Undue Influence and Constructive Fraud Causes of Action Against Attorney Should Not Have Been Dismissed
The First Department reversed Surrogate’s Court’s dismissal of undue influence and constructive fraud causes of action against an attorney who was the beneficiary of a one million dollar trust account created by the decedent. In finding questions of fact had been raised concerning both causes of action, in part concerning whether the attorney had misrepresented his financial condition to the decedent, the First Department wrote:
Surrogate’s Court erred in dismissing the claim of undue influence as there were conflicting inferences of both undue influence and the lack thereof. For example, the evidence showed that, from September 2009 to January 2010, as decedent’s health continued to deteriorate, defendant repeatedly wrote and called decedent to request the creation of a $1 million trust account and suggested that he would suffer a financial crisis if he did not receive it, and decedent complained to plaintiff (his wife) that defendant would not stop asking him for money. … Under the circumstances presented, defendant failed to overcome the presumption of undue influence and failed to eliminate any triable issue of fact warranting dismissal of the count …. * * * The count of constructive fraud was also improperly dismissed. Defendant, who had a substantial net worth at the time of decedent’s death, nevertheless repeatedly represented that his savings were deteriorating and that he would suffer a financial crisis if decedent did not give him the $1 million. While decedent was aware of the salary paid to defendant over the years as counsel to decedent’s company, this alone did not amount to clear evidence to eliminate any triable issue of fact as to whether defendant had misrepresented his financial condition, and whether decedent relied upon it … . Matter of Schneiderman, 2013 NY Slip Op 02687, 1st Dept, 4-23-13