A will can be contested in Florida on the grounds of undue influence, lack of capacity, fraud, duress, lack of testamentary formalities, and insane delusion. Attorney Skatoff has handled every type of will contest, and is one of a few attorneys in Florida to handle such cases statewide, on a contingency fee basis where appropriate.
Grounds For a Florida Will Contest
Lack of Proper Formalities
Proper execution of a will under Florida law 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. Critically, for a will to be validly executed, the decedent must sign or acknowledge the will in the presence of the two attesting witnesses, and the two attesting witnesses must sign the will in the presence of each other. Jordan v. Fehr, 902 So. 2d 198 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005). Often a quick deposition of the persons present at the execution of the will can establish that the requisite formalities were, or were not followed.
Lack of Capacity
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 deceased around the time the will was executed. The Florida Supreme Court has stated in In re Wilmott’s Estate, 66 So. 2d 465 (Fla. 1953):
The making of a will does not depend upon a sound body but upon a sound mind. By “sound mind” is meant the ability of the testator ‘to mentally understand in a general way the nature and extend of the property to be disposed of, and the testator’s relation to those who would naturally claim a substantial benefit from the will, as well as a general understanding of practical effect of the will as executed
Insane Delusion
Insane delusion occurs when the testator, against all evidence to the contrary, believes something that is not true, and creates or changes an estate planning document (will or trust) based on the insane delusion. For example, the testator could believe that she has been abandoned by a child and disinherits the child. In reality, the child visits his mother every day. The will could be set aside as an insane delusion.
Probate Fraud
Estate fraud occurs when a beneficiary of a will causes the testator to make or change a will based on misrepresentations. For example, an unscrupulous child could tell a parent lies about a sibling to cause that sibling to be disinherited. Examples of such fraud could be that the sibling has been convicted of a crime, has engaged in illegal or immoral acts, or has said derogatory things about the testator. If the will has been prepared based on the fraud, the will can be set aside in a successful will contest.
Challenging a Will in Florida for Undue Influence
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.
Active Procurement, Confidential Relationship, Substantial Beneficiary, and the Shifting Burden of Proof
The person trying to challenge the will needs to show that the alleged undue influencer engaged in active procurement of the will. The alleged undue influencer also must be shown to have benefitted from the change in the estate plan. It is also helpful to show that the alleged undue influencer had a confidential relationship with the decedent, meaning one of trust and confidence. If these elements of undue influence can be established, Florida law implements a shift in the burden of proof.
The shifting burden of proof is explained in RBC Ministries v. Tompkins, 974 So. 2d 569 (2nd DCA 2008):
If 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 influence arises.
The rebuttable “presumption of undue influence implements public policy against abuse of fiduciary or confidential relationships and is therefore a presumption shifting the burden of proof.” § 733.107(2), Fla. Stat. (2005). Such a presumption “affecting the burden of proof”—as distinct from a presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence—”imposes upon the party against whom it operates the burden of proof concerning the nonexistence of the presumed fact.” § 90.302(2), Fla. Stat. (2005). Accordingly, once a will contestant establishes the existence of the basis for the rebuttable presumption of undue influence, the burden of proof shifts to the proponent of the will to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the nonexistence of undue influence.
Whether the challenger to the will can prove active procurement is normally the litigated part of a case. The Florida Supreme Court in Estate of Carpenter, 253 So.2d 697 (Fla. 1971) sets forth a list of active procurement factors to establish whether there is undue influence. The Carpenter case lists a set of non-exclusive factors to determine whether a beneficiary has actively procured a will.
Carpenter Factors:
(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.
The Carpenter factors are not an exhaustive list of the factors that can be used to establish undue influence – they are just the types of objective factors that can be used to determine whether there was active procurement.
The reasoning from the RBC Ministries v. Tompkins case explains how undue influence is weighed by the Florida courts:
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).
Given the RBC Ministries positive reference to “at least four of the factors” from the Carpenter case, litigants should strive to identify at least four such active procurement factors.
FAQ
Who Can Challenge a Will?
If a person benefits from a successful will contest, that person has “standing” to maintain the challenge. If the challenge is to roll back the challenged will to a previous will, the contestant must be a beneficiary of the previous will. If the challenge is to eliminate the challenged will to create intestacy, the contestant must be an intestate beneficiary. Florida allows stepchildren to contest a will to assert intestacy, if no other heirs have priority.
In Gordon v. Kleinman, 2013 Fla. App. Lexis (4th DCA 2013), the Florida appellate court reversed the probate court’s dismissal of a will contest. The plaintiff alleged that the last will was invalid as a result of undue influence, and that any and all prior wills that excluded her were also invalid as a result of undue influence. Although the pleading allegations seems quite thin (thin enough to warrant the probate court warning plaintiff’s counsel about the possibility of sanctions for filing a frivolous pleading), the appellate court reversed, as follows:
“A petition for revocation of probate shall state the interest of the petitioner in the estate and the facts constituting the grounds on which the revocation is demanded.” Fla. Prob. R. 5.270. “Hence, whether a person is an ‘interested person’ is an element that must be established by the petitioner seeking revocation of probate . . . .” Wehrheim v. Golden Pond Assisted Living Facility, 905 So. 2d 1002, 1006 (Fla. 5th DCA 2005). “[A] petitioner may not be an interested person in revocation and removal proceedings if previous and presumptively valid wills have been discovered that, similar to the current will, do not include the petitioner as a beneficiary of the estate.” Id. (citations omitted). Thus “it is the burden of the petitioner seeking to revoke the present will to establish that the previous will, which also excludes the petitioner as a beneficiary, is invalid.” Id. To withstand a motion to dismiss, the petition must be reviewed for sufficient allegations that the petitioner is an interested person and that previous wills which excluded the petitioner are invalid. In the second amended petition, petitioner alleged that she was the beneficiary of the 1983 will and that all of the prior wills under which she was not a beneficiary were the result of undue influence and/or testamentary incapacity and therefore invalid. Petitioner has pleaded sufficient allegations of standing and the trial court erred in dismissing her petition. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal of the second amended petition and remand for further proceedings.
Will the Court consider factors beyond those identified in the Carpenter case?
Yes. The case Swiss v. Flanagan, 329 So.3d 199 (3rd DCA 2021), explains that many factors can be considered in determining whether or not there has been undue influence, not just those factors set forth in the Carpenter case.
Further, as has been observed by multiple courts, the Carpenter criteria are not exclusive. Instead, courts “may expect supplementation by other relevant considerations appearing in subsequent cases.” Id.; see also In re Est. of Winslow v. Patterson, 147 So. 2d 613, 616 (Fla. 2d DCA 1962) (considering the insulation of the testator from her relatives and efforts to prejudice her against them); Newman v. Smith, 77 Fla. 633, 82 So. 236, 246 (1918) (considering the reasonableness of the will provisions). In this regard, courts have routinely considered the mental and physical health inequalities between the testator and beneficiary at the time the will is executed. See In re Estate of Reid, 138 So. 2d 342, 349 (Fla. 3d DCA 1962), overruled in part on other grounds, Carpenter, 253 So. 2d 697 (Fla. 1971) ; Cripe v. Atl. First Nat’l Bank of Daytona Beach, 422 So. 2d 820, 824 (Fla. 1982) (“Where there is such inequality of mental strength, active procurement can be shown by evidence … of a request or suggestion by the dominant party.”).
As relevant here, it can scarcely be the subject of debate that in the months preceding the execution of the disputed will, the testator was in declining health. Indeed, his frailties were sufficiently concerning to warrant a request for competency evaluations by his long-serving estate planning attorney. Further, by the time the will was drafted and executed, Swiss, who was able-bodied and mentally firm, had assumed control over the testator’s finances and other aspects of his personal affairs, restricted lines of communication with his children, and disclosed his financial holdings to others. Perhaps of equal import, as astutely noted by the trial court, “[t]he circumstances [of the will] are highly suspicious, including the absence of a documented attorney’s file for the estate preparation … the clear involvement of … Swiss in contacting the lawyer and arranging the meeting, [and] the errors in the will and affidavit.” The preparing attorney was unable to recount the time, place, and manner of signature of the will, and his record was devoid of standard documentation, including invoices, drafts, correspondence, and the like. Further, prior will drafts reflected Swiss was to take no active role in administration, but in the disputed will, she was nominated personal representative.
When can a will be challenged?
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.
Although a will cannot be challenged until after death, often times the undue influencer creates a trust into which assets are placed. The undue influencer might also have deeds prepared to transfer real estate, and might make changes to bank account titles and life insurance beneficiary designations. Trusts, deeds, bank accounts and life insurance can all be challenged during life, but only inside of a guardianship proceeding.
Can a will be challenged if the maker was suffering from dementia or Alzheimer’s?
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.
Can a will that leaves everything to a second spouse instead of children from a first marriage be challenged?
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.
Can I get a jury trial in a will contest case?
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.
Does Florida Recognize Co Contest Clauses?
No, Florida does not recognize “no contest” clauses. For will contests, Section 732.517 of the Florida Probate Code provides as follows:
Penalty clause for contest.—A provision in a will purporting to penalize any interested person for contesting the will or instituting other proceedings relating to the estate is unenforceable.
For trust challenges, Section 736.1108 of the Florida Trust Code provides as follows:
Penalty clause for contest.—(1) A provision in a trust instrument purporting to penalize any interested person for contesting the trust instrument or instituting other proceedings relating to a trust estate or trust assets is unenforceable.(2) This section applies to trusts created on or after October 1, 1993. For purposes of this subsection, a revocable trust shall be treated as created when the right of revocation terminates.
Can Other Documents Be Challenged On The Same Grounds As A Will?
Yes. Not just a will can be challenged under these grounds. A trust can be challenged under the same grounds, as well as a real estate deed or a beneficiary designation on a financial account.
There are many situations where the undue influencer will trick or persuade a weakened person to sign over valuable real estate, a bank account, or other property directly to the influencer, in the hope that they will have left the scene before the wrongdoing can be discovered. Sometimes, the undue influencer will be added as a beneficiary on bank accounts in place of the heirs to whom the decedent intended the account to pass.
If the wrongdoing is discovered prior to the victim’s passing, a common way for a loved one to start to clean up the situation will be to create a guardianship, which will allow the guardian to use the court’s jurisdiction to reclaim assets that were fraudulently removed. If an estate plan was also changed because of undue influence, the guardianship will also allow evidence to be collected for use at a subsequent will contest proceeding.
What factors are important in a will contest?
- Sudden Property or Beneficiary Changes: Contesting a will often occurs when there are unexpected alterations to asset distribution or beneficiary designations, especially if these changes occur shortly before the testator’s death.
- Exclusion of Natural Heirs: If close family members or dependents are unexpectedly omitted from the will without explanation, this may prompt a will contest.
- Discrepancies Between Verbal Wishes and Written Will: Disputes may arise when there is a significant difference between what the deceased verbally communicated to family or friends and the contents of their written will.
How to Avoid a will Contest
From the perspective of the testator, the best way to avoid a will contest is to not involve any of the beneficiaries of the will in the preparation of the will.
Based on the Florida case law regarding undue influence, the following the basic steps for how to avoid a will contest are:
- Do not take the recommendation of a beneficiary for the selection of the drafting attorney.
- Do not allow a beneficiary to meet with the drafting attorney, or to discuss the estate plan with the drafting attorney.
- When you meet with the estate planning lawyer, do not take any beneficiary with you to the meeting.
- When you execute the estate planning documents, do not take any of the beneficiaries with you.
- After execution of the estate plan, do not give any of the beneficiaries the original of the will, or for that matter a copy of the will.
- If you intend to disinherit children or to leave children radically different amounts of inheritances, give your reasons to the estate planning attorney in detail, and insist that your reasons be kept with the estate planning file. You can even make your own note and ask that it be included with your file and released to the beneficiaries upon your passing.
From the perspective of a beneficiary, if you believe that the testator is going to bequeath you an inheritance and that other family members would be upset by such inheritance, the following steps should be taken to avoid a will contest.
- Do not make the recommendation as to who should be the estate planning attorney. Certainly do not take mother to your own estate planning attorney.
- Do not accompany the testator to the estate planning attorney’s office. If the testator can’t drive, have the testator take a cab. If you absolutely must drive the testator, wait in the car.
- Under no circumstance should you be present in a meeting with the testator and the estate planning attorney. Your presence at such a meeting will be the strongest piece of evidence used against you.
- Do not be present when the estate planning documents are signed. Your presence at the execution will be a strong fact used against you in a will contest proceeding.
How Much Does a Will Contest Cost?
The decision to contest a will in Florida is not one to be taken lightly, particularly when you consider the potential financial implications involved. When you enter into a will contest, you’re not only confronting emotional and legal challenges but also coping with the investment of time and money.
Attorney Fees
Legal representation is critical in any will contest, and this can constitute a significant portion of the overall expenses. Attorneys may charge an hourly rate or a flat fee for their services, and these rates can vary widely based on experience, location, and the complexity of the will contest. It’s important to discuss fee structures up front with any potential attorney to understand how legal costs could escalate over the course of the litigation.
Court Costs
In addition to attorney fees, there are court costs that must be considered. These can include filing fees, costs for copying and submitting documents, fees for any required notices, and expenses related to obtaining necessary court records. While these costs might seem small individually, they can quickly add up, further increasing the financial burden of the will contest.
Potential Additional Expenses
- Expert Witness Fees: If your case requires the testimony of expert witnesses, such as forensic accountants or handwriting analysts, their fees will add to the overall cost.
- Appraisal Costs: You may need to appraise property or assets, which will require hiring professional appraisers.
- Miscellaneous: Other potential costs include travel expenses, deposition costs, and fees for obtaining medical or financial records.
Contesting a will in Florida can be an expensive endeavor, and there’s no guarantee of success. It’s crucial to carefully weigh the financial implications against the potential benefits of overturning the will or reaching a settlement. Consulting with an experienced probate attorney can provide greater clarity on what you might expect to spend based on the specifics of your case.