Wealth Litigated
What happens when a Massachusetts divorce court reaches into a Michigan irrevocable trust and pulls out $1.17 million for an ex-son-in-law?. Despite a spendthrift clause and an independent trustee with "sole and absolute discretion," a 2023 appellate decision in the Jones case proved that some "divorce-proof" trust designs aren't as bulletproof as they look. In this episode, Professor Kelly Lise Murray, JD analyzes how a single verb in a trust provision—and the "woven fabric" of a high-net-worth marriage—led to a massive clawback for a spouse who wasn't even a beneficiary. WHAT YOU’LL LEARN * The $1.17M Verb: Why the choice to "postpone" rather than "terminate" a distribution changed the legal status of the trust from a speculative expectancy to a fixed marital asset. * The "Woven into the Fabric" Standard: How a mother’s history of "showering" the family with gifts created a marital standard of living that the court felt compelled to maintain. * Jurisdiction Jumping: Why a trust governed by Michigan law lost its protection when the beneficiaries divorced in the "all-property" state of Massachusetts. * The Lawyer’s "Invisible" Record: How missing evidence at the trial level regarding tax consequences and mathematical impossibility made certain arguments "invisible" on appeal. KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR WEALTH PROFESSIONALS * ✅ Stress-Test the Language: Ensure trust provisions allow for termination of interests rather than just postponement to maintain "speculative" status in divorce. * ✅ Portability Risk: Client trusts created in one state (e.g., Michigan) are subject to the divorce laws of the state where the couple actually resides (e.g., Massachusetts). * ✅ Prenuptials vs. Postnuptials: A trust requirement for a prenuptial agreement does nothing for a beneficiary already married; consider requiring a postnuptial if the trust is created mid-marriage. * ✅ Closed Class Vulnerability: Sole-beneficiary trusts with mandatory distribution language are viewed by courts as "vested" and divisible, regardless of spendthrift clauses. THE IMPOSSIBLE MATH OF THE JONES CASE * Trust Valuation: The wife’s sub-trust was valued at $1,285,000 at the time of divorce. * The Judgment: The wife was ordered to pay the husband $1,170,000 over 10 years. * The Reality: The husband received 91.3% of the trust’s value. * The Gap: The court noted neither spouse saved for retirement or college because they relied entirely on the mother’s generosity. TIMELINE: THE JONES COLLISION * 1998: Marriage begins. * 2015: Mother-in-law creates a GRAT to avoid gift taxes. * March 2017: Husband files for divorce. * March 2018: The GRAT terminates; the wife’s irrevocable sub-trust funds while the divorce is pending. * September 2019: Three-day trial results in a win for the husband. * September 2023: Massachusetts Appellate Court affirms the $1.17M award. WHY THE "SPENDTHRIFT" PROTECTION FAILED The court found a fatal exception: even if the trustee delayed payments, the wife retained a testamentary power of appointment. This gave her a "present interest" in the trust corpus because she could direct who would inherit her interest, making it "fixed" rather than "speculative". ABOUT THE HOST Professor Kelly Lise Murray, JD is a lawyer and retired Vanderbilt Law School faculty member (18 years) specializing in asset protection and wealth preservation. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford and cum laude from Harvard Law School. RESOURCES: Primary Case: Jones v. Jones (Massachusetts Appellate Court, 2023). More insights at: WealthLitigated.com. Legal Disclaimer: This show is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed. #WealthLitigated #AssetProtection #IrrevocableTrust #DivorceLaw #EstatePlanning #JonesCase #WealthManagement
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