees in Florida, because protected homestead is not a probate asset.  However, if a personal representative wants fees associated with work regarding a decedent’s homestead, they can petition for extraordinary fees.  To learn more about homestead property in Florida and fees with respect to homestead property, read the Complete Guide to Florida Homestead.

In addition, a Florida personal representative may be entitled to further fees and compensation for extraordinary services, including but not limited to:

  • selling real or personal property
  • conducting litigation on behalf of the estate
  • involvement in tax proceedings
  • carrying on the decedent’s business
  • dealing with protected homestead

Extraordinary personal representative fees would normally be paid hourly, although an alternative arrangement is not precluded by Florida law.  The statute, Section 733.617, requires that a petition be filed to approve the extraordinary compensation.

Yes, the personal representative fee may be adjusted upwards or downwards, upon petition by an interested person, based on the following criteria:

(a) The promptness, efficiency, and skill with which the administration was handled by the personal representative;
(b) The responsibilities assumed by and the potential liabilities of the personal representative;
(c) The nature and value of the assets that are affected by the decedent’s death;
(d) The benefits or detriments resulting to the estate or interested persons from the personal representative’s services;
(e) The complexity or simplicity of the administration and the novelty of the issues presented;
(f) The personal representative’s participation in tax planning for the estate and the estate’s beneficiaries and in tax return preparation, review, or approval;
(g) The nature of the probate, nonprobate, and exempt assets, the expenses of administration, the liabilities of the decedent, and the compensation paid to other professionals and fiduciaries;
(h) Any delay in payment of the compensation after the services were furnished; and
(i) Any other relevant factors.

Yes, two personal representatives may each be paid a full personal representative commission if the estate is valued at $100,000 or more.  If the estate is less than $100,000, one personal representative’s fee is split between them.

Among many other things, the Florida Probate Code (Ch. 731 – 735, Fla. Stat.) specifies how and when a beneficiary of an estate will receive his or her share of assets. While pending litigation can substantially delay the distribution of asset, the Code provides for a beneficiary to receive an interim (partial) distribution in a Florida estate while administration and litigation are ongoing.

The individual or entity who presides over the probate process is known in Florida as the personal representative(administrator(trix) or executor(trix) in other jurisdictions). From a technical standpoint, it is the personal representative who facilitates distribution of assets to the beneficiaries per the terms of a will (testate) or Florida law (intestate).

The Probate Code, which sets forth the powers of a personal representative, explicitly authorizes the personal representative to make a partial distribution, or interim distribution, to beneficiaries. Fla. Stat. § 733.612(26). Importantly, this power to make interim distributions during administration is not absolute. Rather, certain predicates must be established, and where there is a dispute as to the propriety of the interim distribution, a court order may be necessary.

Fundamental to the concept of a partial distribution of assets being made to a beneficiary are the existence of (i) a beneficiary and (ii) sufficient assets.

Accordingly, it must be undisputed that the proposed distributee is a beneficiary. Where there is pending litigation as to an individual’s beneficial interest, a partial distribution cannot be made.

Second, there must be sufficient assets from which to make the interim distribution.

The Probate Code only authorizes the personal representative to make distribution of probate assets.

Even if there are sufficient probate assets in the abstract, a showing must be made that the assets sought to be distributed are not necessary to satisfy claims, administrative expenses, taxes, family allowance, exempt property, or elective share. Fla. Stat. § 733.612(26).

If you are a beneficiary of an estate and believe you are entitled to a partial or interim distribution, you may file a petition with the court where the estate is being administered. Upon demonstrating that there are sufficient assets to make the distribution without compromising the estate as set forth above, the court will likely grant the request.

As most legal answers go, the answer to “Is a Cooperative Apartment Realty or Personalty in Florida Probate” is: it depends.  The main consideration is what state is your co-op located in?  If your co-op is in Florida, then it is treated as real property for some purposes.  will govern the co-op for purposes of exemption from forced sale by creditors and the exemption from ad valorem taxation. It is not subject to Florida’s homestead protections on devise and descent.

It is important to understand that when an individual buys into a co-op they become a shareholder of the corporation that owns the property.  As this corporate shareholder, the individual is then entitled to the exclusive use of a unit for housing in that property. This definition—treating a co-op as real property—is not uniform throughout the United States.  In fact, most states do not treat co-ops as real property.  In New York for example, where an estimate 99% of the world’s cooperatives are, a co-op is considered personal property and not real property. State Tax Comm’n v. Shor378 N.Y.S.2d 222 (Sup. Ct. 1975) (holding that a co-op apartment is not sold but leased under a so-called proprietary lease, considering the nature of that proprietary lease, which a shareholder in a co-operative acquires, such lease is personalty and not realty).

How is a Co-op Treated in Probate? It is important to remember the three contexts in which Florida’s homestead law applies: Exemption from ad valorem taxation Protection from forced sale by creditors; and,Limitations on alienation and devise. Under Florida law a co-op is treated as real property for the purposes of Homestead’s exemption from forced sale by creditors; however, a cooperative apartment may not be considered homestead property for the purpose of subjecting it to Florida Statutes regulating the descent of homestead property. Phillips v. Hirshon, 958 So. 2d 425, 426 (Fla. 3d 2007) (relying on In re Estate of Wartels, 357 So. 2d 708 (Fla. 1978)).

The purchaser of a co-op in Florida does not hold any type of proprietary interest in the apartment itself, the apartment building containing the unit, or the land upon which the building is situated. See State v. Swinscoe, 376 So. 2d 1 (Fla. 1979).Devise is defined as a testamentary disposition of real or personal property. Fla. Stat. § 731.201(10).  In probate proceedings, a co-op apartment is not considered homestead property for the purpose of the limitations on devise and descent.  The constitutional protections governing descent and devise of homestead property concern an interest in realty.  A co-operative apartment does not meet this definition because co-ops do not give owners of such units title to the apartment or the land the apartment or building is situated on.  In re Estate of Wartels, 357 So. 2d at 710-11.

This is not to say that a co-op may be transferred freely without limitation.  The Supreme Court noted in In re Estate of Wartels An owner of stock in a cooperative apartment corporation is restricted from transferring that stock and is further restricted from transferring the lease he holds to the individual apartment unit. These restrictions are tied together. The transfer of the stock or the lease could not be effected without first obtaining consent from the Board of Directors of the corporation. 357 So. 2d at 709. Therefore, a co-op apartment is not considered homestead property for the purpose of the limitations on descent of the property in probate. It may freely be devised through a testamentary instrument by its owner, subject of course to the restrictions imposed by the cooperative and its Board of Directors. New York Co-Ops as Personalty Where a Florida resident, who does domiciled in the State of Florida, owned a co-op in New York, it may be necessary to open an ancillary probate proceeding in New York. Consultation with the co-op’s Board of Directors is necessary to ascertain whether there are specific restrictions on the transfer of the stock or interest in the cooperative, or whether ancillary probate will be required.  An attorney can aid you in this communication with the co-op board.

What is Florida Homestead Property?

Florida homestead property is real property no greater than one-half acre in a city or 160- acres outside a city, owned by a Florida resident, who must be a natural person or revocable trust (not a corporation or other type of entity).  If your Florida property is homestead, you are entitled to certain exemptions and protections under the Florida Constitution.

You can only have one homesteaded real property in the State of Florida.

You must be a Florida Resident to claim the homestead protections and benefit from the homestead exemptions.

If you spend part of your time in Florida and part in another location, there are several indicia of residency that courts will look at if residency is in dispute.  These include where you vote, where you have a driver’s license, where your mail goes, and where you spend most of your time.

Florida homestead protections only apply to property within certain acreage limitations.  If the property is within a municipality, then the homestead exemption applies to:

one-half acre of contiguous land, upon which the exemption shall be limited to the residence of the owner or the owner’s family

If the property is outside of a municipality, then the homestead exemption applies:

to the extent of one hundred sixty acres of contiguous land and improvements thereon, which shall not be reduced without the owner’s consent by reason of subsequent inclusion in a municipality.

For homestead protection, the property must be owned by a natural person or revocable trust, not a corporation or any other entity.

  1. Provides homesteads with an exemption from taxes;
  2. Protects homesteads from forced sale by creditors
  3. Places certain restrictions on a homestead owner from alienating or devising the homestead
These three different homestead protections are discussed at length below, and are set forth in Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution, which states: (a) There shall be exempt from forced sale under process of any court, and no judgment, decree or execution shall be a lien thereon, except for the payment of taxes and assessments thereon, obligations contracted for the purchase, improvement or repair thereof, or obligations contracted for house, field or other labor performed on the realty, the following property owned by a natural person: (1) a homestead, if located outside a municipality, to the extent of one hundred sixty acres of contiguous land and improvements thereon, which shall not be reduced without the owner’s consent by reason of subsequent inclusion in a municipality; or if located within a municipality, to the extent of one-half acre of contiguous land, upon which the exemption shall be limited to the residence of the owner or the owner’s family; (2) personal property to the value of one thousand dollars. (b) These exemptions shall inure to the surviving spouse or heirs of the owner. (c) The homestead shall not be subject to devise if the owner is survived by spouse or minor child, except the homestead may be devised to the owner’s spouse if there be no minor child. The owner of homestead real estate, joined by the spouse if married, may alienate the homestead by mortgage, sale or gift and, if married, may by deed transfer the title to an estate by the entirety with the spouse. If the owner or spouse is incompetent, the method of alienation or encumbrance shall be as provided by law. The Florida Probate Code defines “protected homestead” in Section 731.201(33): “Protected homestead” means the property described in s. 4(a)(1), Art. X of the State Constitution on which at the death of the owner the exemption inures to the owner’s surviving spouse or heirs under s. 4(b), Art. X of the State Constitution. For purposes of the code, real property owned in tenancy by the entireties or in joint tenancy with rights of survivorship is not protected homestead.
The public policy furthered by a homestead exemption is to: promote the stability and welfare of the state by securing to the householder a home, so that the homeowner and his or her heirs may live beyond the reach of financial misfortune and the demands of creditors who have given credit under such law.  Public Health Trust v. Lopez, 531 So. 2d 946, 948 (Fla. 1988). McKean v. Warburton, 919 So. 2d 341 (Fla. 2005).  Homestead protections have been construed liberally by Florida Courts.
The Florida Constitution also protects Florida homestead property from creditors, stating that the Florida homestead: shall be exempt from forced sale under process of any court, and no judgment, decree or execution shall be a lien thereon, except for the payment of taxes and assessments thereon, obligations contracted for the purchase, improvement or repair thereof, or obligations contracted for house, field or other labor performed on the realty… This means that a creditor cannot force the sale of your homestead in order to satisfy a judgment against you.  This protection does not apply to creditors associated with your homestead, such as your mortgage company or the contractor that renovated your kitchen.
Yes, you can purchase a homestead to avoid creditors.  As the Florida Supreme Court has stated: The transfer of nonexempt assets into an exempt homestead with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors is not one of the three exceptions to the homestead exemption provided in article X, section 4. Nor can we reasonably extend our equitable lien jurisprudence to except such conduct from the exemption’s protection. We have invoked equitable principles to reach beyond the literal language of the excepts only where funds obtained through fraud or egregious conduct were used to invest in, purchase, or improve the homestead. Havoco of Am. v. Hill, 790 So. 2d 1018, 1028 (Fla. 2001). Therefore, if someone purchases a homestead in order to not pay a judgment creditor, the exemptions afforded by the Florida Constitution will still apply. But, if funds obtained through fraud are used to invest in, purchase, or improve the homestead, Florida courts might very well reach beyond the exemptions and take away the protections.  The homestead exemption is not to be so liberally construed as to make it an instrument of fraud or imposition upon creditors. A homestead purchased to avoid paying a creditor is still protected because: the Florida constitutional exemption of homesteads protects the homestead against every type of claim and judgment except those specifically mentioned in the constitutional provision itself. Olesky v. Nicholas, 82 So. 2d 510, 513 (Fla. 1955).

In bankruptcy, you are not entitled to the unlimited protection against creditors for homesteads.  Instead, the Florida homestead protection only applies if a debtor has lived in Florida for at least 40 months.  The homestead property must not be larger than a ½ acre in a municipality, and 160 acres outside a municipality.

If a debtor in bankruptcy does not meet the 40-month Florida residency requirement the homestead exemption is capped.  The cap per current federal law is $160,375.

A surviving spouse and minor children will always inherit the Florida homestead property, regardless of what the will says.  If there are no minor children and no surviving spouse, the Florida homestead can be bequeathed to anyone.

If there is no will and no minor children, the share of the surviving spouse will depend on whether there are any adult children.

If there are no surviving descendants of the decedent, then the surviving spouse inherits the entire homestead.

If the decedent is survived by one or more descendants, the surviving spouse takes a life estate, with the remainder in fee simple to the descendants.  The surviving spouse may elect to take a 1/2 interest as tenant in common rather than a life estate, discussed below.

If there is no will and no surviving spouse, but decedent was survived by minor children, then the homestead goes in fee simple to the decedent’s descendants in being.

If there is no surviving spouse and no minor children, the Florida homestead passes just like any other asset according to Florida’s law of intestacy.

Share of other heirs.—The part of the intestate estate not passing to the surviving spouse under s. 732.102, or the entire intestate estate if there is no surviving spouse, descends as follows:

(1) To the descendants of the decedent.

(2) If there is no descendant, to the decedent’s father and mother equally, or to the survivor of them.

(3) If there is none of the foregoing, to the decedent’s brothers and sisters and the descendants of deceased brothers and sisters.

(4) If there is none of the foregoing, the estate shall be divided, one-half of which shall go to the decedent’s paternal, and the other half to the decedent’s maternal, kindred in the following order:

(a) To the grandfather and grandmother equally, or to the survivor of them.

(b) If there is no grandfather or grandmother, to uncles and aunts and descendants of deceased uncles and aunts of the decedent.

(c) If there is either no paternal kindred or no maternal kindred, the estate shall go to the other kindred who survive, in the order stated above.

(5) If there is no kindred of either part, the whole of the property shall go to the kindred of the last deceased spouse of the decedent as if the deceased spouse had survived the decedent and then died intestate entitled to the estate.

(6) If none of the foregoing, and if any of the descendants of the decedent’s great-grandparents were Holocaust victims as defined in s. 626.9543(3)(a), including such victims in countries cooperating with the discriminatory policies of Nazi Germany, then to the descendants of the great-grandparents. The court shall allow any such descendant to meet a reasonable, not unduly restrictive, standard of proof to substantiate his or her lineage. This subsection only applies to escheated property and shall cease to be effective for proceedings filed after December 31, 2004.

As provided in the Florida Constitution, homestead property cannot be freely devised if the owner is survived by a spouse or minor children.

If the decedent is survived by a spouse and no minor children, the surviving spouse must be bequeathed either a life estate in the property, or the entire fee simple interest in the property.  If the surviving spouse was bequeathed a life estate, the bequest is valid and the remainder interest can be bequeathed to anyone.

If the surviving spouse is bequeathed neither a life estate nor the entire property, the spouse is automatically entitled to a life estate, and any children of the deceased receive the remainder.

Because there are minor children and no surviving spouse, the homestead cannot be devised.  Section 732.4015.  The homestead will descend to the decedent’s descendants in being.

If there is a surviving spouse and minor children, then the homestead cannot be devised.  By operation of law the surviving spouse will receive a life estate, with the remainder to descendants in being.

If there is no surviving spouse or minor children, the homestead can be freely devised.  If the homestead is devised to persons outside of the class of intestate heirs, the protections will not inure to those devisees.

The surviving spouse is permitted, in lieu of a life estate, to elect to take an undivided one-half interest in the homestead as a tenant in common, with the remaining undivided one-half interest vesting in the decedent’s descendants in being at the time of decedent’s death.  This is called a tenant-in-common election (“TIC Election”).  The TIC election must be made within 6 months of the decedent’s death and must be recorded in the official record book of the county where the homestead property is located.  Section 732.401.

A one-half tenant in common interest gives the surviving spouse an ownership interest in the homestead, which allows the surviving spouse to bring a partition action to sell the property. If the property is sold, the surviving spouse will generally receive one-half of the proceeds of any sale. Prior to the enactment of the revised Florida Homestead statute, if the Homestead was not devised in a way that was permitted by Florida law, the surviving spouse automatically received a life estate in the Homestead property and any minor children received a vested remainder in the property.  The life estate interest could not be partitioned, which required the surviving spouse and children of the deceased to negotiate a sale of the homestead.  If there was no agreement, the property could not be sold.

These arcane rules strained many family relationships, especially in second marriages. In these situations, the Florida Principal and Income Act governs the allocation of expenses between the life estate and vested remainder interest. The surviving spouse is generally responsible for any interest payments on the mortgage, property taxes, property insurance and repairs and the children are generally responsible for principal mortgage payments on the residence and any substantial capital expenditures.

To add another complicating factor, if the surviving spouse ever wanted to downsize, the surviving spouse had to negotiate with the children to allow a sale and they would have to determine a value for her life estate. While many see the new statute as a beneficial change, it is also important to note that it is to the detriment of the decedent’s minor children in many cases.  A very elderly widow will receive one-half of the Homestead, rather than a life estate which may have zero value.  The real winners in some situations will be the surviving spouse’s children from an earlier marriage.  To read a case study about how homestead, divorce, and surviving spouses intersect, click here.

When a homestead owner dies, the homestead exemptions and protections inure to those people who are within the class of intestate heirs and are to receive the property upon the owner’s death.

“Any person to whom homestead property is devised under a will and who is categorized as an “heir” in the intestacy statute, regardless of whether that person would be next in line had the decedent died intestate, receives protected homestead property under the Florida Constitution.”  Snyder v. Davis, 699 So. 2d 999 (Fla. 1997).

Therefore, whether by devise or by the laws of descent and distribution, if the homestead property is inherited by someone within the class of intestate heirs, the protections impressed upon that homestead inure to those beneficiaries.

Homestead status is determined at the death of the decedent.  See Wilson v. Fla. Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 64 So. 2d 309, 313 (Fla. 1953).   “[T]he benefits of homestead protections vest in a qualified beneficiary at the moment of a testator’s death…”  Cutler v. Cutler, 994 So. 2d 341, 345 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008).

Therefore, if beneficiaries sell the homestead property after the death of the decedent, because the beneficiaries’ homestead rights attached prior to the sale, “the proceeds of that sale are protected from the claims of the decedent’s creditors.”  White v. Theodore Parker, P.A. (in Re Estate of Hamel), 821 So. 2d 1276, 1280 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002) (property rights, including homestead, passing by virtue of the death of a person vest at the time of death).

Yes, homestead property held by a revocable trust is treated as if held directly by the grantor of the revocable trust.

Section 732.4015 of the Florida Probate Code provides:

(1) As provided by the Florida Constitution, the homestead shall not be subject to devise if the owner is survived by a spouse or a minor child or minor children, except that the homestead may be devised to the owner’s spouse if there is no minor child or minor children.

(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the term:

(a) “Owner” includes the grantor of a trust described in s. 733.707(3) that is evidenced by a written instrument which is in existence at the time of the grantor’s death as if the interest held in trust was owned by the grantor.

(b) “Devise” includes a disposition by trust of that portion of the trust estate which, if titled in the name of the grantor of the trust, would be the grantor’s homestead.

In Aronson v. Aronson, 81 So.3d 515 (3rd DCA 2012), the decedent had transferred his property to a revocable trust, and then became a Florida resident.  At the time of his death, the property was his homestead property.  The revocable trust bequeathed a life estate to the spouse, in trust, with the remainder interest, in trust, to the decedent’s children from an earlier marriage.  The revocable trust also provided for payments to the surviving spouse of money every year.  The trust held no other assets from which to make the payments or to otherwise pay to maintain the property.

A dispute ensued between the surviving spouse, the decedent’s children, and trustee over how to administer the trust and the homestead property.

The appellate court held that, because the property was homestead property, the property was not subject to disposition through the revocable trust.  At the moment of death, the property passed to its owners:

In a twinkle of an eye, as it were, to his wife for life, and thereafter to his surviving sons.  * * * From that moment forward, the trustees had no power or authority with respect to the former marital home.  The widow became responsible for the expenses of the property, and, of course, remains so for as long as she remains a life tenant.

No.  “Homestead property, whether devised or not, passes outside of the probate estate.”

Clifton v. Clifton, 553 So. 2d 192, 194 n. 3 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989).   “Neither executors nor administrators have at any time in this State had any jurisdiction over the homestead of a deceased person.  The homestead is in no wise an asset of the estate of a decedent.” Cavanaugh v. Cavanaugh, 542 So. 2d 1345, 1351 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989) “[W]hen devised to a qualified heir, decedent’s homestead property is not distributed as part of the decedent’s estate, and passes directly to the designated heir.”  Estate of Shefner v. Shefner-Holden, 2 So. 3d 1076, 1078  (Fla. 3d DCA 2009).  A homestead order is not required “to pass title to persons entitled to homestead property…”  Clifton v. Clifton, So. 2d 192, 194 (5th DCA 1989).

This can be a source of confusion, since the probate court will rule on petitions to determine the homestead status of property and enter orders of homestead.  But, the probate court is basically confirming rights that existed at the time of death, not creating new rights at the time of the entry of a homestead order.

The scope of a personal representative’s authority over a decedent’s homestead property is set forth in Fla. Stat. § 733.607(1), which provides that:

Except as otherwise provided by a decedent’s will, every personal representative has a right to, and shall take possession or control of, the decedent’s property, except the protected homestead.

Fla. Stat. § 733.608 goes one step further, explaining that the protected homestead is not an asset in the hands of the personal representative.  Thus, the default rule in Florida is that, a personal representative is required to take possession of all of a decedent’s non-homestead property; however, homestead property does not become part of the probate estate subject to administration by the personal representative.  See, e.g., Harrell v. Snyder, et al., 913 So.2d 749 (Fla. 5th DCA 2005).

Because of these statutory directives, a personal representative’s exercise of dominion over homestead is limited in both scope and circumstance.  As a general rule, if real property appears to be homestead, the personal representative may:

[T]ake possession of the property for the limited purpose of preserving, insuring, and protecting it for the person having an interest in the property, pending a determination of homestead status.

Fla. Stat. § 733.608(2).

Importantly, this statute does not alter the status of the property—it is still non-probate homestead—it merely outlines what the personal representative can do during the administration process.

Yes.  Section 732.2035 states that: “The decedent’s interest in property which constitutes the protected homestead of the decedent” enters into the elective estate. Section 732.2035, Fla. Stat.

An exception exists if there has been a waiver of homestead rights by the surviving spouse. Section 732.2045(1)(i) governs exclusions and states:

(i) Property which constitutes the protected homestead of the decedent if the surviving spouse validly waived his or her homestead rights as provided under s. 732.702, or otherwise under applicable law, and such spouse did not receive any interest in the protected homestead upon the decedent’s death.

If upon the death of the spouse, the surviving spouse gets fee simple title to the homestead property, then the property is valued at fair market value on the date of decedent’s death.  Section 732.2055(1).

If the surviving spouse takes a life estate, or elects to take a tenant-in-common interest, then the homestead property is valued at one-half of the fair market value on the decedent’s date of death for purposes of the elective estate.  Section 732.2055

No.  The statutory percentage compensation for the personal representative and the attorney for the personal representative for ordinary services is computed based on set amounts and percentages of the compensable value of the estate.  See § 733.617, Fla. Stat. (personal representative commission) and § 733.6171, Fla. Stat. (compensation of attorney for the personal representative).

The compensable value of the estate is “the inventory value of the probate estate assets and the income earned by the estate during administration.”  Id.  The inventory value of the probate estate does not include the value of the homestead real property.  Fla. Prob. R. 5.340 [“include for each listed item (excluding real property appearing to be protected homestead property) its estimated fair market value at the date of the decedent’s death.”].

The value of homestead property is not included in the inventory, because homestead property is not an asset of the estate.  See Fla. Prob. R. 5.340.  See Clifton v. Clifton, 553 So. 2d 192, 194 n.3 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989) (“Homestead property, whether devised or not, passes outside of the probate estate…it is not an asset of the estate.”).

Therefore, percentage fees are not permitted to be taken on the value of the exempt homestead property.

Yes, the probate lawyer representing the personal representative and the personal representative can be paid for working on the homestead property.  However, receiving such fees requires some extra steps, by either filing and perfecting 733.608 lien, or by petitioning for fees for extraordinary services.

If the personal representative opts to take possession of the protected homestead for the limited purpose of preserving, insurance and protecting the homestead, section 733.608(3) provides lien rights to the personal representative.  Section 733.608(3) states, in part, that:

If the personal representative expends funds or incurs obligations to preserve, maintain, insure, or protect the property referenced in subsection (2), the personal representative shall be entitled to a lien on that property and its revenues to secure repayment of those expenditures and obligations incurred. These expenditures and obligations incurred, including, but not limited to, fees and costs, shall constitute a debt owed to the personal representative that is charged against and which may be secured by a lien on the protected homestead, as provided in this section.

In order to be entitled to a lien, the personal representative must take possession of the property (which cannot be occupied by an interested person), and the funds expended must be incurred for the purpose of preserving, maintaining, insuring, or protecting the homestead property.

Under Florida law, the personal representative is required to file a Notice of Taking Possession of Protected Homestead pursuant to Florida Probate Rule 5.404.  The notice is required to contain:

  1. A legal description of the property;
  2. a statement of the limited purpose for preserving, insuring, and protecting it for the heirs or devisees pending a determination of the homestead status;
  3. the name and address of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney;
  4. if the personal representative is in possession when the notice is filed, the date the personal representative took possession.
 

In Herrilka v. Yates, a probate court’s order awarding a lien on the protected homestead was reversed.  The order was reversed because the decedent’s alleged spouse lived in the house at all times, meaning the curator never took possession of the property, and because the fees requested were related to the estate administration, not for the preservation of the homestead property.

In order to determine the amount of the debt secured by the lien, the personal representative is required to file a petition and must serve formal notice on the persons appearing to have an interest in the property.

Both the personal representative and the attorney for the personal representative have the option of petitioning for fees for extraordinary services.  “Dealing with protected homestead” can be considered an extraordinary service of the personal representative.  Section 733.617, Fla. Stat. (compensation of personal representative).  The attorney for the personal representative may petition for additional compensation for “legal advice regarding homestead status of real property or proceedings involving that status and services related to protected homestead.” Section 733.6171 (compensation of attorney for the personal representative).

In order to receive fees from the estate for extraordinary services, a petition must be filed.  These extraordinary fees would be in addition to fees for ordinary services in the estate.

There is one situation where the homestead property can lose its homestead protection after the death of the owner.  As held by the Florida Supreme Court:

“It is only when the testator specifies in the will that the homestead is to be sold and the proceeds are to be divided that the homestead loses its “protected” status.”

McKean v. Warburton, 919 So. 2d 341, 346-347 (Fla. 2005).

Yes, the homestead rights and protections can be waived. However, since homestead is a constitutionally protected right, any waiver must be made “knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently” and waivers of the homestead protections cannot be made in an unsecured agreement.  Chames v. DeMayo, 972 So. 2d 850, 861 (Fla. 2007).

Therefore, a purported waiver of homestead rights contained in an unsecured agreement is not enforceable under Florida law.

No Waiver – Chames v. DeMayo

Chames v. DeMayo involved a creditor (an attorney) seeking fees by placing a lien on the homestead property.  The Florida Supreme Court had to determine whether a “waiver” of the homestead exemption can occur in a retainer agreement.  The answer was no, and the waiver of homestead protections found in the retainer agreement was not a valid way to award a lien for attorney’s fees on the client’s homestead.  The Court stated:

Requiring that a waiver of the homestead exemption be made in the context of a mortgage assures that the waiver is made knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily. In obtaining a mortgage, a homeowner is well aware that if the payments are not made, the home may be foreclosed upon. As we noted in Carter, “the very nature of the transaction implies the exercise of discretion and the contemplation of inevitable consequences.” Carter, 20 Fla. at 570. A mortgage assures that the waiver of the homestead exemption, like the waiver of other rights, is made with eyes wide open–not inadvertently, deep in the entrails of a retainer agreement. Those who truly wish to waive their homestead exemption–including DeMayo–can do so.

Chames v. DeMayo, 972 So. 2d 850, 861-862, 2007 Fla. LEXIS 2393, *33, 32 Fla. L. Weekly S 820

Waiver – Stone v. Stone

In a 2014 case from Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeals, the appellate court ruled that boilerplate language in a deed operated as a waiver of the spouse’s homestead rights.  Stone_v._Stone, 157 So. 3d 295, (Fla. 4th DCA 2014).

In Stone, the husband and wife married.  After the marriage, they executed a deed conveying their homestead property to themselves, as tenants in common.  The husband then conveyed his one-half tenant in common interest to a qualified personal residence trust (QPRT). The wife joined in the deed (which is required to covey homestead property in Florida).

The husband did not survive the term of the QPRT, which causes the property to revert back to the husband’s estate.  The husband’s estate planning documents put the husband’s share of the homestead property into trust for the benefit of the wife.  At her death, the property would go to their daughter.  Their son was excluded as a beneficiary of the husband’s estate  plan.  The wife then died.  The son claimed rights in the property, as homestead, contending that the planning that had taken place was not effective to deprive him of his remainder interest homestead rights.

The Court held that there were two transfers that took place.  The first was the husband’s transfer of his interest to the QPRT, and the second was the subsequent transfer of the interest to the daughter after the wife’s death.

The first transfer of the property to the QPRT was not an impermissible “devise” of the property because it was an inter vivos transfer because the settlor did not retain a power to revest himself with the property, pursuant to Section 732.4017(1).

The second transfer entailed the reversion of the property to the husband’s estate (because he did not survive the term of the QPRT), and then passed to the daughter under the terms of the husband’s will.  The court held that this second transfer was a devise, i.e., a testamentary disposition, which cannot be used to circumvent the restrictions on the devise of homestead property when there is a spouse.

The Florida Constitution states that homestead property cannot be devised if the owner is survived by a spouse, unless the devise is to the spouse.  The devise to the daughter would therefore be ineffective unless the wife waived her homestead rights, which the Court held that she did.

The Court held that the wife waived her homestead rights by executing the deed splitting the property into two one-half tenancy in common interests.

Alma waived her homestead rights by executing the March 27, 2000 warranty deed splitting the property into two one-half tenancy in common interests and then transferring her interest into her QPRT. Section 732.702, Florida Statutes, provides in part, that “[t]he rights of a surviving spouse to . . . homestead . . . may be waived, wholly or partly, before or after marriage, by a written contract, agreement, or waiver, signed by the waiving party in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.” § 732.702(1), Fla. Stat. (2011). Further, “[u]nless the waiver provides to the contrary, a waiver of ‘all rights,’ or equivalent language” may constitute a waiver of all homestead rights that would otherwise pass to the waiving spouse by intestate succession. Id.  The deed Alma executed on March 27, 2000, provided that she “grants, bargains, sells, aliens, remises, releases, conveys, and confirms” the property “together with all the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereto belonging or in anywise appertaining.” We agree with the trial court that this constituted a waiver of any constitutional homestead rights Alma had in Jerome’s one-half interest in the property.

Because the wife had waived her interest in the homestead property, the husband was free to devise the property as he saw fit.

What is interesting about the opinion is that the Court allowed the very important homestead rights that married spouses have in Florida to be waived via the operation of common boilerplate language found in almost every warranty deed executed in the State of Florida.

Yes, homestead can be partitioned.  In Tullis v. Tullis, 360 So. 2d 375 (Fla. 1978), the Supreme Court held that these “constitutional provisions allow the partition and forced sale of homestead property upon suit by one of the owners of that property.”

Moreover, where property is indivisible, a unilateral act of one party taking possession and claiming the homestead exemption on the property does not affect the substantial rights of the other owners of the property.  See Wescott v. Wescott, 487 So. 2d 1099, 1101 (Fla. 5th DCA 1986) (relying on Tullis, 360 So. 2d. at 377-78).

In Wescott, the Court noted that:

“[h]omestead interests should be protected from forced sale wherever possible, but not at the expense of others owning interests in the property.” Wescott, 487 So. 2d at 1101. There, exclusive possession of the home was given to the former-husband following the dissolution of the co-owners’ marriage.  A contingency was placed on this right to exclusive possession, it would only last until their children reached majority.  After the youngest child reached age 18, the former-husband moved out into another residence and sought partition.  The former-wife moved in and claimed the home as her homestead.  Id. at 1099.

The Court cited Tullis to state that:

[t]he purpose of the homestead exemption provision in our state constitution is to protect the family home from forced sale for the debts of the owner and head of the family. However, this court has never held that the homestead provision precludes a common owner of property from suing for partition and obtaining a forced sale in order to obtain the beneficial enjoyment of her interest in the property.

This understanding is important not just in divorce situations but in inheritance disputes as well.  Under Florida law, when homestead property is not validly devised, it passes to the decedent’s heirs.  Fla. Stat. § 732.401.  Moreover, unlike probate assets, which are not distributed immediately upon death, the benefits of homestead property vest at death.  Engelke v. Estate of Engelke, 921 So. 2d 693 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006).

Thus, when a decedent dies owning homestead in Florida, any heir can theoretically take possession of the property immediately upon the decedent’s death and make the property his or her own homestead.  Such action can be at odds with the wishes of the decedent’s remaining heirs.  In the absence of a right to partition the property, the aforementioned circumstance would invariably result in a race to take possession of the decedent’s homestead.  The right to partition prevents a situation in which the first heir to move in and claim the real property as their homestead wins.  Importantly, any co-owner(irrespective of his or her proportionate interest) may seek a partition of real property.

Cavanaugh v. Cavanaugh, 542 So. 2d 1345, 1351 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989) (homestead is not an estate asset)

“Neither executors nor administrators have at any time in this State had any jurisdiction over the homestead of a deceased person.  The homestead is in no wise an asset of the estate of a decedent.”

Chames v. DeMayo, 972 So. 2d 850, 861 (Fla. 2007) (waivers of homestead protections must be knowing, intelligent, and voluntary)

“We continue to hold that a waiver of the homestead exemption in an unsecured agreement is unenforceable.”

 Clifton v. Clifton, 553 So. 2d 192 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989) (personal representatives have no jurisdiction over homestead) (no homestead order is required to pass title to homestead)

“Homestead property, whether devised or not, passes outside of the probate estate. Personal representatives have no jurisdiction over nor title to homestead, and it is not an asset of the testatory estate.”

“The fact that the probate court failed to enter a formal order of distribution concerning the homestead in the Clifton probate is significant. No such order is required to pass title to persons entitled to homestead property, nor is a personal representative’s deed required.”

Cutler v. Cutler, 994 So. 2d 341, 345 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008) (homestead protections inure at death) (when testator directs sale of homestead and distribution of proceeds, homestead protections lost)

“[T]he benefits of homestead protections vest in a qualified beneficiary at the moment of a testator’s death…”

“It has long been recognized that the owner of homestead property may devise that property in a manner that terminates the protections accorded by article X, section 4. In Estate of Price v. West Florida Hospital., Inc., 513 So. 2d 767, 767 (Fla. 1st DCA 1987), the court confirmed that where a testator directs the sale of homestead property and distribution of the proceeds, the proceeds lose their homestead character and become part of the estate subject to administrative costs and creditors’ claims.”

Estate of Shefner v. Shefner-Holden, 2 So. 3d 1076 (Fla. 3d DCA 2009) (homestead is not a part of the probate estate)

“[W]hen devised to a qualified heir, decedent’s homestead property is not distributed as part of the decedent’s estate, and passes directly to the designated heir.”

Havoco of Am. v. Hill, 790 So. 2d 1018 (Fla. 2001) (purchase of homestead to evade creditors is generally permitted)

“The transfer of nonexempt assets into an exempt homestead with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors is not one of the three exceptions to the homestead exemption provided in article X, section 4. Nor can we reasonably extend our equitable lien jurisprudence to except such conduct from the exemption’s protection.”

McKean v. Warburton, 919 So. 2d 341 (Fla. 2005) (if homestead not specifically devised it goes to the residuary devisees) (only when the testator specifies in the will that the homestead is to be sold and proceeds divided does homestead lose protected status)

“[W]here a decedent is not survived by a spouse or minor children, the decedent’s homestead property passes to the residuary devisees, not the general devisees, unless there is a specific testamentary disposition ordering the property to be sold and the proceeds made a part of the general estate.”

“It is only when the testator specifies in the will that the homestead is to be sold and the proceeds are to be divided that the homestead loses its “protected” status.”

Monks v. Smith, 609 So.2d 740 (Fla. 1st DCA 1992) (Equitable principles cannot be used to deny homestead status)

“However, “the homestead protection has never been based upon principles of equity.” Public Health Trust of Dade County v. Lopez, 531 So. 2d 946, 951 (Fla. 1988). The surcharge proceeding against Monks may have been entirely appropriate, and certainly Monks will be personally liable for the judgment against her. But that in itself is an entirely separate issue from the legal question of homestead, to which the equitable defense of unclean hands has never applied.”

Snyder v. Davis, 699 So. 2d 999 (Fla. 1997) (homestead provisions construed liberally) (anyone in the class of intestate heirs who inherits homestead receives protections)

“We have consistently made it clear that the homestead provision must be given a broad and liberal construction. In the context of this case, we reject the narrow entitlement definition of the term “heirs” that includes only those people who would inherit under the intestacy statute at the death of the decedent. Instead, we hold that the homestead provision allows a testator with no surviving spouse or minor children to choose to devise, in a will, the homestead property, with its accompanying protection from creditors, to any family member within the class of persons categorized in our intestacy statute.”

Stone_v._Stone, 157 So. 3d 295 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014) (boilerplate language in deed can operate as waiver of homestead rights)

“The deed Alma executed on March 27, 2000, provided that she “grants, bargains, sells, aliens, remises, releases, conveys, and confirms” the property “together with all the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereto belonging or in anywise appertaining.” We agree with the trial court that this constituted a waiver of any constitutional homestead rights Alma had in Jerome’s one-half interest in the property.”

Tullis v. Tullis, 360 So. 2d 375 (Fla. 1978) (homestead property can be partitioned)

“We hold, with the First District, that our constitutional provisions allow the partition and forced sale of homestead property upon suit by one of the owners of that property, if such partition and forced sale is necessary to protect the beneficial enjoyment of the owners in common to the extent of their interests in the property.”

White v. Theodore Parker, P.A. (in Re Estate of Hamel), 821 So. 2d 1276 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002) (homestead protections vest at death and protection from creditors’ claims inures to heirs)

“Generally,  property rights passing by virtue of the death of a person vest at the time of death. See § 732.101(2), Fla. Stat. (2000) (involving intestate estates); § 732.514, Fla. Stat. (2000) (involving devises); Rice v. Greenberg (In re Estate of Rice), 406 So. 2d 469, 473 (Fla. 3d DCA 1981) (involving remainder interests); Estate of Broome, 375 So. 2d 594 (Fla. 5th DCA 1979) (involving dower). The same has been held true for home stead. See Wilson v. Fla. Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 64 So. 2d 309, 313 (Fla. 1953) (holding that appropriate time to determine homestead status is at death of the decedent, regardless of whether property thereafter continues to be homestead).  If the property is homestead on the date of death, the homestead protection is impressed upon the land and the protection from creditors’ claims inures to the benefit of the heirs to whom the property is devised.”

“[H]eirs’ homestead rights attached prior to the transfer and that the proceeds of that sale are protected from the claims of the decedent’s creditors.”

Wilson v. Fla. Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 64 So. 2d 309, 313 (Fla. 1953) (appropriate time to determine homestead status is at death of decedent, regardless of whether property thereafter continues to be homestead).

  • A creditor claim in Florida probate is a claim filed by a person or entity (a “creditor”) that the decedent owed money to at the time decedent died.  A creditor must file a timely statement of claim in the probate estate in order to pursue satisfaction of their creditor claim.

    Unless creditors’ claims are barred, every personal representative is required to cause notice to creditors to be published and served.  Section 733.701, Fla. Stat.

  • 30 days after the date of service of the notice to creditors on the creditor
  • 3 months after the first publication of the notice to creditors
  • 2 years from date of death for known or reasonably ascertainable creditors who did not receive notice to creditors

These deadlines can be broken down into deadlines applicable to known or reasonably ascertainable creditors and unknown creditors.

If you are a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor then you are entitled to direct notice of a Florida probate proceeding.  The Florida Supreme Court, in Jones v. Golden, resolved any confusion over when a creditor claim needs to be filed for a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor:

Creditors who are known or reasonably ascertainable need not rely on publication for notice of the pending administration of an estate. Section 733.2121(3)(a) requires a personal representative to “promptly serve a copy of the notice” on those creditors who are known or reasonably ascertainable after a diligent search. The limitations period applicable to known or reasonably ascertainable creditors does not begin to run until service is perfected. Once served with a copy of the notice, a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor must file any claim within the later of “3 months after the time of the first publication of the notice to creditors or . . . 30 days after the date of service on the creditor . . . .” § 733.702(1), Fla. Stat.

 

Under the plain language of section 733.702(1), where a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is never served with a copy of the notice to creditors, the applicable limitations period never begins to run and cannot bar that creditor’s claim. “[A]s to any creditor required to be served with a copy of the notice to creditors,” the [**15]  limitations period can only be triggered by “service on the creditor” of the required notice. § 733.702(1), Fla. Stat. A known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is absolved from the limitations of section 733.702(1) by virtue of the fact that the personal representative failed to serve the creditor with the required notice. The  [*248]  only instance in which a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is required to file any claims before the expiration of the three-month window after publication of the notice is where the last day of the three-month window occurs more than thirty days after service of the required notice.

 

Accordingly, if a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is not served with a copy of the notice, section 733.702(1) does not govern the timeliness of that creditor’s claims. Instead, the claims of such a creditor are only barred if not filed within the two-year period of repose set forth in section 733.710. Thus, the claim of a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor who was never served with a copy of the notice to creditors is timely if filed within two years of the decedent’s death. Further, because the limitations periods in section 733.702 are inapplicable under such circumstances, it is not necessary for the creditor to seek an extension of time [**16]  under section 733.702(3) since that section applies only to claims that are untimely under section 733.702.

If you are not a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor, then you get notice by publication in a local newspaper.

The limitations period applicable to unknown creditors, set forth in section 733.702(1), begins to run upon publication of the notice to creditors and ends three months after the date of the first publication.

Creditor claims and divorce often intersect, and an ex-spouse and a surviving spouse may have to file a creditor claim to enforce their rights.

A premarital or postnuptial agreement can be enforced after a prior spouse’s death, but the prior spouse must file a creditor claim to enforce this contract right.  See Spohr v. Berryman, 589 So. 2d 225 (Fla. 1991).

In Passamondi v. Passamondi, (2nd DCA 2014), Mr. and Mrs. Passamondi filed for divorce.  Mr. Passamondi requested that the divorce proceedings be bifurcated, because Mr. Passamondi was suffering from a terminal illness and presumably wanted a final judgment of divorce entered sooner rather than later, even if it meant other issues such as distribution of property would determined after entry of the judgment of divorce.

 

A final judgment of divorce was entered on May 24, 2006.  The final judgment “reserved jurisdiction over this cause and each of the parties to enter such further Orders, Judgments, and Decrees as may be necessary at any time in the future to resolve all equitable distribution issues and any other issues which have been pled.”

Mr. Passamondi died in July 2006.  The former wife filed a creditor claim in Mr. Passomondi’s Florida probate estate.  The basis for the former wife’s claim was an “undetermined marital interest in all of the real, personal and intangible property of decedent preceding his death as so determined in” the pending dissolution of marriage proceeding.

The former wife also filed a supplemental petition for relief in the dissolution of marriage proceeding against Mr. Passamondi’s estate and his three children.

Four years passed.  A final hearing was set in the dissolution proceeding for October 2011.  In the meantime, the probate proceedings were terminated in May 2011.

When the parties appeared for final hearing in the dissolution proceeding, the court declined to hear and determine the remaining issues, ruling that Mr. Passamondi’s death and opening of Mr. Passamondi’s estate vested the probate court with “exclusive jurisdiction to determine the proper manner of distribution of the Former Husband’s assets after payment of all creditors of the Estate of which the Former Wife was one…”  The trial court dismissed the former’s wife’s claims.

 

The Florida appellate court reversed the ruling of the trial court, stating:

If a trial court bifurcates a proceeding for dissolution of marriage by entering a judgment dissolving the marriage but retaining jurisdiction to determine property issues, the subsequent death of a party does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction to determine the issues reserved.

Although filing a creditor claim was ultimately not necessary in this case, it is prudent to file a creditor claim to make sure your client’s rights are protected.

A surviving spouse who has community property rights must file a claim in the deceased spouse’s estate to enforce community property rights.  We have written about this requirement under Florida law here.

A child support arrearage can be pursued with a creditor claim in Florida probate by the parent owed the support, or by an emancipated child if the parent is unable or unwilling to pursue.

In Davis v. Hengan, a father died owing child support arrearages.  The father died intestate, and was survived by his daughter, his daughter’s mother, and his current wife.  The daughter and current wife were appointed co-personal representatives of the father’s Florida estate.

The mother, as a creditor of the father’s estate, filed a statement of claim in the father’s Florida estate for child support arrearages.  An objection was made to the mother’s claim, and the mother filed an independent action against the co-personal representatives of the estate for the child support arrearages.

The daughter (a co-personal representative), also filed a statement of claim against the estate for child support arrearages.  The current wife (the other co-personal representative) objected to the daughter’s claim.  Like the mother, the daughter filed an independent action on her claim, and then moved to consolidate her independent action with her mother’s independent action.

 

The father’s current wife, as co-personal representative, moved to dismiss the daughter’s independent action.  The current wife argued that the daughter lacked standing to pursue child support arrearages because the right to pursue the arrearages vested solely in the daughter’s mother.  The Florida trial court granted the current wife’s motion to dismiss.  The daughter appealed.

In a short opinion, the Florida appellate court affirmed the dismissal of the daughter’s independent action, stating:

Parents have a legal duty to support their children.” Dep’t of Revenue v. Jackson, 846 So. 2d 486, 492 (Fla. 2003); see § 61.09, Fla. Stat. (2015). “An obligation to pay accrued support is not extinguished even when the child reaches majority, notwithstanding that the parent’s obligation to support normally ends when a child reaches eighteen.” Kranz, 661 So. 2d at 878 (citation omitted). We have held that a child has standing to enforce rights that ripen after the child reaches the age of majority. Brown v. Brown, 484 So. 2d 1282 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986). But we have never held, nor has any other court held, that the rights that accrue during the age of minority can be enforced by anyone other than the child’s legal representative.

The Florida appellate court noted that the opinion should not be read to prevent a child who has been emancipated from pursuing child support arrearages if the parent is unable or unwilling to pursue the arrearages.

es, and it will relate back.

In the case of Richard v Richard, (3rd DCA 2016), the court was faced with the issue of a potentially late-filed creditor claim in the Florida probate.  The notice to creditors was published one day prior to the order appointing the two personal representatives.  The trial court held that the notice to creditors was not validly published, which had the effect of making the creditor claim not late (because the three month claim period, otherwise triggered by the publication of the notice to creditors, had not yet started to run).

In reversing, the appellate court relied on the “relation back” doctrine, as well as specific statutory authority to ratify acts taken prior to the appointment of a personal representative.

As explained by the court:

The roots of the “relation back” doctrine run deep in Florida law. In 1954, the Florida Supreme Court referred to it as an “ancient doctrine” when considering whether or not a trial court erred in dismissing a wrongful death claim brought by a father on behalf of his deceased son’s estate prior to his appointment as personal representative of the estate. Griffin v. Workman, 73 So. 2d 844, 846 (Fla. 1954). The Court further noted the doctrine, which provides that “whenever letters of administration or testamentary are granted they relate back to the intestate’s or testator’s death,” had “been accepted with virtual unanimity, since it was promulgated, in a long line of cases” throughout the country.

The court also looked to a Florida Statute, which provides as follows (Section 733.601):

The duties and powers of a personal representative commence upon appointment. The powers of a personal representative relate back in time to give acts by the person appointed, occurring before appointment and beneficial to the estate, the same effect as those occurring after appointment. A personal representative may ratify and accept acts on behalf of the estate done by others when the acts would have been proper for a personal representative.

In summarizing its holding, the court explained:

We hold that the relation back doctrine, codified in section 733.601, applies to the personal representative’s act of publishing the notice to the creditors, and that the order appointing personal representative relates back and validates the pre-appointment act of publication of the notice to creditors.

Creditor claim deadlines in Florida probate can be quick, and a trap for the unwary.  Figure out if you need to file a creditor claim, and file your claim as soon as possible.

Just because a creditor claim has been filed does not mean that the claim is automatically deemed valid and paid.  Creditor claims can be objected to.

The personal representative of the estate or other interested person may file an objection to a creditor claim.

An “interested person” is defined in section 731.201(23) as any person who may reasonably be expected to be affected by the outcome of the particular proceeding involved.  In the context of a creditor claim, this would include the beneficiaries and other creditors.

The deadline to file an objection to a creditor claim is the later of:

  • On or before the expiration of 4 months from the first publication of notice to creditors or;
  • Within 30 days from the timely filing or amendment of a claim.

Once an objection to a creditor is filed, the claimant (the person who filed the creditor claim) has two options.

If the claimant wants to pursue their creditor claim, the claimant must file an independent action.  Pursuant to section 733.705, a claimant has 30 days from the service of the objection to the claim to file the independent action.  The independent action is a separate lawsuit, and cannot be filed in the probate estate.

  • The other option for the claimant is to let go of the creditor claim.  If 30 days passes without the filing of an independent action, then the creditor claim will not be paid, and will effectively be abandoned.

  • Give Required Notices to Beneficiaries, Surviving Spouses, and Creditors. Florida law requires that a Notice of Administration be provided to beneficiaries named in the will, as well as surviving spouses. The Notice of Administration provides important information, such as the deadline for challenging the validity of a will, and alerts the spouse that he or she must claim certain spousal entitlements, such as elective share and family allowance. Known creditors must be given a Notice to Creditors, stating that the creditor has 90 days within which to file a creditor claim in the estate. Notice to Creditors must also be published in the local newspaper, alerting such creditors of the deadline for filing creditor claims.
  • Marshall Assets, Preserve and Protect. Once the estate has been opened and letters of administration issued to the personal representative, the personal representative should take custody of the assets of the deceased that are properly part of the probate estate. For bank accounts, brokerage accounts, annuities, and insurance payable to the probate estate, the personal representative should retitle such accounts into the name of the estate and/or move such accounts into new accounts in the name of he estate. Normally, positions in stocks would be turned into cash (or reduced) so as to avoid any losses on estate assets. Real estate would be insured, secured, and listed for sale (or distributed to the beneficiaries). Homestead property of the deceased is not normally considered an estate asset so is handled differently. During this process, normally at the beginning, an estate inventory is filed with the probate court and sent to all of the beneficiaries.
  • Creditors, Taxes, Disputes and Other Messy Stuff. These are the things that cause estate to be tied up for years and consume large amounts of money. Creditor lawsuits can go on for years. If the estate is subject to the estate tax, it will require a minimum of two years to close the estate, usually longer. If someone challenges the validity of the will, that process could take years as well and be very expensive. If the estate must deal with real estate, business interests, patents, art, or a wrongful death claim, such could tie up the estate for years. Some estates have all of these issues and more. If the estate has none of these issues, the estate should be able to be closed in under one year, sometimes even faster.
  • Distribution to the Beneficiaries. The personal representative makes distribution to the beneficiaries after all of the difficult and messy issues are resolved. The personal representative might make interim distributions during the administration of the estate, or might wait and only make final distribution to the beneficiaries. For the final distribution, the personal representative can issue a plan of distribution and final accounting to the beneficiaries, to which they can object. In estates with good harmony, the personal representative might only issue an informal accounting and informal plan of distribution, to which they could agree with by signing a waiver or similar document.
  • Discharge and Accounting. The personal representative, at the conclusion of the estate administration, will file a final accounting, plan of distribution, and petition for discharge with the probate court. If the accounting and plan of distribution was waived by the beneficiaries, those documents would not be filed. The clerk’s office at the probate court will review the petition for discharge to ensure that all requirements of a proper probate administration have been complied with, such as filing the inventory, paying (or successfully disputing)all creditor claims, and filing either the final accounting and plan of distribution (or waivers signed by the beneficiaries for such documents).

The Florida Probate Code provides that the surviving spouse, or if there is no surviving spouse, the children, may have a right to receive a share of the estate free from creditors.  This share is known as exempt property under the Florida Probate Code.  The exempt property statute is Section 732.402.

If the decedent was a resident of Florida, certain family members may receive the exempt property.  If the decedent was married at the time of death, the surviving spouse can receive the exempt property.  If not married, the children of the decedent can receive the exempt property.

  • Household furnishings at the usual place of abode, valued at no more than $20,000
  • Two motor vehicles held in the decedent’s name and regularly used by the decedent and or members of the immediate family.  Each vehicle cannot weight more than 15,000 pounds.
  • Qualified tuition programs under Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code
  • Certain types of educator death benefits

If the exempt property is bequeathed in a will to someone who would not be entitled to exempt property, the property goes to that person as non-exempt property.  Otherwise, the property is exempt.

A petition for the determination of exempt property must be filed by the later of (i) 4 months after the date of service of the notice of administration, or (ii) 40 days after the date of termination of any proceeding involving the construction, admission to probate, or validity of a will or involving any other matter affecting any part of the estate subject to exempt property.  In case of doubt as to when to file, a protective exempt property election should be filed.

  • Exempt from the claims of creditors
  • Excluded from the value of the estate before residuary, intestate, or pretermitted or elective shares are determined.

Florida Spousal and Family Rights

Surviving Spouse Rights in Florida include:

  • All or one-half of the estate if there is no will
  • All or one-half of the estate if the will predates the marriage
  • Homestead rights in the marital residence
  • An elective share equal to 30% of probate and non-probate assets
  • Family Allowance
  • Exempt Property
 

With short deadlines in probate, it is important to effectively secure the rights of a surviving spouse within the timelines provided by statute to ensure the surviving spouse is protected and receives all he or she is  entitled to under Florida law.   The failure to meet one of the probate deadlines can cause a surviving spouse to lose one or more spousal entitlements. Download the Guide to Surviving Spouse Rights in Florida.

  • INTESTATE.  If a person dies without a Will he or she is considered to die intestate.
 
  • INTESTATE SHARE.  If a spouse dies without a Will, the surviving spouse receives an intestate share.  (If a couple is separated at the time of death, the surviving spouse is not barred from inheriting under Florida law).
 
  • SHARE OF SURVIVING SPOUSE – NO CHILDREN OR ALL DESCENDANTS OF SURVIVOR AND SPOUSE.  If the only survivor is a surviving spouse, or if all the lineal descendants are also lineal descendants of the surviving spouse and the decedent, then the surviving spouse receives the entire estate of the decedent.
 
  • SHARE OF SURVIVING SPOUSE IF THERE ARE SURVIVING DESCENDANTS NOT FROM BOTH DECEDENT AND SURVIVING SPOUSE.  If there are descendants of the decedent who are not also of the surviving spouse, or if there are descendants of the deceased, but the surviving spouse has descendants not also from the decedent, then the surviving spouse receives one-half of the intestate estate.
  • PRETERMITTED SPOUSE.  If a person makes a Will and then marries a person not provided for in the Will, the surviving spouse is called a pretermitted spouse.  Under Florida law, a pretermitted spouse is entitled to receive a share of the estate as if the decedent died intestate, unless the will clearly provides to the contrary.  (It is unusual for a will to name a person as a potential future spouse and fix that person’s inheritance in the will.  If the will does this, the surviving spouse can consider whether he or she would be better off with the elective share.)
    
  • PRETERMITTED SPOUSE WITH A WILL AND NO DESCENDANTS.  If there are no lineal descendants and only a pretermitted spouse, under Florida law, the pretermitted spouse receives the entire estate notwithstanding that a Will may leave assets to other heirs of the decedent.
  • HOMESTEAD RIGHTS.  Article X Section 4(c) of the Florida Constitution limits who can receive Homestead property upon the death of an owner if he or she is survived by a spouse or a minor child.  A surviving spouse is entitled to no less than a life estate in any property used as a homestead by the deceased spouse in Florida.  See the Complete Guide to Florida Homestead.
 
  • DEADLINE TO FILE FOR HOMESTEAD ELECTION AS TENANT IN COMMON.  If a surviving spouse is left a life estate, he or she has six months from the decedent’s date of death to make an election under Florida Statutes Section 723.401 to take a one-half interest in the Homestead as a tenant in common.  This is a very important election, because in Florida, owning a life estate can often be more costly to maintain than the benefit is worth, given the high cost of ownership of real estate in Florida as a result of property taxes, insurance, and homeowner association dues.  By making the election a spouse can force the sale of the property and receive 50% of the sales proceeds.  Homestead rights are protected by the Florida Constitution and are in addition to any elective share, family allowance, or exempt property rights discussed below.   No notice of the tenant in common election right needs to be given to the surviving spouse, making this six month deadline easy to miss.
  • ELECTIVE SHARE. Under Florida probate law, a Surviving Spouse has a right to a 30% elective share of the estate of the deceased spouse valued as of the date of death.  Florida Statutes Section 732.2035 is an all encompassing statute that includes in the elective estate the following items: Probate estate, pay on death (POD), transfer on death and similar accounts; jointly owned accounts or securities based on the amount the decedent could withdraw, jointly owned real estate, ½ of  tenants by the entirety property, certain revocable transfers, including revocable living trusts, retained life estates and income interests, most retirement benefits, cash value of life insurance immediately prior to the death of the decedent, most gifts one year prior to death, and property transferred in satisfaction of the elective share prior to death.  While debts of the decedent reduce the elective share, expenses of administration such as attorney fees do not reduce the value of the elective share. The elective share can also receive interest from the estate in some circumstances.  The value of the elective share is initially satisfied from assets that have already passed to the surviving spouse, next from the probate estate, and finally from other assets included in the elective estate.

Learn more about calculating the elective share here.

 
  • DEADLINE FOR FILING FOR THE ELECTIVE SHARE.  The elective share election must be made within the earlier of 6 months from the service of a Notice of Administration on the surviving spouse or, if no Notice of Administration is given, within two years of the date of death of the decedent pursuant to Florida Statutes Section 732.2135; Florida Probate Rule 5.360.  If a temporary election is made it must be withdrawn within 8 months from the decedent’s date of death or prior to the order for contribution.  The personal representative shall serve all parties within 20 days of receipt of an Election to Take Elective Share along with a copy of the Election.  An interested party then has 20 days of receipt of the Formal Notice to object.
  • FAMILY ALLOWANCE.  In addition to Homestead rights and the right of elective share, a surviving spouse of a Florida decedent is entitled to a Family Allowance of up to $18,000 payable in lump sum or installments.  The family allowance provides support for the decedent’s spouse and lineal heirs that the decedent was supporting, pursuant to Florida Statutes Section 732.403.  The amount paid in the Family allowance cannot be offset against the share otherwise passing to the surviving spouse unless the Will provides otherwise.  If a personal Representative is recalcitrant in paying the allowance after a petition is filed pursuant to Probate Rule 5.407, the estate may even be required to pay attorneys fees for getting the allowance, since a benefit has been provided by the estate.
 
  • DEADLINE FOR FILING THE FAMILY ALLOWANCE.  The Family Allowance can be filed at any time during the pendency of the administration of the estate.
  • EXEMPT PROPERTY.  In addition to Homestead and Family Allowance, testate and intestate property and Elective Share, the surviving spouse of a decedent domiciled in Florida at the time of death is entitled to certain items of tangible personal property including household furniture and appliances up to $20,000 as of the date of death, two personal automobiles held in the decedent’s name and regularly used by the decedent or members of the decedent’s immediate family as personal automobiles under 15,000 pounds.  This property is called Exempt Property under Florida Statutes section 732.402.  Exempt property has an additional advantage of being exempt from all creditors of the estate except perfected security interests.  However, property that is specifically bequeathed in a decedent’s will is not subject to the exemptions of Florida Statutes section 732.402.   Furthermore, if Exempt property is specifically devised to a person who otherwise would receive the exempt property, one can petition the court to determine the property to be exempt, and therefore not subject to creditors with non-perfected security interests under Florida Probate Rule 5.406.  Furthermore, exempt property is excluded from the value of the estate before residuary, intestate, or pretermitted or elective shares are determined.
 
  • DEADLINE FOR FILING FOR EXEMPT PROPERTY.  An Exempt property petition must be filed no later than either four months after the date of service of the Notice of Administration or the date that is 40 days after the date of termination of any proceedings involving the construction, admission to probate, or validity of the Will or involving any other matter selecting part of the estate subject to Florida Statutes section 732.402.
  • COMMUNITY PROPERTY.  A decedent’s surviving spouse is entitled to one-half of all community property acquired during the marriage, and this is not an elective estate, and is not subject to testamentary distribution under the decedent’s estate.  While Florida does not recognize community property as a property ownership form for its residents, it will respect community property acquired while such person was a resident of a community property state and continually held as community property.
 
  • DEADLINE FOR FILING FOR COMMUNITY PROPERTY.  Florida Statutes sections 732.221 and 732.223 allow a surviving spouse or a beneficiary to perfect title in Community Property by order of the Probate Court or by an instrument executed by the personal representative or the beneficiaries with approval by the Probate Court.  The personal representative has no requirement to search for community property, unless the surviving spouse, beneficiary or a creditor files a written demand to the personal representative within three months of the filing of a Notice of Administration on the surviving spouse or such beneficiary.  A creditor has three months from first publication of the notice to creditors to make a written demand.  We have written about community property claims in Florida here.
  • SOCIAL SECURITY DEATH BENEFIT.  Applying for a Social Security lump sum death benefit (currently $255) must be filed within 2 years of the date of death.
  • SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS FOR A SURVIVING SPOUSE.  It is also important to ensure you receive any and all payments you may be entitled to as a surviving spouse from Social Security.
  • MARITAL AGREEMENTS.  Martial Agreements which are often referred to as prenuptial agreements, ante-nuptial agreements, and post-nuptial agreements, can waive or create rights upon the death of a spouse.  It is imperative to have a lawyer review these agreements who is familiar with the probate process to properly address any rights you may have at death or as a surviving spouse.   It is also important to have these documents properly reviewed by experienced probate lawyers to ensure any death time provisions are properly addressed prior to signing any of these agreements.  Many of the rights of a surviving spouse can be waived or increased in properly drafted agreements.
 
  • TIMELINE TO FILE A CREDITOR CLAIM.  If a surviving spouse of a Florida decedent has a Marital Agreement, it is imperative that his or her attorney file a protective creditor claim to preserve these contract rights of the surviving spouse, within three months of filing the Notice of Publication to Creditors or thirty days from the date of service of a known creditor, even if the surviving spouse is the personal representative.  A common mistake of probate lawyers in handling marital agreements is the failure to file such a creditor claim.  There is no harm in filing a protective claim, and often filing a protective creditor claim results in the payment of benefits to a surviving spouse which may otherwise be lost.  The Florida Supreme Court has even ruled that filing such a claim is necessary to enforce a surviving spouse’s right under a marital agreement. Spohr v. Berryman, 589 So. 2d 225 (Fla. 1991).  The consequence of failing to timely file a creditor claim for a spouse with rights under a marital agreement can be severe.  A spouse who fails to file can potentially lose all such rights under the agreement.
  • FILE A KNOWN WILL.  A known will must be filed with the court within 10 days of the decedent’s death. Florida Statutes section 732.901.  A surviving spouse also has a right to a copy of the will.
  • COURT DOCUMENTS.  A surviving spouse is entitled to all the documents filed with the court in their spouse’s probate proceedings.  This includes the Petition for Administration, Letters of Administration, Notice to Creditors, Petition for Administration, Inventory, Final Accounting, Order for Discharge, and any and all other pleadings regarding the estate.
  • Some probate lawyers in Florida who handle a large volume of surviving spouse cases will be flexible and consider arrangements on a contingency basis or on a pay-at-the-end basis, where the surviving spouse client has no up-front payment obligation.
  • Florida law allows the beneficiaries or the personal representative of an estate to attempt to deny spousal benefits to the spouse of a valid marriage if the marriage was allegedly obtained through fraud, duress, or undue influence.  See Florida Statute section 732.805.  Even if the marriage was so procured, the spouse will be entitled to the benefits if the marriage was subsequently ratified.

Florida’s elective share is calculated by:

  1. Determining the elective estate;
  2. Calculating the net elective estate;
  3. Calculating 30% of the net elective estate to determine the elective share;
  4. Determining the satisfaction amount, if any.

The Florida Elective Share is a means by which surviving spouses receive a fair share of their deceased spouse’s estate, no matter what the estate planning documents say. In general, the Florida elective share provides that the surviving spouse is to receive no less than 30% of the deceased spouse’s assets. The calculation of the elective share is the most complex part of Florida probate.

The elective share calculation starts with a computation of the Elective Estate. The Elective Estate attempts to measure all of the property of the decedent that should be fairly included in the calculation. The Elective Estate includes the following assets:

  • property in the probate estate
  • decedent’s interest in property which constitutes the protected homestead of the decedent
  • gifts within the last year before death
  • pay on death accounts
  • jointly titled assets
  • assets in a revocable trust
  • retirement accounts
  • cash surrender value of life insurance owned by the decedent (but not the death benefit, unless the death benefit is paid to the probate estate)
  •  annuities

The personal representative might not know about all of the non-probate assets that comprise the Elective Estate, so may need to investigate. A surviving spouse might also perform discovery to try to identify and value all of the potential assets of the Elective Estate.

Once the Elective Estate is determined, the Net Elective Estate is calculated. Essentially, liabilities of the decedent are subtracted from the Elective Estate to determine the Net Elective Estate. Importantly, expenses of administration are not liabilities for this purpose and therefore do not reduce the Net Elective Estate in Florida. (Other states have a different rule.) A consequence of not taking into account expenses of administration is that any attorney fees or costs incurred in litigating an elective share dispute are borne by the other beneficiaries of the estate, not the surviving spouse seeking elective share.

Once the Net Elective Estate is computed (Elective Estate – Liabilities of the Decedent), 30% of such amount is the Elective Share.

Next is to compute the Satisfaction of the Elective Share. The amount needed to satisfy the Elective Share is simple – the amount of the Elective Share minus that amounts already received (or to be received) by the surviving spouse from all sources as a result of the death of the decedent.

In some cases, the surviving spouse has already received the full value of the Elective Share, and in other cases there is an amount that remains that must be paid to the surviving spouse to fully satisfy the Elective Share.

 

To pay that portion of the Elective Share not yet paid, the Florida Probate Code sets forth an ordering of what assets are used to satisfy the Elective Share. the Florida elective share statute sets forth several classes of assets to satisfy the Elective Share, in the following order:

  • Class 1: The Decedent’s probate estate and revocable trusts
  • Class 2: Pay on Death, Transfer on Death and In Trust for Accounts; Property held as Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship or Tenancy by the Entirety; life insurance cash surrender value
  • Class 3: Any other property interest included in the Elective Estate computation

At first, calculating Florida’s elective share can seem like a daunting task.  However, once all of the decedents assets, interests, and liabilities are gathered, calculation of the elective share can be done.

For most of Florida jurisprudence, the children and other heirs of a deceased person in Florida were prohibited from challenging a marriage after the death in Florida probate court.

But stopping a deathbed marriage or a marriage procured by fraud or undue influence is important because of the many spousal rights in Florida that a surviving spouse is entitled to, including elective share, status as a pretermitted spouse, Florida homestead, family allowance and the personal property of the deceased.  Even if the marriage lasts for hours or days, a surviving spouse could end up with the homestead, and between 30% and 100% of the other assets of the deceased.

In order to stop unfair and unjust deathbed marriages and other abusive arrangements, Florida enacted Section 732.805, entitled Spousal Rights Procured by Fraud, Duress, or Undue Influence.

If the surviving spouse is found to have procured the marriage by fraud, duress or undue influence, all of the spousal rights that the surviving spouse would otherwise be entitled to are eliminated.  Any of the beneficiaries and heirs of the estate may bring the challenge to the surviving spouse rights.  The challenger has the burden of proof that the marriage was procured by fraud, duress, or undue influence.

Even if the marriage was so procured by fraud or undue influence, the surviving spouse can claim, in defense, that the deceased nevertheless “ratified” the marriage after learning about the fraud, duress, or undue influence.  Although there are many ways in which a marriage could be “ratified,” one way would be to consummate the marriage in the traditional way.

The new statute does seem to provide for an attorney fee shifting provision.  Therefore, one should not bring a challenge to the marriage unless one is pretty certain of success.

Although the statute does not address the issue, if the marriage is argued to be void because of a complete lack of capacity, the ability to void a marriage for lack of capacity existed under the common law of Florida.  It is believed, although not certain, that the ability to void a marriage after death, under the common law if Florida, is still preserved.  Nevertheless, until a Florida probate court weighs in, the law is not certain.  For a true deathbed marriage, the best practice would likely be to argue that the marriage was void as the deceased lacked capacity, and to also argue that the marriage was voidable under the new statute section 732.805, as being the product of fraud, undue influence or duress.

A portion of the Florida statute on voiding spousal rights due to fraud, undue influence, and duress is reproduced below.

732.805 Spousal rights procured by fraud, duress, or undue influence.—

 

(1) A surviving spouse who is found to have procured a marriage to the decedent by fraud, duress, or undue influence is not entitled to any of the following rights or benefits that inure solely by virtue of the marriage or the person’s status as surviving spouse of the decedent unless the decedent and the surviving spouse voluntarily cohabited as husband and wife with full knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud, duress, or undue influence or both spouses otherwise subsequently ratified the marriage:

 

(a) Any rights or benefits under the Florida Probate Code, including, but not limited to, entitlement to elective share or family allowance; preference in appointment as personal representative; inheritance by intestacy, homestead, or exempt property; or inheritance as a pretermitted spouse.

 

(b) Any rights or benefits under a bond, life insurance policy, or other contractual arrangement if the decedent is the principal obligee or the person upon whose life the policy is issued, unless the surviving spouse is provided for by name, whether or not designated as the spouse, in the bond, life insurance policy, or other contractual arrangement.

 

(c) Any rights or benefits under a will, trust, or power of appointment, unless the surviving spouse is provided for by name, whether or not designated as the spouse, in the will, trust, or power of appointment.

 

(d) Any immunity from the presumption of undue influence that a surviving spouse may have under state law.

 

(2) Any of the rights or benefits listed in paragraphs (1)(a)-(c) which would have passed solely by virtue of the marriage to a surviving spouse who is found to have procured the marriage by fraud, duress, or undue influence shall pass as if the spouse had predeceased the decedent.

 

(3) A challenge to a surviving spouse’s rights under this section may be maintained as a defense, objection, or cause of action by any interested person after the death of the decedent in any proceeding in which the fact of marriage may be directly or indirectly material.

 

(4) The contestant has the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the marriage was procured by fraud, duress, or undue influence. If ratification of the marriage is raised as a defense, the surviving spouse has the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the evidence, the subsequent ratification by both spouses.

 

(5) In all actions brought under this section, the court shall award taxable costs as in chancery actions, including attorney’s fees. When awarding taxable costs and attorney’s fees, the court may direct payment from a party’s interest, if any, in the estate, or enter a judgment that may be satisfied from other property of the party, or both.

 

(7) The rights and remedies granted in this section are in addition to any other rights or remedies a person may have at law or equity.

 

(8) Unless sooner barred by adjudication, estoppel, or a provision of the Florida Probate Code or Florida Probate Rules, an interested person is barred from bringing an action under this section unless the action is commenced within 4 years after the decedent’s date of death. A cause of action under this section accrues on the decedent’s date of death.

Important ruling preserves right of surviving spouses to proceed with loss of consortium claim after death of spouse.  Randall v. Walt Disney, (Fla. 5th DCA 2014).

Mrs. Randall and her husband were on a roller coaster at Walt Disney World, where allegedly Mr. Randall sustained head and neck injuries on the roller coaster. Mr. Randall filed a personal injury claim against Walt Disney, and Mrs. Randall filed a loss of consortium claim against Walt Disney.  Mr. Randall then died, and it is claimed that he died as a result of the roller coaster injury. 

Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.260 requires that, when a party in a lawsuit dies, there is 90 days from the filing of a suggestion of death to substitute into the personal representative of the deceased’s estate.  If the substitution is not done on time, in the absence of very good cause, the deceased party is dismissed from the lawsuit.  This can be a very harsh rule and a trap for the unwary – the substitution must be done on time.  The trial court then dismissed the personal injury case because of the lack of timely substitution, and the appellate court affirmed the dismissal. 

The trial court also dismissed the surviving spouse’s loss of consortium claim, under the theory that the claim was derivative and cannot survive on its own.  The dismissal of the underlying personal injury claim required the dismissal of the loss of consortium claim.  

The appellate court reversed, holding that the surviving spouse’s loss of consortium claim survived. Another appellate court (the Third District) came to the opposite conclusion regarding the survival of the loss of consortium claim.  This court explained is disagreement as follows:

The Third District implicitly concluded that because the surviving spouse can recover from the date of injury, the loss of consortium from the date of injury merges with the continuing injury suffered after death, and the surviving spouse therefore recovers. We find this analysis problematic because it considers only a situation where a wrongful death action can be maintained. Indeed, under the third district’s interpretation, where the injured spouse dies from an injury unrelated to the personal injury action, the surviving spouse who suffered a loss of consortium would not be able to maintain a wrongful death action. Therefore, the surviving spouse would lose a vested right to recover for a loss of consortium from the date of injury to the date of death. This cannot be the result the Legislature intended and, here, that would be the effect.

The Florida Supreme Court will eventually have to determine which appellate court has it right.  I the meantime, the disparate treatment will continue. 

A creditor claim in Florida probate is a claim filed by a person or entity (a “creditor”) that the decedent owed money to at the time decedent died.  A creditor must file a timely statement of claim in the probate estate in order to pursue satisfaction of their creditor claim.

Unless creditors’ claims are barred, every personal representative is required to cause notice to creditors to be published and served.  Section 733.701, Fla. Stat.

  • 30 days after the date of service of the notice to creditors on the creditor
  • 3 months after the first publication of the notice to creditors
  • 2 years from date of death for known or reasonably ascertainable creditors who did not receive notice to creditors

These deadlines can be broken down into deadlines applicable to known or reasonably ascertainable creditors and unknown creditors.

If you are a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor then you are entitled to direct notice of a Florida probate proceeding.  The Florida Supreme Court, in Jones v. Golden, resolved any confusion over when a creditor claim needs to be filed for a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor:

Creditors who are known or reasonably ascertainable need not rely on publication for notice of the pending administration of an estate. Section 733.2121(3)(a) requires a personal representative to “promptly serve a copy of the notice” on those creditors who are known or reasonably ascertainable after a diligent search. The limitations period applicable to known or reasonably ascertainable creditors does not begin to run until service is perfected. Once served with a copy of the notice, a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor must file any claim within the later of “3 months after the time of the first publication of the notice to creditors or . . . 30 days after the date of service on the creditor . . . .” § 733.702(1), Fla. Stat.

 

Under the plain language of section 733.702(1), where a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is never served with a copy of the notice to creditors, the applicable limitations period never begins to run and cannot bar that creditor’s claim. “[A]s to any creditor required to be served with a copy of the notice to creditors,” the [**15]  limitations period can only be triggered by “service on the creditor” of the required notice. § 733.702(1), Fla. Stat. A known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is absolved from the limitations of section 733.702(1) by virtue of the fact that the personal representative failed to serve the creditor with the required notice. The  [*248]  only instance in which a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is required to file any claims before the expiration of the three-month window after publication of the notice is where the last day of the three-month window occurs more than thirty days after service of the required notice.

 

Accordingly, if a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor is not served with a copy of the notice, section 733.702(1) does not govern the timeliness of that creditor’s claims. Instead, the claims of such a creditor are only barred if not filed within the two-year period of repose set forth in section 733.710. Thus, the claim of a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor who was never served with a copy of the notice to creditors is timely if filed within two years of the decedent’s death. Further, because the limitations periods in section 733.702 are inapplicable under such circumstances, it is not necessary for the creditor to seek an extension of time [**16]  under section 733.702(3) since that section applies only to claims that are untimely under section 733.702.

If you are not a known or reasonably ascertainable creditor, then you get notice by publication in a local newspaper.

The limitations period applicable to unknown creditors, set forth in section 733.702(1), begins to run upon publication of the notice to creditors and ends three months after the date of the first publication.

Creditor claims and divorce often intersect, and an ex-spouse and a surviving spouse may have to file a creditor claim to enforce their rights.

A premarital or postnuptial agreement can be enforced after a prior spouse’s death, but the prior spouse must file a creditor claim to enforce this contract right.  See Spohr v. Berryman, 589 So. 2d 225 (Fla. 1991).

In Passamondi v. Passamondi, (2nd DCA 2014), Mr. and Mrs. Passamondi filed for divorce.  Mr. Passamondi requested that the divorce proceedings be bifurcated, because Mr. Passamondi was suffering from a terminal illness and presumably wanted a final judgment of divorce entered sooner rather than later, even if it meant other issues such as distribution of property would determined after entry of the judgment of divorce.

A final judgment of divorce was entered on May 24, 2006.  The final judgment “reserved jurisdiction over this cause and each of the parties to enter such further Orders, Judgments, and Decrees as may be necessary at any time in the future to resolve all equitable distribution issues and any other issues which have been pled.”

Mr. Passamondi died in July 2006.  The former wife filed a creditor claim in Mr. Passomondi’s Florida probate estate.  The basis for the former wife’s claim was an “undetermined marital interest in all of the real, personal and intangible property of decedent preceding his death as so determined in” the pending dissolution of marriage proceeding.

The former wife also filed a supplemental petition for relief in the dissolution of marriage proceeding against Mr. Passamondi’s estate and his three children.

Four years passed.  A final hearing was set in the dissolution proceeding for October 2011.  In the meantime, the probate proceedings were terminated in May 2011.

When the parties appeared for final hearing in the dissolution proceeding, the court declined to hear and determine the remaining issues, ruling that Mr. Passamondi’s death and opening of Mr. Passamondi’s estate vested the probate court with “exclusive jurisdiction to determine the proper manner of distribution of the Former Husband’s assets after payment of all creditors of the Estate of which the Former Wife was one…”  The trial court dismissed the former’s wife’s claims.

The Florida appellate court reversed the ruling of the trial court, stating:

If a trial court bifurcates a proceeding for dissolution of marriage by entering a judgment dissolving the marriage but retaining jurisdiction to determine property issues, the subsequent death of a party does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction to determine the issues reserved.

Although filing a creditor claim was ultimately not necessary in this case, it is prudent to file a creditor claim to make sure your client’s rights are protected.

A surviving spouse who has community property rights must file a claim in the deceased spouse’s estate to enforce community property rights.  We have written about this requirement under Florida law here.

A child support arrearage can be pursued with a creditor claim in Florida probate by the parent owed the support, or by an emancipated child if the parent is unable or unwilling to pursue.

In Davis v. Hengan, a father died owing child support arrearages.  The father died intestate, and was survived by his daughter, his daughter’s mother, and his current wife.  The daughter and current wife were appointed co-personal representatives of the father’s Florida estate.

The mother, as a creditor of the father’s estate, filed a statement of claim in the father’s Florida estate for child support arrearages.  An objection was made to the mother’s claim, and the mother filed an independent action against the co-personal representatives of the estate for the child support arrearages.

The daughter (a co-personal representative), also filed a statement of claim against the estate for child support arrearages.  The current wife (the other co-personal representative) objected to the daughter’s claim.  Like the mother, the daughter filed an independent action on her claim, and then moved to consolidate her independent action with her mother’s independent action.

 

The father’s current wife, as co-personal representative, moved to dismiss the daughter’s independent action.  The current wife argued that the daughter lacked standing to pursue child support arrearages because the right to pursue the arrearages vested solely in the daughter’s mother.  The Florida trial court granted the current wife’s motion to dismiss.  The daughter appealed.

In a short opinion, the Florida appellate court affirmed the dismissal of the daughter’s independent action, stating:

Parents have a legal duty to support their children.” Dep’t of Revenue v. Jackson, 846 So. 2d 486, 492 (Fla. 2003); see § 61.09, Fla. Stat. (2015). “An obligation to pay accrued support is not extinguished even when the child reaches majority, notwithstanding that the parent’s obligation to support normally ends when a child reaches eighteen.” Kranz, 661 So. 2d at 878 (citation omitted). We have held that a child has standing to enforce rights that ripen after the child reaches the age of majority. Brown v. Brown, 484 So. 2d 1282 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986). But we have never held, nor has any other court held, that the rights that accrue during the age of minority can be enforced by anyone other than the child’s legal representative.

The Florida appellate court noted that the opinion should not be read to prevent a child who has been emancipated from pursuing child support arrearages if the parent is unable or unwilling to pursue the arrearages.

Yes, and it will relate back.

In the case of Richard v Richard, (3rd DCA 2016), the court was faced with the issue of a potentially late-filed creditor claim in the Florida probate.  The notice to creditors was published one day prior to the order appointing the two personal representatives.  The trial court held that the notice to creditors was not validly published, which had the effect of making the creditor claim not late (because the three month claim period, otherwise triggered by the publication of the notice to creditors, had not yet started to run).

In reversing, the appellate court relied on the “relation back” doctrine, as well as specific statutory authority to ratify acts taken prior to the appointment of a personal representative.

As explained by the court:

The roots of the “relation back” doctrine run deep in Florida law. In 1954, the Florida Supreme Court referred to it as an “ancient doctrine” when considering whether or not a trial court erred in dismissing a wrongful death claim brought by a father on behalf of his deceased son’s estate prior to his appointment as personal representative of the estate. Griffin v. Workman, 73 So. 2d 844, 846 (Fla. 1954). The Court further noted the doctrine, which provides that “whenever letters of administration or testamentary are granted they relate back to the intestate’s or testator’s death,” had “been accepted with virtual unanimity, since it was promulgated, in a long line of cases” throughout the country.

The court also looked to a Florida Statute, which provides as follows (Section 733.601):

The duties and powers of a personal representative commence upon appointment. The powers of a personal representative relate back in time to give acts by the person appointed, occurring before appointment and beneficial to the estate, the same effect as those occurring after appointment. A personal representative may ratify and accept acts on behalf of the estate done by others when the acts would have been proper for a personal representative.

In summarizing its holding, the court explained:

We hold that the relation back doctrine, codified in section 733.601, applies to the personal representative’s act of publishing the notice to the creditors, and that the order appointing personal representative relates back and validates the pre-appointment act of publication of the notice to creditors.

Creditor claim deadlines in Florida probate can be quick, and a trap for the unwary.  Figure out if you need to file a creditor claim, and file your claim as soon as possible.

Just because a creditor claim has been filed does not mean that the claim is automatically deemed valid and paid.  Creditor claims can be objected to.

The personal representative of the estate or other interested person may file an objection to a creditor claim.

An “interested person” is defined in section 731.201(23) as any person who may reasonably be expected to be affected by the outcome of the particular proceeding involved.  In the context of a creditor claim, this would include the beneficiaries and other creditors.

The deadline to file an objection to a creditor claim is the later of:

  • On or before the expiration of 4 months from the first publication of notice to creditors or;
  • Within 30 days from the timely filing or amendment of a claim.

Once an objection to a creditor is filed, the claimant (the person who filed the creditor claim) has two options.

If the claimant wants to pursue their creditor claim, the claimant must file an independent action.  Pursuant to section 733.705, a claimant has 30 days from the service of the objection to the claim to file the independent action.  The independent action is a separate lawsuit, and cannot be filed in the probate estate.

The other option for the claimant is to let go of the creditor claim.  If 30 days passes without the filing of an independent action, then the creditor claim will not be paid, and will effectively be abandoned.

  • Often times homestead can be confusing.  Add on to the issue of Florida homestead a divorce, a marital settlement agreement, a second spouse, and a life estate, and the situation becomes very complicated.  In the case of Friscia_v._Friscia, the Florida probate court and the Florida Second District Court of Appeal encountered a family situation involving all of these things, and did a great job of clearly articulating how their decision was reached.

In this case, Nora (Second Wife) is the surviving spouse of Vincent J. Friscia (Decedent), and the personal representative of Decedent’s estate.  Robin Friscia is Decedent’s former wife (Former Wife) and mother of Decedent’s two kids, Nicholas and Thomas.

Decedent and the Former Wife divorced in 2008.  As part of the divorce, the couple entered into a marital settlement agreement (“MSA”) which was incorporated into a final judgment.  The MSA provided for the division of the Florida homestead.  The MSA granted the Former Wife exclusive use and possession of the home until the parties’ youngest child graduated from high school.  At that point in time, the marital home was to be listed for sale and the proceeds divided equally (50/50) between the parties.  The Former Wife also got the option to buy out the Decedent’s interest in the home at any time until it was sold, for one-half (1/2) of fair market value.

Decedent died in 2011, while married to his Second Wife.  When Decedent died, his son Nicholas was still in high school, and both sons were living in the former marital home with Decedent’s Former Wife.  Decedent’s son Thomas asked the Florida probate court to determine the homestead status of the former marital home.  Thomas claimed that the former marital home was Decedent’s homestead, and that title to Decedent’s interest in the property inured to Decedent’s sons and to Nora, the Second Wife.

The Florida constitution provides:

§ 4. Homestead; exemptions
(a) There shall be exempt from forced sale under process of any court, and no judgment, decree or execution shall be a lien thereon, . . . the following property owned by a natural person:
(1) a homestead, if located outside a municipality, to the extent of one hundred sixty acres of contiguous land and improvements thereon . . . ; or if located within a municipality, to the extent of one-half acre of contiguous land, upon which the exemption shall be limited to the residence of the owner or the owner’s family;
. . . .
(b) These exemptions shall inure to the surviving spouse or heirs of the owner.

Homestead property is not a part of a Decedent’s estate, and therefore a personal representative does not have jurisdiction over the homestead.  When a Florida decedent dies intestate, the surviving spouse takes a life estate with a vested remainder to the lineal descendants. 

The Florida probate court, over the Second Wife’s objection, determined that Decedent owned the marital home as a tenant in common with the Former Wife, and that Decedent’s ½ interest was entitled to homestead protection.  The Florida probate court ruled that the Florida homestead exemption inured to the Second Wife as a life estate with a vested remainder in Decedent’s sons as lineal descendants.  The result of this ruling was that the Former Wife and the Second Wife each owned a one half interest in the former marital home as tenants in common, with the second wife having a life estate. Holders of life estates are generally entitled to live in the property for life, and when they die, the remaindermen get the property.  But, when the Second Wife attempted to gain entry to the property and “exercise her right in the life estate,” Decedent’s son refused the Second Wife entry and the police escorted her from the property. Why, if the Second Wife had a life estate in the property, did she not get to use it?  Because of the MSA between Decedent and the Former Wife.

Remember, the MSA granted the Former Wife exclusive use and possession of the home until the parties’ youngest child graduated from high school.  At that point in time, the marital home was to be listed for sale and the proceeds divided equally (50/50) between the parties.  The Former Wife also got the option to buy out the Husband’s interest in the home at any time until it was sold, for one-half (1/2) of fair market value.

The Florida appellate court explained why the divorce agreement did not operate as a waiver of Decedent’s homestead rights, and why the Second Wife did not get to exercise her life estate.

First, the final judgment of dissolution between the Decedent and the Former Wife did not operate to transfer Decedent’s interest in the former marital home.  The Decedent’s interest in the home retained its homestead protection because the Decedent’s sons, whom the Decedent still supported financially, continued to live on the property.  The Florida Constitution does not require that the owner claiming homestead exemption reside on the property; it is sufficient for the owner’s family to reside on the property.

Second, there was no waiver of Decedent’s homestead protection in the MSA.  The MSA contained “mutual release” provisions where the parties released each other from all claims or demands, but these releases waived any rights either had in the property of the other – not their homestead rights in their own property.  The MSA also directed that the former marital home be sold and the net proceeds divided when the youngest son graduated from high school.  The Florida appellate court noted that while a spouse can waive homestead rights in his own property by contracting to take action inconsistent with those rights (such as agreeing to sell the marital home and pay any outstanding judgments out of the husband’s share of the proceeds), the Decedent in this case did no such thing.

Finally, as to the Second Wife’s rights as a life tenant, the Florida homestead status afforded to the Decedent’s interest in the former marital home did not negate to terms agreed to in the MSA.  The MSA was binding on Decedent and his heirs.  If Decedent had lived, Former Wife would have been entitled to exclusive use and possession, and would have been required to sell the marital home and divide the proceeds unless the Former Wife exercised the option to buy out Decedent’s interest.  Unfortunately for the Second Wife, she has a life tenancy in decedent’s interest in name only.

  • If the Second Wife had been successful in arguing that the former marital home was not Decedent’s homestead, the Second Wife could have possibly used the value of the former marital home to calculate her elective share, and also could have controlled the former marital home as an asset of the estate.  The Second Wife would still likely have been bound by the MSA.

Most states have comprehensive surviving spouse rights.  The most important of these rights in Florida is the elective share.  

However, there are ways to disinherit your spouse in Florida:

  1. Marital Agreement.  Florida as well as most every other state, allows spousal rights, including the elective share, to be waived by a premarital or postmarital agreement.
  2. Term Insurance.  The cash surrender value of a life insurance policy is typically included in elective share calculations, if the policy is owned by the deceased.  Because term life insurance is not included in these calculations, the use of term insurance policies can avoid the elective share.  The insurance must name as beneficiaries the people other than the spouse to be disinherited.  If there is no beneficiary designation or the beneficiary designation names the estate, a portion of the death benefit will be paid to the surviving spouse through the elective share.
  3. Prepare Proper Estate Planning Documents.  In most states, including Florida, the surviving spouse must take affirmative steps, within relatively short timeframes, to claim the elective share.  See Deadlines and Timelines In Florida Probate. If the surviving spouse dies before making the election, the election cannot be made by the personal representative of the second to die spouse.  If the surviving spouse becomes incapacitated, typically the election can only be made with court approval.  Better to have a comprehensive estate plan that disinherits the spouse, because the surviving spouse might not, for whatever reason, make the elective share election.
  4. Private Foundation.  For the wealthy, a private foundation can be a great way to disinherit a spouse.  By transferring assets to the foundation during life, the assets are not included in the elective share calculations.  By placing the desired heirs in charge of the foundation (for example children from an earlier marriage), those heirs will have significant control over the funds. The foundation has to be funded before death for this to work.  In Florida, any gifts made within a year of death are pulled back into the elective share calculation – so the funding of the foundation has to be done at least one year before death.
  5. Domestic Irrevocable Trust / Lifetime Gifting.  Giving assets away prior to death can avoid the elective share  In Florida, assets transferred more than one year prior to death are excluded from the elective share calculation.  In order to work, however, the gift must be a bona fide and complete gift.  Likewise, assets transferred to a domestic irrevocable trust will likely avoid the elective share.  In order to work in Florida, the transfer must be made at least one year prior to death and all rights to the assets in the trust must be given up permanently. 
  6. Offshore Trusts.  An offshore trust in the proper jurisdiction will probably avoid the elective share entirely.  The United States court will have no jurisdiction to compel the trustee of the foreign jurisdiction to turn over the assets of the offshore trust.  I have a residual concern, however, that the court in the United States could compel any United States person to turn over assets received from the offshore trust to satisfy the elective share.  I am not aware of any reported cases that say this, but am cautious of this possible outcome. 
 

These techniques are appropriate for residents of states that have comprehensive elective share systems.  States with community property automatically treat half the assets as belonging to each spouse – making planning around community property a completely different task. 

Also, not every non-community property state has elective share.  One state – Georgia – does not have elective share. Therefore, the simplest and possibly most effective way in which to avoid the elective share is to move to Georgia (the seventh way to disinherit a spouse for those of you counting).  

Establishing paternity in probate proceedings is a common issue, especially with the widespread availability of inexpensive and highly reliable DNA testing.  The rules for establishing paternity in Florida probate proceedings, however, have a number of hurdles, some of which intentionally deny biological paternity from controlling the outcome.

The starting point for paternity determinations in probate is found at section 732.108, Florida Statutes (2011), which provides that paternity for children born out of wedlock can be established as follows: 

(a)  The natural parents participated in a marriage ceremony before or after the birth of the person born out of wedlock, even though the attempted marriage is void. 

(b)  The paternity of the father is established by an adjudication before or after the death of the father. Chapter 95 shall not apply in determining heirs in a probate proceeding under this paragraph.

(c)  The paternity of the father is acknowledged in writing by the father.

 

If there is an adjudication of paternity, prior to the death of the father, it will likely have taken place in the family courts, whereas an adjudication of paternity after the death will most likely end up in the probate courts. Section 732.108 permits the probate courts to adjudicate paternity rights which have not already been adjudicated in another proceeding.

Section 732.108 does not permit the probate court to address paternity issues after a prior paternity determination in family court or elsewhere.  Instead, a litigant is required to go back to the court making the original paternity determination. In Glover v. Miller, 947 So.2d 1254, (Fla. 4th DCA 2007), a probate court addressed this very issue with regard to a party’s right to contest a prior paternity adjudication. 

Because any determination of paternity will involve many other parties and have effects more far reaching than a mere adjudication of the biological connection between Jerrod and Glover, we are not convinced that such a determination can and should be made as part of the probate proceedings where the only issue to be determined is intestate succession. We agree with the trial court that in order for Glover to assert a right as an heir, the existing judgment of paternity would have to be vacated. A child cannot have two legally recognized fathers.

Acknowledgment in writing may be in the form of a birth certificate, affidavit, or other writing such as a beneficiary designation under a life insurance policy. There is no requirement that the writing take on any particular formality. When faced with the question of whether eyewitness testimony should be required to authenticate writings of a father acknowledging a child, the court in In re: Estate of Jerrido, 339 So.2d 237 (Fla. 4th DCA 1976) refused to require such evidence.

The applications in question upon acceptance by the life insurance carriers were incorporated into the policies the carriers issued and became part of those policies. Because of this incorporation, the applications became prima facie evidence of their own authenticity, including those portions of the applications bearing the signatures of witnesses.

As discussed in a recent article in the New York Times, the use of DNA evidence has become very liberalized to the extent that privacy rights are trumped in order to seek out the identity of criminals.  However, probate courts have taken a more conservative approach in refusing to permit DNA evidence to identify true biological parents when paternity has already been established pursuant to 732.108. 

In Glover v. Miller, the Court refused to consider DNA evidence, which would have confirmed the child’s biological father, because there had been a prior adjudication of paternity for another man before the child’s death.

Section 732.101(2) provides that the decedent’s date of death is the event vesting the heirs’ rights to intestate property. At the date of Jerrod’s death, Glover was not considered Jerrod’s father for purposes of intestate succession, because he never married Jerrod’s mother, was never adjudicated to be his father, and never acknowledged in writing that he was Jerrod’s father. In contrast, Miller was Jerrod’s father for purposes of intestate succession because he was adjudicated to be Jerrod’s father. Thus, Miller’s rights vested on Jerrod’s death because he is Jerrod’s father by a paternity judgment. Jerrod was a lineal descendant of Miller within the meaning of section 732.108(2)(b), so he is an heir for purposes of section 733.301(1)(b)3.

In Holmen v. Holmen, 697 So.2d 866 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997), the trial court refused to consider DNA evidence of paternity, finding that the decedent’s written acknowledgment of the child was sufficient proof to settle the issue. On appeal, the issue was whether the rebuttable presumption of paternity in family law proceedings (section 742.10) should be applicable in probate proceedings. The appellate court refused to apply the standard in probate proceedings.

 

The appellants, who contested the petition, argued that the decedent’s affidavit created only a rebuttable presumption. They wanted the opportunity to demonstrate by scientific testing and other evidence that the decedent was not in fact the father of the child. They relied on section 742.10(1), which provides:

(1) This chapter provides the primary jurisdiction and procedures for the determination of paternity for children born out of wedlock. When the establishment of paternity has been raised and determined within an adjudicatory hearing brought under the statutes governing inheritance, dependency under workers’ compensation or similar compensation programs, or vital statistics, or when an affidavit acknowledging paternity or a stipulation of paternity is executed by both parties and filed with the clerk of the court, or when a consenting affidavit as provided for in s. 382.013(6)(b) is executed by both parties, it shall constitute the establishment of paternity for purposes of this chapter. If no adjudicatory proceeding was held, a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity shall create a rebuttable presumption as defined by s. 90.304, of paternity § 742.10(1), Fla. Stat. (1995) (emphasis added).

In In re Estate of Smith, 685 So.2d 1206, 1208 (Fla.1996), the Supreme Court agreed with the conclusion of the first district and held that “paternity may be established in the course of probate proceedings.” The first district had concluded that section 732 does not require that an adjudication of paternity in probate be by an action pursuant to chapter 742, explaining:

To the contrary, it would seem to us that inclusion in the Probate Code, chapter 732, of a provision allowing intestate succession by the illegitimate child of a father indicates that the issue of paternity may be properly adjudicated in the probate proceeding.

. . .

Based on Estate of Smith, we agree that chapter 732 controls in this probate proceeding. The decedent’s written acknowledgment in this case thus establishes paternity for purposes of intestate succession. . . .

Pursuant to section 95.11, “within four years . . . an action relating to the determination of paternity, with the time running from the date the child reaches the age of majority” must be filed to prevent being barred under this section.”

Does this serve as a bar to a proceeding brought in probate? At one time the caselaw said yes, but now due to an amendment to the probate code the answer is “No.” Section 723.108(b) was recently amended to address this very issue and now states as follows: “Chapter 95 shall not apply in determining heirs in a probate proceeding under this paragraph.”

Prior to the amendment, the caselaw on this issue held that statute of limitations did apply to probate proceedings to determine heirship, but only to those proceedings requiring an adjudicatory hearing.  

The court in Thurston v. Thurston, 777 So.2d 1001 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001) had addressed the applicability of section 95.11 to the predecessor statute (section 731.29) to section 732.108 and further discussed the legislative intent of allowing inheritance rights to be established without an adjudicatory proceeding. Section 731.29 read as follows:

Every illegitimate child is an heir of his mother, and also of the person who, in writing, signed in the presence of a competent witness, acknowledges himself to be the father. Such illegitimate child shall inherit from his mother and also, when so recognized, from his father, in the same manner as if the child had been born in lawful wedlock. However, such illegitimate child does not represent his father or mother by inheriting any part of the estate of the parents’ kindred, either lineal or collateral, unless his parents have intermarried, in which event such illegitimate child shall be deemed legitimate for all purposes.

The court in Thurston held that the amended section 732.108 required an adjudicatory hearing or determination of paternity to prove a marriage was between natural parents under subsection (a) and to determine paternity of a father under subsection (b). However, the analysis of in Thurston made clear that a determination of paternity through an adjudicatory hearing is not necessary if you seek to prove your intestate right through a writing under subsection (c). Although an interesting analysis on this issue, the holding in Thurston has been overruled by the amendment to section 732.108(b).

Closing the Probate Estate

A Petition for Discharge in Florida probate lets the court and the beneficiaries know what assets are in the estate and how the assets will be distributed.  The Petition for Discharge also informs the court and beneficiaries the amount of assets being paid to the attorney or the personal representative, and the personal representative’s fees.

If you are the personal representative of a Florida probate, one of your last obligations will be to file the Petition for Discharge.  If you are a beneficiary of a Florida estate, one of the last documents you will receive will be the Petition for Discharge.  You will likely wonder whether or not you should consent to the Petition.

A Petition for Discharge in Florida probate, pursuant to Florida Probate Rule 5.400, is required to contain a statement:

(1) that the personal representative has fully administered the estate;

(2) that all claims which were presented have been paid, settled, or otherwise disposed of;

(3) that the personal representative has paid or made provision for taxes and expenses of administration;

(4) showing the amount of compensation paid or to be paid to the personal representative, attorneys, accountants, appraisers, or other agents employed by the personal representative and the manner of determining that compensation;

(5) showing a plan of distribution which shall include:

(A) a schedule of all prior distributions;

(B) the property remaining in the hands of the personal representative for distribution;

(C) a schedule describing the proposed distribution of the remaining assets; and

(D) the amount of funds retained by the personal representative to pay expenses that are incurred in the distribution of the remaining assets and termination of the estate administration;

(6) that any objections to the accounting, the compensation paid or proposed to be paid, or the proposed distribution of assets must be filed within 30 days from the date of service of the last of the petition for discharge or final accounting; and also that within 90 days after filing of the objection, a notice of hearing thereon must be served or the objection is abandoned; and

(7) that objections, if any, shall be in writing and shall state with particularity the item or items to which the objection is directed and the grounds on which the objection is based.

Rule 5.400 establishes the procedure for giving notice and serving the final accounting, petition for discharge, and plan of distribution to all interested persons in the estate prior to distribution and discharge.

Yes, a beneficiary or interested person can object to a petition for discharge.

Florida Probate Rule 5.400 requires that any objection to the compensation paid or proposed to be paid, or the proposed distribution of assets must be filed within 30 days from the service of the last of the Petition for Discharge or the Final Accounting.  A beneficiary then has 90 days from the filing of the objection to serve a notice of hearing on the objection, or the objection is deemed abandoned.

The deadlines to object to a Petition for discharge are strictly construed by the Florida Courts.  For example, in Unanue v. Johnson, a personal representative was discharged within the 30 day window for objections to the Petition for Discharge.  Two beneficiaries of the estate filed an objection, and then sought reversal of the order discharging the personal representative, because their time to object was cut short in violation of Rule 5.400.  The appellate court reversed because the discharge of the personal representative did not allow for the consideration of the timely filed objection.

Often, the petition for discharge will be accompanied by a Waiver of Accounting, Receipt, and Consent to Discharge.  This document asks the beneficiaries to waive the requirement of an accounting and consent to the discharge of the personal representative.

A waiver and consent is typically sent to save money and time, and to expeditiously close the probate without using further estate assets to prepare a formal accounting.  If all interested persons sign the waiver and consent, then discharge of the personal representative is generally a smooth process.

If you have been involved in an estate where you suspect mismanagement or dishonesty on the part of the personal representative, you should consider consulting an attorney before signing a waiver and consent.  Some items on a petition for discharge are easily verifiable, such as the reasonableness of personal representative’s fees, while others might need more investigation.

In many probate administrations, the beneficiaries will be asked to sign a waiver of accounting, so as to release the personal representative of the estate from having to account to the beneficiaries. Should you sign the waiver of accounting in a Florida Probate?

A Final Accounting is filed in a Florida Probate when the personal representative has fully administered the estate and is ready to make final distributions and close the estate.

Florida Probate Rule 5.400, entitled “Distribution and Discharge,” requires that the personal representative “file a final accounting and a petition for discharge including a plan of distribution.”

Probate Rule 5.346, entitled “Fiduciary Accounting,” sets forth the information required to be disclosed in a fiduciary accounting.

Accounting Standards. The following standards are required for the accounting of all transactions occurring on or after January 1, 1994:(1) Accountings shall be stated in a manner that is understandable to persons who are not familiar with practices and terminology peculiar to the administration of estates and trusts.
(2) The accounting shall begin with a concise summary of its purpose and content.
(3) The accounting shall contain sufficient information to put interested persons on notice as to all significant transactions affecting administration during the accounting period.
(4) The accounting shall contain 2 values in the schedule of assets at the end of the accounting period, the asset acquisition value or carrying value, and estimated current value.
(5) Gains and losses incurred during the accounting period shall be shown separately in the same schedule.
(6) The accounting shall show significant transactions that do not affect the amount for which the fiduciary is accountable.

The Florida Probate Rules provide a model format for accountings so that the accountings are consistent and understandable.

Upon receipt of an accounting, an interested person has 30 days of service of the accounting to object to the accounting. The objection must be in writing and served on the personal representative and interested persons within 30 days of service.

Accountings can be expensive and time consuming to prepare.  The estate cannot be closed until the time for objecting has expired.  Therefore, if waivers are not signed, everyone is forced to wait until an objection is filed or until the time to object has come and gone.

In many estates, the personal representative will ask the beneficiaries to waive the requirement for an accounting.

In many Florida estates, it makes sense to waive the accounting.  This is because the personal representative has already provided most, if not all, of the information that would constitute an accounting, such as bank and brokerage statements. In such cases, the information has already been provided, making an accounting unnecessary. Also, Florida Probate Rule 5.341 requires that a personal representative provide any information regarding an estate to a beneficiary who requests the information.

So, between bank statements and answers to some questions about the administration of an estate, many interested persons will have been provided all of the information necessary to evaluate whether or not to waive the requirement of a formal accounting.

In complex estates, however, and in estates where the personal representative has been less than forthcoming about information, the formality of a final accounting may be desired. If there are disputes about how an estate has been administered, it may be a bad idea to waive an accounting.

Accountings can be expensive and time consuming to prepare.  The estate cannot be closed until the time for objecting has expired.  Therefore, if waivers are not signed, everyone is forced to wait until an objection is filed or until the time to object has come and gone. In many estates, the personal representative will ask the beneficiaries to waive the requirement for an accounting. In many Florida estates, it makes sense to waive the accounting.  This is because the personal representative has already provided most, if not all, of the information that would constitute an accounting, such as bank and brokerage statements. In such cases, the information has already been provided, making an accounting unnecessary. Also, Florida Probate Rule 5.341 requires that a personal representative provide any information regarding an estate to a beneficiary who requests the information. So, between bank statements and answers to some questions about the administration of an estate, many interested persons will have been provided all of the information necessary to evaluate whether or not to waive the requirement of a formal accounting. In complex estates, however, and in estates where the personal representative has been less than forthcoming about information, the formality of a final accounting may be desired. If there are disputes about how an estate has been administered, it may be a bad idea to waive an accounting.

Fundamental to our legal system is the concept of procedural due process — before any order can be rendered affecting a person’s rights, that person must be given notice and an opportunity to be heard.  In civil cases, the summons and complaint are the implements of serving process and meeting this notice requirement.  In probate matters, things have been historically less clear.  However, a recent opinion by Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeals clarifies that formal notice has to be served on an attorney for the personal representative to review the attorney’s compensation.

Adversarial probate proceedings differ from traditional civil litigation in that the parties to a probate dispute are usually seeking resolution of some issue involving assets of the estate.  In most instances, the probate court has taken jurisdiction over the estate and the individuals who come to court are seeking a determination as to their rights in the probate estate.  Because it is the corpus of probate assets which is actually at issue in these disputes, we say that these probate proceedings are in rem proceedings; that is, they affect an interest in property. 

In some instances, however, individuals involved in a probate matter seek relief against a person for a legal wrong.  One example is an action for surcharge.  Surcharge is an action against a fiduciary — in the context of probate, a personal representative — for payment of damages from the fiduciary’s own funds to beneficiaries as a result of breach of fiduciary duty (notably, an action for surcharge can also be pursued against the attorney for a fiduciary).  Because surcharge damages are paid by from the fiduciary’s own funds and not from probate funds, the fiduciary is exposed to personal liability and must be sued in his/her individual capacity.

 

What emerges is a dichotomy of probate litigation wherein some proceedings appear to be in rem in nature.  For these matters, personal jurisdiction over the interested parties is not necessarily required.  This is important where, for instance, the beneficiaries are not located in Florida and have no relation to the state beyond their beneficial interest in the estate.  On the other hand, where an action is brought against a person in his/her individual capacity and where that individual is exposed to personal liability, personal jurisdiction over that individual is required.  How one acquires personal jurisdiction in a probate matter was recently at issue before our Fourth District Court of Appeals.

In Simmons v. Baranowitz, (4th DCA 2015) the Fourth District Court of Appeals reversed the probate trial court’s imposition of damages for surcharge against a personal representative’s attorney on grounds that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction.  The Fourth District noted that the nature of a surcharge action is such that the remedy is being sought against the individual.  Because relief is being sought against the individual and not from the corpus of probate assets, the court must have personal jurisdiction over the person being sued.  In a probate matter the Simmons Court explained, formal notice is required to confer personal jurisdiction over an individual.  The Court suggested that the filing of documents on behalf of the personal representative and receipt of a fee did not suffice to confer jurisdiction on the attorney in his individual capacity.  The surcharge proceeding, the Fourth District explained, was essentially a new action against an individual who had not previously been a party to any matter.  Because that attorney was not given proper notice of the surcharge proceeding against him, the trial court did not have the requisite jurisdiction to order the attorney to pay damages. 

The appellate court ruled that a special kind of notice, called formal notice, should have been given to the attorney for the personal representative.  Formal notice needs to be served on the attorney for the personal representative to challenge the compensation (Attorney fees) paid to the attorney for the estate. 

You can reopen probate in Florida if additional assets are located, a new will found, a creditor entitled to notice was not paid, or for fraud.

A probate in Florida will end upon the filing by the Personal Representative of a Petition for Discharge, Plan of Distribution, and Final Accounting, and the Court entering an Order of Discharge.  Any interested person may object to the Petition for Discharge, in which case a hearing might be held before the Order of Discharge is entered.  Indeed, the Court might agree that the Petition for Discharge or the Plan of Distribution should be altered prior to the close out of the estate.  Interested persons might be asked to sign a Waiver of Accounting and Consent to the Petition for Discharge – if all sign, the Court could enter the Order of Discharge in chambers or at a quick five-minute hearing.

In many probate estates, the Court will administratively close the estate.  In such a case, the Personal Representative is not discharged, but administration of the estate will be suspended.  Typically this happens when the estate is not closed by an initial deadline set by the Court – typically 12 months from the issuance of Letters of Administration.  In some situations, Personal Representatives die, become disabled, or lose interest. It is fairly common.

In a summary administration, the probate estate is never really opened or closed.  No Personal Representative is appointed.  Instead, any interested person, after providing notice to all other interested persons, asks the Court to issue an Order of Summary Administration, which retitles assets and directs third parties to deliver assets in their custody to the proper heirs.

Florida Statute 733.903 is the starting point to reopen an estate.

733.903 Subsequent administration.—The final settlement of an estate and the discharge of the personal representative shall not prevent further administration. The order of discharge may not be revoked based upon the discovery of a will or later will.

Florida Probate Rule 5.460 sets forth how to petition the Court to reopen a closed Florida probate estate:

Rule 5.460. Subsequent Administration

(a) Petition. If, after an estate is closed, additional property of the decedent is discovered or if further administration of the estate is required for any other reason, any interested person may file a petition for further administration of the estate. The petition shall be filed in the same probate file as the original administration.

(b) Contents. The petition shall state:

(1) the name, address, and interest of the petitioner in the estate;

(2) the reason for further administration of the estate;

(3) the description, approximate value, and location of any asset not included among the assets of the prior administration; and

(4) a statement of the relief sought.

(c) Order. The court shall enter such orders as appropriate. Unless required, the court need not revoke the order of discharge, reissue letters, or require bond.

The 2018 case of Sims v. Barnard, 257 So.3d 630 (1st DCA 2018) explains how to reopen a Florida probate estate for fraud.  The estate administration lasted more than 10 years, with several personal representatives.  The final personal representative filed a final accounting, to which a beneficiary objected.  The Court overruled the objections and discharged the personal representative in 2015.  Two years later, the beneficiary sued the final personal representative for fraud and embezzlement.

The Court allowed, in theory, the lawsuit against the personal representative to proceed, under a modified res judicata concept:

Appellant correctly asserts that section 733.901 “does not serve as an absolute bar to the suits filed after the discharge of
the personal representative.” Van Dusen v. Southeast First Nat’l Bank of Miami, 478 So. 2d 82, 89 (Fla. 3d DCA 1985). The
statutory bar codifies “a modified res judicata concept . . .applicable in probate cases.” Id. at 91. The bar will not be applied to a suit for fraud by concealment, where its application “would permit a fiduciary to benefit from its alleged wrongful acts if it could conceal them for the statutory period.” Karpo v. Deitsch, 196 So. 2d 180, 181 (Fla. 3d DCA 1967) (holding that suit was not barred by discharge where suit alleged PR concealed from heirs the true value of estate and concealed from the court the identities of the heirs preventing heirs from asserting objection or claim prior to discharge). Likewise, where the PR conceals its intentional transfer of an estate asset by failing to report the distribution in the petition for distribution or otherwise, the PR “is not entitled to the sanctuary provided by” section 733.901. Van Dusen, 478 So. 2d at 91.

The Court dismissed the lawsuit because the beneficiary did not make the necessary showing to be allowed to proceed to reopen the Florida probate:

The record in this case fails to support any concealment of any estate asset or distribution from the court or from Appellant which prevented Appellant from raising his objection prior to the order of discharge so as to remove Appellant’s lawsuit from the application of section 733.901(2). In fact, the record amply demonstrates that Appellant did repeatedly but unavailingly raise his same objections and claims of mismanagement against the PR throughout the probate proceedings.

Yes.  The case of Dean v. Bentley, 848 So. 2d 487 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2003) involved a lawyer/personal representative who learned of a new will during probate administration, but nevertheless proceeded to close out the estate without notifying the court or the beneficiary of the new will.  In allowing the petitioner to reopen the Florida estate, the Court explained:

The appellants also argue that the estate should not have been reopened because a petition for revocation of probate must be brought before discharge, and Bentley did not file the petition for revocation until after the order of discharge was entered. Although sections 733.208 and 733.109, Florida Statutes, provide that a petition for revocation of probate should be filed before discharge, fraud is recognized as justification for reopening an estate, even after an order for discharge has been entered. Liechty v. Hall, 687 So. 2d 64, 65 (Fla. 5th DCA 1997); Padgett v. Padgett, 318 So. 2d 484, 485 (Fla. 1st DCA 1975). Also, Rule 1.540(b), Florida Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “[o]n motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, decree, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: . . . . fraud (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party.”

Yes, including on the grounds that an heir was excluded from the original summary administration.  In Wallace v. Watkins, 253 So. 3d 1204 (5th DCA 2018), the decedent died in 1971.  In 2001, her two daughters obtained summary administration for a parcel of realty that the decedent owned.  Apparently, the decedent had adopted 3 of her grandchildren, who received no notice of the summary administration.  In 2016, the adopted children sought to reopen the summary administration under Section 735.206(g), which provides:

Any heir or devisee of the decedent who was lawfully entitled to share in the estate but who was not included in the order of summary administration and distribution may enforce all rights in appropriate proceedings against those who procured the order and, if successful, shall be awarded reasonable attorney’s fees as an element of costs.

In allowing the summary administration to be reopened, the Court was clear:

In their petition to reopen summary administration, Appellees specifically alleged that they were excluded from the original petition for summary administration although they were known heirs of the decedent.

The trial court somehow barred the reopening under Florida’s nonclaim statute, which is an absolute bar to creditor claims against an estate more than two years after death.  As explained by the appellate court, the nonclaim statute does not apply to the interests of a beneficiary seeking to reopen a Florida probate:

Florida’s nonclaim statute applies to claims brought against the estate by creditors. It does not apply to the beneficial interests of heirs. See In re Estate of Robertson, 520 So. 2d 99, 102 (Fla. 4th DCA 1988) (rejecting argument that nonclaim statute barred claim of heirship because such claims were “not the type of ‘claim’ contemplated” by nonclaim statute).

Probate Litigation and Will Contests

20 days, 3 months, or 4 years.

Florida probate lawyers are often asked what is the deadline to challenge a will in Florida probate. There are a number of deadlines for Florida probate, and one must be aware of them.  The two most important deadlines are the twenty-day rule and the three-month rule.  For a complete chart of probate deadlines and timelines in Florida, click here.

20-day Deadline To Challenge a Will If you Receive Formal Notice

If you are served with formal notice of a Petition for Administration, that formal notice will give 20 days within which to challenge the will by filing an objection to the Petition for Administration. If an objection is not filed, there is a substantial risk that the ability to challenge the will can be lost.

3-Month Deadline To Challenge a Will If you Receive a Notice of Administration

If instead of being served with formal notice of the petition for administration, one is served with a Notice of Administration, that document will state that the recipient has three months within which to challenge the probate of the will. If a Petition to Revoke Probate is not filed within the three month period, the ability to contest the will is lost.

What if One Never Receives the Petition for Administration or a Notice of Administration?

Is there no ability to challenge the will? One can always file a Petition to Revoke Probate, as long as the probate administration is still pending. Once the probate administration has closed, the ability to contest the will is severely limited. In some case, a claim for Intentional Interference with Expectancy can be filed, but the ability to file such a case is pretty narrow.

If a new will is discovered after the deadlines have passed, the new will can be admitted into probate, even if a prior will was already admitted, and even if the deadlines triggered by the Notice of Administration or a Petition for Administration have already passed. Once the probate administration has closed, the ability to offer a new will to undue the previous probate administration is likely going to be difficult.

If there is probate fraud, it is possible that the deadlines to challenge a will in Florida might not apply.  The general rule of thumb is that on the outside, you have four years to challenge a will after death, if none of the other deadlines are triggered.

No. The person must be dead before the will can be challenged, because a will can always be changed or revoked, at least in theory. So the first rule regarding when a will can be challenged is that the person must be dead, at least that is the rule in Florida. It is possible to challenge a revocable trust before death in narrow circumstances, which can be advantageous. Also, it is possible to gather evidence for a will contest before death if there is a guardianship pending. In many cases involving strong disputes with much money present and an elderly and inform person, the litigation beings before death in the form of a guardianship. There is also typically a challenge to revocable trusts, lifetime gifts, and uses of powers of attorney.

Bringing a Florida will contest can seem daunting, and is something most people have never done before.  Here are your top Florida will contest questions answered.

A will can be challenged only after death, not while the maker of the will is still alive, although the facts surrounding the creation of the will can be gathered and preserved for subsequent litigation. After death, the Personal Representative will issue a Notice of Administration, which starts a 90-day period for challenging a will or the appointment of the Personal Representative. Sometimes, an interested person in the estate will serve a petition for administration on all other interested persons, accompanied by a document called “Formal Notice.”  If a formal notice has been received, the time for starting the will contest is only 20 days from receipt of the formal notice.

Yes.  Proper execution of a will requires that the will be signed by the testator and witnessed by two witnesses, who also sign the will. A will can be contested on the grounds that it was not properly drafted, signed, or witnessed in accordance with the applicable requirements. A will can also be thrown out if it can be proven to be a forgery or to have been tampered with. Florida courts have declared wills to be invalid that were not witnessed properly, including a situation where the witness was in an adjoining room when the will was signed and not in the immediate presence of the testator.

Yes.  Under Florida law, a testator is required to have mental competency to make a will and to understand the nature of his or her assets and the people to whom the assets are going to be distributed. A will can be declared void if lack of capacity can be proven. Typically, incompetence is established through a prior medical diagnosis of dementia, Alzheimer’s, or psychosis, or through the testimony of witnesses as to the irrational conduct of the testator around the time the will was executed.

Accordion Content

Yes.  Undue influence occurs when the testator is compelled or coerced to execute a will as a result of improper pressure exerted on him or her, typically by a relative, friend, trusted advisor, or health care worker. In many cases, the undue influencer will upset a long established estate plan where the bulk of the estate was to pass to the direct descendants or other close relatives of the decedent. Some undue influencers are new friends or acquaintances of the decedent who “befriend” the decedent in the last months or years of life, typically after the decedent has suffered some decline in mental ability. In other situations, one child of the decedent, often a caregiver, will coerce the decedent to write the other children out of the will. Undue influencers can also be health care workers or live in aides who implicitly or explicitly threaten to withhold care unless the estate plan is changed in favor of the health care worker.  Please read Estate of Carpenter, which is the most important undue influence case in Florida.

Yes.  While Florida courts are reluctant to overturn bequests to a surviving spouse under an undue influence claim, given the importance of marriage in our society, an egregious set of facts could warrant striking of a bequest to a surviving spouse.  However, the surviving spouse will be entitled to the elective share and other spousal entitlements, absent a valid marital agreement to the contrary.

Possibly.  Almost all Florida will contests are heard by the probate division of the circuit court, where jury trials are not permitted and it goes without question that the judge will decide your case. In some situations, if a remedy in probate court is not available, a claim for tortious interference with inheritance expectancy can be filed, which does entitle the challenger to a jury trial.

One of the most common Florida will contest questions is about no contest clauses in wills, which we have written about here.  Unlike many states, Florida does not recognize “no contest” clauses in wills or trusts. In any litigation in Florida over a will or trust, such a clause will be ignored.

The most common challenge to the validity of a will is for undue influence.  If all or a portion of a will is proven to be the product of undue influence, the whole will or the portion that was procured through undue influence can be set aside in favor of a prior will or intestacy.

There are a number of cases in Florida probate where wills or trusts have been set aside as the product of undue influence.  Relevant excerpts from two such undue influence cases in Florida probate are presented.

The first undue influence case is Raimi v. Furlong, 702 So. 2d 1273 (3rd DCA 1997).

The lower court additionally found that “The Barash Will and Amended Trust” was void because it was procured by “undue influence and overreaching by Manny in violation of a confidential or fiduciary relationship.” When a will is challenged on the grounds of undue influence, the influence must amount to over persuasion, duress, force, coercion, or artful or fraudulent contrivances to such an extent that there is a destruction of free agency and willpower of the testator. See In re Carpenter’s Estate, 253 So. 2d 697, 704 (Fla. 1971); Dunson, 141 So. 2d at 605; see also Estate of Brock, 692 So. 2d 907, 911 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996), rev. denied, 694 So. 2d 737 (Fla. 1997). A presumption of undue influencearises in favor of a will contestant if it is established that a substantial beneficiary under the will occupied a confidential relationship with the testator and was active in procuring the contested will. See Carpenter, 253 So. 2d at 701; Brock, 692 So. 2d at 911; Elson v. Vargas, 520 So. 2d 76, 76 (Fla. 3d DCA), rev. denied, 528 So. 2d 1181 (Fla. 1988). The origin of the confidence between the benefactor and testator is immaterial and the confidential relationship is broadly defined:

The rule embraces both technical fiduciary relations and those informal relations which exist wherever one man trusts in and relies upon another.

* * * *

The relation and the duties involved in it need not be legal. It may be moral, social, domestic, or merely personal.  Carpenter, 253 So. 2d at 701 (citing Quinn v. Phipps, 113 So. 419, 421, 93 Fla. 805, 810 (1927)).  As for a determination of whether a substantial beneficiary was active in the procurement of the will, our supreme court in Carpenter outlined the following non-exclusive list of factors for the court’s consideration:

 

a) presence of the beneficiary at the execution of the will;
b) presence of the beneficiary on those occasions when the testator expressed a desire to make a will;
c) recommendation by the beneficiary of an attorney to draw the will;
d) knowledge of the contents of the will by the beneficiary prior to execution;
e) giving of instructions on preparation of the will by the beneficiary to the attorney drawing the will;
f) securing of witnesses to the will by the beneficiary; and
g) safekeeping of the will by the beneficiary subsequent to execution.
253 So. 2d at 702.

These listed criteria are only general guidelines and a will contestant is not required to prove them all to establish active procurement. See Id. Each case is fact specific and the significance of any (or all) of such criteria must be determined with reference to the particular facts of the case.

Once the presumption of undue influence arises, the burden shifts to the beneficiary of the will to come forward with a reasonable explanation of his or her active role in the preparation of the decedent’s will. See Brock, 692 So. 2d at 912. If the presumption goes unrebutted, it alone is sufficient to sustain the contestant’s burden. See Id. On the other hand, if the presumption is rebutted, the contestant must establish undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence. See Tarsagian v. Watt, 402 So. 2d 471, 472 (Fla. 3d DCA 1981).

 

With reference to “The Barash Will and Amended Trust,” the lower court found that a presumption of undue influence was created by virtue of Manny’s: 1) role in finding Mr. Barash; 2) role in procuring “The Barash Will and Amended Trust”; and 3) control of the decedent’s personal and financial affairs. 13 The court further found  that the presumption had not been rebutted by a reasonable explanation for Manny’s acts and conduct. Alternatively, the lower court found that even in the absence of the presumption, Manny’s undue influence had been proven by the greater weight of substantial and competent evidence. We do not agree that the evidence supports either of the lower courts’ alternative conclusions.

The second Florida probate undue influence case is RBC Ministries v. Tompkins, 974 So. 2d 569 2nd DCA 2008).

[I]f a substantial beneficiary under a will occupies a confidential relationship with the testator and is active in procuring the contested will, the presumption of undue influencearises.” Carpenter v. Carpenter (In re Estate of Carpenter), 253 So. 2d 697, 701 (Fla. 1971).The supreme court has provided the following nonexclusive list of criteria which are relevant to determining whether a beneficiary has been active in procuring a will:

 

(a) presence of the beneficiary at the execution of the will; (b) presence of the beneficiary on those occasions when the testator expressed a desire to make a will; (c) recommendation by the beneficiary of an attorney to draw the will; (d) knowledge of the contents of the will by the beneficiary prior to execution; (e) giving of instructions on preparation of the will by the beneficiary to the attorney drawing the will; (f) securing of witnesses to the will by the beneficiary; and (g) safekeeping of the will by the beneficiary subsequent to execution.
Carpenter, 253 So. 2d at 702.

 

Will contestants are not “required to prove all the listed criteria to show active procurement.” Id. Indeed, “it will be the rare case in which all the criteria will be present.” Id.
On the active procurement issue, the record before the trial court shows the following facts: Tompkins was present at the execution of the will. She was present when the decedent expressed a desire to make a will. She did not recommend an attorney to draft the will, but she herself drafted the will on her home computer. Because she drafted the will, she was aware of the contents of the will before it was executed. Tompkins secured the witnesses to the will, but the witnesses were neutral parties. Finally, Tompkins had possession of the will after its execution.

 

Accordingly, the circumstances identified in Carpenter’s criteria (a), (b), (d), (f), and (g) are all present here. Circumstances similar to–but, in fact, more egregious than–the circumstances identified in criteria (c) and (e) are also present here. In view of these facts, there is no basis for concluding that Tompkins established beyond dispute that she was not active in procuring the contested will. Given Tompkins’ conceded status as a substantial beneficiary under the will, her admitted confidential relationship with the decedent, and her failure to show beyond dispute that she was not active in procuring the will, Tompkins did not establish that the presumption of undue influence had not arisen. See id. at 702 (holding that “at least four of the factors” regarding active procurement were “sufficient to raise the presumption of undue influence” where the beneficiary was a substantial beneficiary who had a confidential relationship with the decedent).

Although the facts of each undue influence case vary, the same themes reoccur.  There is a mentally weakened elderly person, a predatory individual takes advantage of the situation by inserting himself or herself into the estate planning process.  Although every one of the Carpenter factors need not always be present, typically a number of such factors will be present so that the court can conclude that the new estate plan would not have been created but for the involvement of the undue influencer.

Tortious interference in estate planning, also known as tortuous interference with inheritance, also known as tortuous interference with expectancy, is a relatively new theory of inheritance liability first recognized in Florida in 1966. See Allen v. Leybourne, 190 So. 2d 825 (Fla. 3d DCA 1966).

To state a claim for intentional interference with an expectancy of inheritance, the complaint must allege:

  1. the existence of an expectancy;
  2. intentional interference with the expectancy through tortuous conduct;
  3. causation; and,
  4. damages.
 

The tort is primarily to protect the deceased testator’s former right to dispose of property freely and without improper interference.

If adequate relief is available in a probate proceeding, then that probate remedy must be exhausted before such a claim can be pursued.  If Defendant’s fraud is not discovered until after probate, plaintiff is allowed to bring a later action for damages since relief in the probate court was impossible. Schilling v. Herrera, 952 So. 2d 1231 (Fla. 3d DCA 2007).

The tortious interference action may be brought only under circumstances that do not usurp the jurisdiction of the Florida probate court, constitute an impermissible collateral attack on an order or judgment entered in a Florida probate proceeding, or improperly delegate, to disappointed beneficiaries, the responsibility for the protection of a competent testator’s right to dispose of property freely and without improper interference.

Florida law requires the exhaustion of other available probate remedies that may provide adequate relief.

In DeWitt v. Duce, 408 So. 2d 216 (Fla. 1981), the Florida Supreme Court set forth the rule of tortious interference, stating that:

if adequate relief is available in a probate proceeding, then that remedy must be exhausted before a tortuous interference claim may be pursued.

A later action (after a probate action) for tortious interference is allowed only if the circumstances surrounding the tortious conduct effectively preclude full and adequate relief in the probate court and the inadequacy of the probate remedy is made apparent or established. Id.  One such situation when a later action is permitted is when the defendant’s conduct precludes the plaintiff from obtaining adequate relief in the probate proceeding. Ebeling v. Voltz, 454 So. 2d 783 (Fla. 4thDCA 1984).

In Ebeling, plaintiffs had notice of the will favoring defendant, but failed to litigate an incapacity claim in the probate proceeding because of defendant’s fraudulent inducement not to contest the will.   The subsequent tortious interference with expectancy action was allowed and determined not to be an impermissible collateral attack on the will or the probate proceedings.

The Schilling case distinguishes DeWitt by the allegations of two separate frauds – the initial fraud on the testator, and the second by the prevention of a contest in the probate court.  The court noted that if only the first fraud was involved, that the attack on the will would be a collateral attack on the probate proceedings barred pursuant to DeWitt.

The holdings of Florida’s most recent tortious interference with expectancy of inheritance cases are summarized below:

  • In Re Estate of Tensfeldt (2d DCA 2003): No cause of action for tortious interference with expectancy of inheritance accrues until the testator’s death.
  • Cohen v. Cohen (4th DCA 2003): No cause of action for tortious interference with expectancy of inheritance because plaintiff failed to exhaust her probate remedy by seeking to invalidate a 2000 Will and seeking probate of a 1997 will.
  • Neumann v. Wordock (2d DCA 2004): An adequate remedy is only available in a probate proceeding if the distribution of assets sought by the aggrieved party can be achieved in the probate proceeding.
  • In Re Estate of Hatten (3d DCA 2004): If a beneficiary of a maliciously destroyed will cannot establish the will because of the evidentiary requirements for establishing a lost will, and if their share in the probate is less than what they would have received under the destroyed will, then they do not have an adequate probate remedy and can pursue a tortious interference with expectancy of inheritance action.
  • Saewitz v. Saewitz (3d DCA 2012):  To state a claim for tortious interference with expectancy of inheritance you need damages, which is the loss of an inheritance or gift that would have been received but for the tortious inteference.  The damage must be established with a reasonable degree of certainty, meaning that which would satisfy the mind of a prudent impartial person.

Adversarial probate proceedings in Florida probate are governed by the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure.  Pursuant to Florida Probate Rule 5.025(d):

After service of formal notice [declaring the proceeding adversarial], the proceedings, as nearly as practicable must be conducted similar to suits of a civil nature, including entry of defaults. The Florida Rules of Civil Procedure govern, except for rule 1.525 [governing motions for costs and attorneys’ fees].

Like a complaint is a civil suit, a petition “shall contain a short and plain statement of the relief sought, the grounds therefor, and the jurisdiction of the court where the jurisdiction has not already been shown.” Fla. Prob. R. 5.020(b); See also LaCalle v. Barquin, 987 So. 2d 1245, 1245 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008).

A petition for administration in probate is akin to a complaint in a civil suit.  LaCalle, 987 So. 2d at 1246.  When an interested person in probate moves to dismiss a Florida probate petition after the proceedings are declared adversarial, the Court must confine itself strictly to the allegations within the four corners of the petition. Id. at 1246 (relying on Pizzi v. Cent. Bank & Trust Co., 250 So. 2d 895, 897 (Fla. 1971)). 

In LaCalle, the trial court dismissed a petition to probate a lost or destroyed will following respondent’s motion to dismiss based on affidavits attached to the motion to dismiss.  On appeal, the Third District reversed in an eloquent fashion, where it stated as follows:

A petition for administration of a will and a petition to establish a lost or destroyed will in probate are different proceedings. See Lowy v. Roberts, 453 So. 2d 886 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). As to the former, it is apodictic that matters dehors the four corners of a complaint or petition may not be considered on a motion to dismiss. See Fla. Prob. R. 5.025(d)(2) ([T]he proceedings [to probate a lost or destroyed will], as nearly as practicable, shall be conducted similar to suits of a civil nature and the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure shall govern, . . .); see also Pizzi v. Cent. Bank & Trust Co., 250 So. 2d 895, 897 (Fla. 1971) (holding–on a motion to dismiss–that [t]he court must confine itself strictly to the allegations within the four corners of the complaint’ (quoting Kest v. Nathanson, 216 So. 2d 233, 235 (Fla. 4th DCA 1968))); N.E. at West Palm Beach, Inc. v. Horowitz, 471 So. 2d 570, 570-71 (Fla. 3d DCA 1985) (The purpose of a motion to dismiss is to ascertain whether a plaintiff has alleged a good cause of action and the court must confine itself strictly to the four corners of the complaint.)

Petitions in probate may take different postures, for example, a petition for administration, a petition to establish a lost or destroyed will, or a petition to establish and return probate assets, each assert. While each petition may seek a separate recovery and involve different moving parts, the petition itself is what triggers the proceeding towards that recovery.  Like a complaint in a civil action, the petition as an initial pleading in probate may invite a response in the way of a motion to dismiss. When the Court rules on the motion to dismiss in probate, it is limited in the same fashion as in a civil lawsuit, to not exceed the four corners of the operative pleading—the petition.  Read about adversarial proceedings in Florida guardianships here. 

Reformation of a will in Florida is permitted to correct a mistake of fact or law.  Prior to 2011, only a trust could be reformed under Florida law.  Florida Statute Section 732.615, effective July 1, 2011, permits a Florida probate court to reform a will so as to effectuate the true intent of the testator:

732.615 Reformation to correct mistakes.—Upon application of any interested person, the court may reform the terms of a will, even if unambiguous, to conform the terms to the testator’s intent if it is proved by clear and convincing evidence that both the accomplishment of the testator’s intent and the terms of the will were affected by a mistake of fact or law, whether in expression or inducement. In determining the testator’s original intent, the court may consider evidence relevant to the testator’s intent even though the evidence contradicts an apparent plain meaning of the will.

Previously, if a will was ambiguous, a Florida court could allow a reformation since the primary intent was to ascertain the intent of the testator. The new statute allows reformation of the will, even if not ambiguous.

A recent case addressing reformation, however, points out that events that occur after the will or trust is executed might not be considered in a reformation action.  The law is much more developed in the case of trust reformation, but can be extrapolated to apply to will reformation.

New Florida Statute section 732.615 will give support for beneficiaries who were deprived of an inheritance or part of an inheritance under a will when it is clear from the evidence that the decedent’s intent was not properly reflected in the will.  Will beneficiaries can pursue reformation of a will in Florida to effectuate the testator’s true intent.

In Hill v. Davis, (Fla. 2011), the Florida Supreme Court may have relaxed the 3 month deadline within which to challenge certain types of probate fraud.  The Florida Supreme Court held that the 3 month period to make certain objections after receiving a Notice of Administration might not apply for challenges based on facts not known during the three month window.

The Florida Probate Code requires that a personal representative serve a Notice of Administration on certain interested persons in the probate, including surviving spouses and beneficiaries of the estate.   See the Florida Probate Deadlines and Timelines applicable to probate cases.  The Notice of Administration may also be served on any person for whom the personal representative wishes to start the statute of limitations running. Any person who receives the Notice of Administration has 3 months from receipt to make certain objections, including the validity of the will, the qualifications of the personal representative, or the jurisdiction of the court. The person objecting has 3 months to file a pleading in the probate court making the objection.

Section 733.212(3) of the Florida Probate code provides:

Any interested person on whom a copy of the notice of administration is served must object to the validity of the will, the qualifications of the personal representative, the venue, or the jurisdiction of the court by filing a petition or other pleading requesting relief in accordance with the Florida Probate Rules on or before the date that is 3 months after the date of service of a copy of the notice of administration on the objecting person, or those objections are forever barred.

What if the reason to challenge the will or the qualifications are not discovered within the 3 month period? Can an interested person file an objection after the 3 month deadline?

The Florida Supreme Court has said yes, in some circumstances. In that case, the personal representative was not eligible to serve as personal representative because he was not a resident of Florida and was not related to the deceased at the time of death of the deceased. An interested person challenged the appointment after the expiration of the 3 month contest period. The fact that the personal representative was not eligible to serve were known to the contestant during the 3 month period.

In rejecting the contestant’s challenge as untimely, the Florida Supreme Court explained that, for facts known to the contestant, the 3 month contest period cannot be expanded. For contests based on facts not known, the 3 month period might not apply.

For challenges based on the qualifications of the personal representative, this case controls – a late contest based on newly discovered facts can proceed outside of the typical probate fraud deadlines. But what about another type of challenge – a will contest based on undue influence – that is not discovered until after the 3 month contest period expires. Does the 3 month limitation period apply? Must the petition for administration or the notice of administration be based on fraud? These answers are not currently known, and will depend on the facts of the individual case.

Florida Probate Quick Guides

Beneficiaries in an estate being administered in Florida have certain rights as set forth in the Florida Probate Code, the Florida Probate Rules, and relevant cases issued under Florida law.

The most important rights for a beneficiary are to be given notice of all relevant details of the estate administration, to be treated fairly, and to have the estate be administered efficiently.

Notice and Due Process Rights in Florida Probate AdministrationThe right to be given adequate notice and information regarding the estate administration begins at the opening of the probate estate and the appointment of the personal representative.

If there is a will and the person named in the will as the personal representative seeks appointment as personal representative by the probate court, no advance notice of the appointment of the personal representative is required.
The will can also be admitted to probate without any advance notice.
If any beneficiary wants to stop the appointment of the named personal representative of the admission of the will to probate, that person has the right to file a caveat, as set forth in Florida Probate Statute Section 731.110.  The filing of the caveat requires that advance notice be given before the appointment of the personal representative by the probate court, and before the will is admitted to probate.

Once the personal representative is appointed by the probate court, the personal representative is required to send to all interested persons a Notice of Administration pursuant to Florida Probate Statute Section 733.212.  The Notice of Administration sets forth various rights that the recipient has to challenge the validity of the will and the appointment and qualifications of the personal representative.  Each recipient has 90 days to make these challenges, or they are considered waived.
Each beneficiary of the probate estate has the right to receive the estate’s accounting, pursuant to Florida Probate Statute Section 733.604.  The accounting must contain an accurate inventory of the assets of the probate estate.  The accounting is required to set forth the value of each asset of the estate.  Each beneficiary is permitted to seek from the personal representative how the value of each asset was obtained.

The personal representative is required to provide a final accounting of all transactions taking place during the probate estate administration.  The Florida Probate Rules set forth the format of a probate accounting.  In addition, a beneficiary may petition the probate court to require the personal representative to file an interim accounting.  Whether the probate court orders an interim accounting is within the court’s discretion.

Right to Fair and Prompt Administration of the Probate Estate

The Personal Representative is required to administer the probate estate fairly.  Bequests should be paid as quickly as possible, with due respect for the rights of creditors and the other beneficiaries.  The facts of each probate administration make specific rules difficult, but most situations are fairly obvious.

For example, if the estate is large, and there are not significant creditors, the specific bequests (assuming they do not make up a large portion of the bequests) should be paid earlier in the estate administration.   If an estate has $1 million in probate assets, no creditors, and two specific bequests, one of $10,000 and the other of a car, each of those specific bequests should be made as soon as the creditor claim period expires.  The residuary beneficiaries will have to wait until the estate is fully administered before receiving their inheritance, although interim distributions of residuary bequests can be compelled in the right situation.

If the estate has creditors, is involved in litigation, has tax issues, the assets are difficult to value, and the estate must be divided among 20 beneficiaries, it might take years before any distributions can be made to anyone.  It is not unusual for a probate administration to last for five years or more.

When the residuary clause of the will divides the remaining assets among several people, such as to the three children of the deceased, in equal shares, if the estate consists of nothing but one bank account, the division into three separate shares is easy.  On the other hand, if the estate consists of a business, investment real estate, and a stock market portfolio, dividing the estate into separate and equal shares could be difficult.  Although the personal representative has a certain amount of discretion in valuing and dividing assets, the personal representative must make every possible effort to be fair and reasonable.

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If the Personal Representative violates the rights of the beneficiaries by administering the estate improperly, the beneficiaries have a number of ways to protect the estate.

The beneficiaries could petition the probate court to instruct the personal representative to administer the estate properly.  For example, if the personal representative is taking too long to complete the administration of the estate, the probate court could order the personal representative to make interim distributions, file an interim accounting, and could set a deadline for completing the administration of the estate.

In more egregious situations, the beneficiaries could ask that the probate court surcharge the personal representative and/or remove the personal representative. Situations where this could be appropriate are where the personal representative violates court orders or steals from the estate.

  • Right to petition for determination of beneficiaries, Florida Probate Code Section 733.105.
  • Right to petition for determination of beneficial interest in estate, Florida Probate Code Section 733.105.
  • Right to petition for revocation of probate of previously admitted will, Florida Probate Code Section, 733.109.
  • Right to oppose or revoke probate of will admitted to probate in another state, Florida Probate Code Section 733.206
  • Right to participate in bond determination of fiduciary, Florida Probate code Section 733.402.
  • Right to notice of resignation/disqualification of personal representative, Florida Probate Code Section 733.502.
  • Right to petition for removal of personal representative, Florida Probate code Section 733.506.
  • Right to have personal representative act in the best interests of the probate estate, Florida Probate Code Section 733.602.
  • Right to contest transaction affected by personal representative’s conflict of interest, Fla. Statute § 733.610
  • Right to petition for increase or decrease in personal representative’s compensation or compensation of his/her attorney, Fla. Statute §§ 733.617; 733.6171
  • Right to object to creditor claim, Fl. Stat. § 733.705
  • Right to object to personal representative’s proof of claim, Fl. Stat. 733.705
  • Right to enter into contract with interested persons to alter interests, shares, or amounts entitled to under will, Florida Statute § 733.815
  • Right to receive petition for apportionment of estate taxes, Fla. Stat. § 733.817
  • Right to Formal Notice in adversary proceedings,  Florida Probate Rules 5.025; 5.040.
  • Right to declare proceedings adversarial and invoke Rules of Civil Procedure, Fla. Probate Rule 5.025
  • Right to request notice of further proceedings. Fla. Prob. R. 5.060.
  • Right to request accounting not otherwise required by law. Fla. Prob. R. 5.150.
  • Right to compel personal representative to file accounting required by law. Fla. Prob. R. 5.150
  • Right to formal notice of petition for administration where petitioner is not entitled to preference in appointment by law or terms of will. Fla. Prob. R. 5.201
  • Right to inventory of safe deposit box. Fla. Prob. R. 5.342
  • Right to accounting filed by resigned or removed personal representative or curator who has been succeeded by personal representative. Fla. Prob. R. 5.345.
  • Right to object to accounting. Fla. Prob. R. 5.345
  • Right to petition for interim distribution. Fla. Prob. R. 5.380 (See also Fla. Stat. § 733.612(26))
  • Right to object to discharge of personal representative. Fla. Prob R. 5.401
  • Right to object to final accounting of personal representative. Fla. Prob R. 5.401
  • Right to petition for determination of homestead status of real property. Fla. Stat. 5.405.
  • Right to petition for determination of exempt property. Fla. Stat. 5.405.
  • Right to petition for family allowance. Fla. Stat. 5.407.
  • Right to petition for establishment and probate of lost or destroyed will. Fla. Stat. § 733.207; Fla. Prob. R. 5.510
  • Right to challenge the validity of a marriage after death procured through fraud, duress or undue influence.  Fla. Stat. 732.805.

Key deadlines and timelines in Florida probate include:

  • TIC Election – 6 months from date of death
  • Elective Share Election – 6 months or 2 years
  • Object to the validity of a will, the qualifications of a personal representative, or jurisdiction – 20 days, 3 months, or 4 years
  • Creditor claim – 30 days, 3 months, or 2 years
  • File Original Will – 10 days from knowledge of death
 

For a downloadable version (pdf) of the probate deadline guide, click here for Florida Probate Deadlines and Timelines.

 

TYPE OF FILING

DEADLINES

AUTHORITY

 

 

 

Tenant in Common Election

6 months from DOD

F.S. 723.401

Filing Original Will

10 days from knowledge of death

F.S. 732.901

To object to will, PR or Jurisdiction

20 days from Service of Formal Notice

Or

3 months from service of NOA

Pr. R. 5.040(a); Pr. R. 5.200; Pr. R. 5.201; F.S. 733.212

F.S. 733.212(3); Pr. R. 5.240

Filing Inventory

60 days issuance of Letters

Pr. R. 5.340

Filing Petition for Exempt Property

4 months from service of NOA

Or

40 days after termination of proceeding for will contest or will construction

F.S. 732.402; Pr. R. 5.406

F.S. 732.402

Filing Election for Elective Share

Earlier of 6 months from service of NOA; or 2 years from DOD

F.S. 732.2135

Filing for $18,000 Family Allowance

Any time during administration

F.S. 732.403; Pr. R. 5.407

Filing Election for Community Property

Within 3 months of service of NOA on surviving spouse;

F.S. 732.221; F.S. 732.333

Filing a Creditor Claim; or PR’s proof of claim

 

Later of 3 months after 1stpublication of NTC; or 30 days after service of NTC;

All claims barred after 2 years

F.S. 733.702 (extension only upon motion to extend); Pr. R. 5.490; Pr. R. 5.498

F.S. 733.710

To Object to a Claim

Later of 4 months after publication of NTC; or 30 days from timely filing of claim

F.S. 733.705 (extension by court only upon motion for good cause); Pr. R. 5.496 (Objection must be served within 10 days of filing) Pr. R. 5.499

To File independent action on claim or declaratory action

30 days from service of objection

F.S. 733.705(5) (PR Must agree in writing to an extension)

To file Proof of Publication

Must be filed with court within 45 days of 1st publication

Pr. R. 5.241(c)

Statement re: Creditors

Must be filed within 4 months from date of 1st publication

Pr. R. 5.241(d)

Affidavit of No FL Estate Tax Due

12 months from LOA (nontaxable)

 

Final Accounting

12 months from LOA

(nontaxable)

Pr. R. 5.400

Petition for Discharge

12 months from LOA

(nontaxable)

Pr. R. 5.400

Objection to Final Accounting and Petition for Discharge/ Interim Accounting

30 days from service of the Final Accounting, Petition for Discharge or Interim Accounting

Pr. R. 5.401

NOH on Objection to Final Accounting or Petition for Discharge

NOH must be served within 90 days of Objection or they are waived

Pr. R. 5.401

 

DOD = Date of Death

NOA – Notice of Administration.  (The Notice of Administration is a notice that the personal representative of the probate estate sends to interested persons in the estate administration, including the surviving spouse.  The Notice of Administration starts many important deadlines that beneficiaries and other claimants have to file pleadings in the probate court.)

NTC = Notice to Creditors.  (The personal representative of the probate estate publishes notice to creditors in the local newspaper.  Reasonably ascertainable creditors are also supposed to be sent a copy of the notice to creditors.)

LOA = Letters of Administration.  (The Florida probate court issues Letters of Administration to the Personal Representative.  These Letters provide the Personal Representative with authority to transact business with third parties, marshal assets, and open bank accounts.)

NOH = Notice of Hearing

PR = Personal Representative

Download Florida Probate Deadlines and Timelines.

1-3 years, generally.  The estate can remain open for a longer amount of time if there is litigation over the estate or between the beneficiaries.

The estate remains open until the estate is fully administered.  For an estate to be fully administered in Florida, all creditors and beneficiaries must have received the proper notices, decedent’s assets must have been marshalled and inventoried, and the personal representative must have accounted to the beneficiaries.  Any litigation must be resolved.  One the estate is ready to be distributed and no objections remain, the estate may be closed and the personal representative discharged.

Florida Trust Administration and Litigation Deadlines & Timelines

TYPE OF FILING

DEADLINES

AUTHORITY

   

Notice of proposed transfer of principal place of administration

60 days before initiating proposed transfer

F.S. 736.0108

Motion for Attorney’s Fees

 

30 days after judgment

F.S. 736.0201; Fl. R. Civ. P. 1.525

Notice of Trust

Upon death of a settlor of trust described in s. 733.707(3)

F.S. 736.05055

Action contesting the validity of the trust

Probably 4 years after trust becomes revocable or 6 months after served with proper notice

F.S. 95.11(3); F.S. 95.031; F.S. 95.051; F.S. 736.0604

Notice of Resignation of Trustee

At least 30 days prior to resignation

F.S. 736.0705

Written request of eligible beneficiary to successor trustee to institute an action or file a claim against prior trustee

Within 6 months after date of the successor trustee’s acceptance of the trust if notice received in writing

F.S. 736.08125

Notice of acceptance of trust

Within 60 days of acceptance

F.S. 736.0813

Notice of trust’s existence, identity of settlor, right to copy of trust, right to accounting, application of fiduciary lawyer-client privilege

Within 60 days after acquiring knowledge of creation of irrevocable trust

F.S. 736.0813

Trust accounting

Annually (irrevocable trust)

F.S. 736.0813

Action seeking contribution

Within 1 year of judgment for breach of trust

F.S. 736.1002

Action for breach of trust

Probably 4 years from breach or 6 months after receipt of limitations notice or trust disclosure document, whichever is received later and outside bars on actions against trustees are 10 years to 40 years, with a possible 30 years added, depending on the beneficiary’s knowledge and whether trustee concealed facts

F.S. 95.11(3); F.S. 95.031; F.S. 95.051; 736.1008(2); 736.1008(6)

 

What assets are probate assets, subject to probate administration, is an initial question in every probate administration in Florida. Probate assets are assets owned by the deceased at death – but only those assets that do not transfer automatically to someone else upon death.

The easiest way to understand which assets are subject to probate administration and which are not is to start with those assets which are not probate assets. Download the Assets of the Deceased Diagram for easy reference.

The title of an asset, which typically denotes ownership, in the name of two or more persons. Real estate and bank accounts can be titled jointly with right of survivorship. When one owner passes, the remaining owner automatically becomes the owner of the asset. An asset that is titled jointly with right of survivorship is not a probate asset.

In some instances, it is not clear whether or not the joint title is intended to be one of survivorship, as opposed to a tenancy in common, or a convenience bank account.

Assets within a revocable trust will be distributed by the trustee of the trust to the named beneficiaries as stated within the trust document. The assets in the revocable trust will not be probate assets.

Banks and brokerage firms typically offer the ability to include a “pay on death” or “transfer on death” designation. Upon the death of the original owner, the bank or brokerage will simply give the account to the listed pay on death owner of the account.

Life insurance, annuities, IRA’s and retirement accounts will typically give the owner of the asset the ability to name a beneficiary upon the death of the owner. An asset with a beneficiary designation will not be a probate asset (unless the probate estate is listed as the beneficiary).

If a married couple owns an asset together, it will be treated as a tenancy by the entireties asset. The surviving spouse will become the owner of the asset upon the death of the first spouse. Any jointly owned asset will be treated as a tenancy by the entireties asset unless the asset is specifically titled in another fashion.

The primary residence of a Florida resident will be treated as Florida homestead property. Homestead property has its own set of of complex rules that will apply if the deceased had a surviving spouse or minor child at the time of death.

If an assets does not transfer to new owners by one of the methods set forth above, the asset is likely a probate asset, and will need to by administered in the probate process.

When minors are the victims of a personal injury and seek to recover losses, Florida guardianship rules present the guidelines for approval of settlements, particularly with respect to minors, wards, and guardians.  Once the amount to be received on behalf of the minor exceed $15,000, Florida guardianship law will require that a guardian be appointed to receive the recovery.  If the total amount of the settlement to be split among multiple parties exceeds $50,000, a guardian ad litem may be required for approval of the settlement.  See Is a Guardianship Necessary to Hire a Personal Injury Lawyer for Minors and Incapacitated Persons? and When Is a Guardian Ad Litem Required For Personal Injury Settlement?

Court approval may also be required if the settlement amount exceeds certain thresholds. Likewise, if there are conflicts of interest among the different potential parties to the lawsuit, a guardian ad litem may be required.  Below is a link to the pdf guide for approval of settlements for minors, wards, and guardians.