Compelling and Defending Estate Accountings
Estate dispute litigators often petition the courts to compel formal accountings during their investigations of suspected wrongdoings.
If an accounting reveals unjustified expenses or missing assets or if it shows the fiduciary breached his duty of care and loyalty owed to interested parties, the courts will surcharge the fiduciary (hold him personally liable), and he must pay back all losses to the estate.
Properly performed estate accountings therefore offer fiduciaries an implied release of liability and relive them from defending their performance in expensive estate dispute litigation.
The following examples show three estate accounting performances and how individuals compel or defend them before, during or after probate:
Executor Accountings—executors prepare and present estate accounting documents during probate. Part of their accounting duties include: sending probate notices to beneficiaries and creditors; paying all estate debts and taxes; performing inventory and appraising estate property and assets; distributing remaining property to beneficiaries; and filing final estate accountings with the courts.
- Compelling Executors: Interested parties hold a statutory right to compel formal accountings if they reasonably believe an executor’s performance has wrongfully reduced their inheritance. Such actions force executors to defend their estate accountings or face court-ordered surcharges to indemnify the estate for losses sustained.
- Defending Executors: Executors are also personally liable to estates for negligent performances or for intentional wrongdoings that cause disinheritance to interested parties. To limit liability risk, executors should always hire prudent estate planning attorneys to prepare and present their formal accountings. They should likewise retain estate accounting defense lawyers to respond on their behalf when beneficiaries make groundless complaints against their conduct. Executors may use estate funds to pay for legal representation, but they must pay the estate back if they lose their defense case.
Trustee Accountings—these fiduciaries own and control the descendant’s property in trust and hold legal duties to manage trust assets carefully for beneficiaries identified in testamentary documents. Trustees therefore hold fiduciary duties to perform in the best interests of beneficiaries and to account for all business transactions executed in trust.
- Compelling Trustees: Iowa Trust Code 633A.4213 compels trustees to keep qualified beneficiaries informed about trust administration activity by presenting them with annual formal accountings. Beneficiaries therefore hold legal rights to compel accountings when trustees fail to report or when they enter fiduciary litigation to have trustees removed for wrongdoings.
- Defending Trustees: Like executors, trustees are also personally liable to the estate when they breach their fiduciary duties; however, accepted annual accountings generally release trustees from liability on actions taken during the reporting year. Estate planning attorneys often prepare formal accountings and annual release statements for fiduciaries, and trustees can deduct their legal expenses from trust accounts as well.
Power of Attorney Agent Accountings—agents holding power of attorney authority manage assets and make financial decisions for incapacitated, ill or elderly testators (principals) while they’re alive. Agents therefore are fiduciaries who owe their principal high legal duties of care and loyalty to work in their best interests.
- Compelling Agents: Interested parties may compel agents to present a formal accounting of the deceased’s estate when investigating whether power of attorney abuse took place while the principal was alive. The court may further surcharge agents if evidence shows they abused their authority and wrongfully caused harm to an interested party’s estate.
- Defending Agents: The Smith Law Firm advises agents to acquire a valid release of service from the courts immediately after their POA authority ends upon death of the principal. During probate proceedings, agents may further compel the deceased’s estate to pay an accounting attorney to secure the release. Without this document, it becomes extremely problematic and expensive for agents to perform formal accountings should an interested party compel them to do so years after the principal has died.