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You are here: Home / Archives for Family Law

Save a Marriage through Mediation

This is an edited excerpt by Vicki Shemin in the MCFM quarterly.

It is the true story of a couple that considered divorce, but decided to stay together after drafting a postmarital agreement regarding the parenting of their young son.

Jill and Don wanted to explore alternative dispute divorce options as they believed that their 7- year marriage was irretrievably broken. Arriving at this painful decision was all the more poignant for this young couple since they had a one-year old son.

The manner of a couple’s interpersonal physical proximity speaks volumes about their psychological state of mind. Not only did Jill and Don elect to sit on the same side of the conference room table, they sat so close to one another that their elbows were practically touching. They spoke in hushed and mutually respectful tones and gave the other partner ample time to articulate his and her feelings. Instead of looking at me, they most often spoke directly to one another. As to their communication, the theme most central to both their parallel and collective conversations was their deep love for their son, Alex.

I sensed a distinctive sea change in the couple: perhaps overwhelmed by what actually getting divorced entails, perhaps striking at the heart of any ambivalence they may have felt coming into the process, by the end of the meeting, Jill and Don looked one another squarely in the eye and contemporaneously asked each other – “Is this what we really want to be doing?”

Jill and Don left our office that day very different individuals from the two who had walked in just an hour and a half before. They wanted me to draft a document which would lay out the details of their co-parenting plan for their son if and when the marriage did end in separation or divorce one day. If divorce became a reality; if that day ever came, they did not want to be making decisions concerning Alex borne of spite, anger or vengeance.

Over the months, Jill and Don worked hard on hammering out the details of a Custody and Parenting Agreement which addressed matters such as legal custody and a very detailed coparenting schedule (including summer and holiday schedules), as well as a provision anticipating the use of a Parenting Coordinator as a mediator/arbitrator to facilitate the couple with parenting decisions.

In mid-March, I heard from Jill. The email said: “Don and I are in a good place in our relationship right now, and I feel we will be in an even stronger now that this Parenting Agreement is behind us. We sincerely thank you in advance for your patience and understanding and for showing us there was another way to move forward in our lives.”

In a period of six months, this family had beaten the odds and stayed together.

Article originally published in maritalmediation.com, and republished in Mediate.com. Full article published in MCFM Quarterly.

Filed Under: Divorce, Family Law, Massachusetts Mediation Tagged With: Divorce Mediation, Marriage Mediation, Massachusetts Mediation, Mediation to Stay Married, Parenting Plan

Divorce Lawyers: 5 Little Known Things You Need To Know

by Vicki L. Shemin

There is an inescapable fact: the relationship between a divorce attorney and a client is, at best, a business relationship. For too many in the legal profession, that is where it starts and ends. What does that mean for YOU as the client when you are going through one of the most difficult experiences you will ever have to face?

It should invoke a caveat emptor warning because once you sign on; you could be making a deal with the devil (and I don’t just mean your ex-spouse).

Below are 5 tips to help you deal with your divorce lawyer at this incredibly confusing time:

1. Interview, Interview, Interview! I recommend interviewing at least two to three prospective divorce attorneys (I know that it takes a lot of time and energy to do so!). As in any other relationship, chemistry is key. Trust your gut. Does this person seem as though s/he is going to serve your best interests, return your calls in a timely manner, aim to be cost-effective, and make all best efforts to fairly and equitably settle your case?  Many lawyers will provide the courtesy of a complimentary half-hour as part of the interview process. It’s free to ask!

2. Got Conflicts? Ask your attorney how well, s/he researches conflicts of interest. It would be terrible to delve deeply into your case only to have your lawyer tell you, s/he can’t represent you after all because a conflict (not previously well-researched) exists. A conflict of interest arises when the attorney or the firm is involved in multiple interests (financial, personal, etc.), any one of which could possibly interfere with the professional’s or organization’s integrity, or even have the appearance of doing so. This may be the case if your spouse came for a brief consult before you did, or if a business with which you, your spouse, or even a member of your spouse’s family may be involved are – or were – clients of the firm.

3. Bait and Switch. When interviewing, ask the lawyer who will actually be the one managing your case on a day-to-day basis. If you sign on with the senior partner, will that lawyer be the one handling everything on your behalf? You may be surprised to learn that more junior staff will be just as knowledgeable, much more accessible, and definitely more affordable. That said, if you find that your case is going to court, you may want the senior partner to be the one going to the mat for you. Ask to meet with the entire potential team before you sign on the dotted line. By the way, also ask if there is “double-billing” if each, the senior lawyer and associate, happen to sit in on the same meeting.

4. Billing Tricks Of The Trade. Ask your lawyer if the firm charges by the ¼ hour or 1/10 of an hour; if driving time is billed; if a retainer is required; whether there are cancellation fees; and if they charge for faxing/photocopying and the like. This will be (or should be) spelled out in your client engagement letter. For example, you can imagine that a two minute call can be billed as either a tenth of an hour or, at a minimum, a quarter of an hour depending on the contract that you have signed. One-quarter of an hour minimum billing units can add up very quickly!

5. Playing Well Together In the Sandbox. Ask if the attorney you are considering hiring knows your spouse’s counsel. It is a well-known fact that attorneys who have a proven history of “playing well together in the sandbox” will likely have a better shot at reaching a mutual accord. For instance, attorneys who are like-minded collaborative attorneys (versus litigation attorneys) may be more likely to go to the same professional meetings, to have served on Boards together, to read each other’s scholarly articles, and to have a proven track record of success in other cases. As we often say around my firm when we have an attorney who does not seem interested in advancing the client’s best interests, quoting Abraham Maslow, “I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.”  Look for caring and skilled lawyers who have a specialized toolbox filled with everything they would need to build a protective haven to serve you well and to get you through this challenging time.

Article originally published in DivorcedMoms.com and republished in Mediate.com

Filed Under: Divorce, Family Law, Massachusetts Divorce Tagged With: Boston Divorce Lawyers, choosing a divorce lawyer, Divorce

Jonathan Fields and Sheryl Dennis recently attended the AFCC’s 54th Annual Conference in Boston

Jonathan Fields and Sheryl Dennis recently attended the AFCC’s 54th Annual Conference in Boston, Turning the Kaleidoscope of Family Conflict into a Prism of Harmony.
The conference featured more than 200 presenters from 12 countries with diverse topics such as family reunification, mediation, alienation, international child abduction, shared parenting, access to justice, relevant social science research, ethics and civility in legal practice, intimate partner violence, technology, custody evaluation, and much more.
The sessions brought together more than 1,000 Family law colleagues from across the globe. The conference focused on finding collaborative and effective means of resolving Family law-related conflicts from a wide range of perspectives. These types of conflicts can arise at many levels, including debates over legislative and policy initiatives, disputed research findings, professional practice disagreements, conflict between family members related to parenting time, child support, and parenting during and after separation and divorce.

Filed Under: Conflict, Divorce, Family Law

Revoking The Irrevocable Trust in a Divorce – or – Never Say Can’t, Say Decant! – PART II*

By:   Jonathan E. Fields

Even with Pfannenstiehl behind us, the complex interplay of the irrevocable trust and divorce continues to vex practitioners.  The topic du jour is decanting and divorce — and the SJC just dove right in with Ferri v. Powell Ferri, 476 Mass. 651 (2017).

Before we go further, a quick primer.  “Decanting” is the process of pouring assets from an irrevocable trust into a newly created trust.  The big question at the heart of decanting and divorce: what if, during (or anticipating) a divorce, the trustee decanted the assets into a newly created trust that was, say, more divorce-proof than the original trust?  But, before we examine that issue, what is the law about decanting generally?  When can a trustee decant the assets in an irrevocable Massachusetts trust to another trust?

Since Massachusetts, unlike other states, has no decanting statute, we look to case law and, in particular, Morse v. Kraft, 466 Mass. 92 (2013). Essentially, the case involved an irrevocable trust created by Robert Kraft which contained four sub-trusts, one for each of the donor’s sons who were very young when the trust was created in 1982. The sub-trusts were administered by a trustee, Morse, and, under the trust terms, the sons could not participate in any distribution decisions. Now that the children were all in their forties and financially sophisticated, Morse wanted to delegate some of his trustee powers to them.

Since the trust gave Morse no explicit right to decant and Massachusetts has no decanting statute, Morse filed a petition asking the court to interpret the trust’s language as authorizing decanting without court approval. The SJC agreed with Morse’s position – that the trust authorized him to decant.

In its analysis, the SJC reminded practitioners that, in interpreting a trust, the donor’s intent is the paramount consideration. Here, because the trust gave Morse broad discretion to make outright distributions to or for the benefit of the beneficiaries, the SJC concluded that the discretion, therefore, encompassed a distribution to a new trust if doing so would serve the beneficiaries’ best interests. In addition to considering the language of the trust, the Court also relied on affidavits from the donor, the drafter, and Morse to the effect that each intended the trustee to have the right to decant.

Notably, the Morse court put on notice drafters of future, post-Morse, trusts: if you want a trustee to have a right to decant, you would be best served by articulating that power in the trust.  With that brief background, let us return to the main issue — decanting the assets during (or anticipating) a divorce to a more divorce-proof trust.

So, let’s dispose of the easy case first: with a post-Morse Massachusetts irrevocable trust without an explicit power to decant, it is likely that decanting would not be permissible.

With a pre-Morse Massachusetts irrevocable trust without an explicit power to decant, we look to Morse v. Kraft. That is, a trustee may well be permitted to decant if the trustee’s discretion is sufficiently broad to make outright distributions to or for the benefit of the beneficiaries, if it is in line with the donor’s intent, and it is in the beneficiaries’ best interests.

The recent Ferri decision involved a Connecticut divorce and a 1983 pre-Morse irrevocable Massachusetts trust that did not articulate an explicit decanting power for the trustee.  The trustee decanted to another trust in the context of a divorce.  The Connecticut Supreme Court certified three questions to the SJC — the essence of the inquiry for our purposes was that they sought a ruling on whether the trustee had the power to decant per the terms of the 1983 trust.

Reviewing the trust language in detail, which is beyond our scope here, the SJC found that the trustee’s powers were broad enough to encompass the authority to decant. Notable, too, was the SJC’s reliance on the affidavit of the settlor who stated his intention that the trustee had the authority to decant, particularly in light of the pending divorce and the need to protect the trust assets from the wife as a potential creditor.  The Connecticut Supreme Court found that because the husband was unaware of the decanting, it did not violate that state’s public policy.

Before divorce attorneys and estate planners get too excited about what they may be able to accomplish for their divorcing clients, such a decanting may not work in Massachusetts.   The concurring opinion made clear that whether such a decanting would violate state public policy remains an open question:

Where, as here, the trustees created a new spendthrift trust for the sole purpose of decanting the assets of an earlier trust that, at least in part, would be included within the [marital estate] … [our law] would require us to consider whether the creation of the new spendthrift trust was contrary to public policy.

As decanting becomes more widespread nationwide, it will continue to surface in more of our cases involving divorcing parties. Morse and Ferri provide welcome guidance to the bar– and we await future case law and/or legislation to sharpen the contours.  In any event, it would behoove both the estate planning practitioner as well as the domestic relations bar to become versed in  the legal trends to best steer our clients down this new path.

* In light of the recent Ferri case, this is an update and revision of an article that originally appeared in the FMQ.

Filed Under: Divorce, Family Law, irrevocable trust

New Rule Brings Clarity to Parenting Coordinator Roles, Jon Fields and Vicki L. Shemin Co-Write Op-Ed

Parenting coordinator roles just got a significant boost and increased clarity, according to Vicki L. Shemin and Jon Fields, in an op-ed co-written for Massachusetts Lawyers’ Weekly. With a rollout of new parenting coordinator roles rules (Probate & Family Court Standing Order 1-17, effective July 1) and the decision of the Appeals Court in Leon v. Cormier, Parenting Coordinators now have the boundaries of their roles more clearly defined than ever, and many of their logistical decisions about parenting that don’t affect the custody agreement can be enforced with the court’s authority. This still leaves big questions about what parenting coordinators should do in a variety of situations, especially where the wellbeing of the child may be at risk.

Read more of Jon and Vicki’s reflections on this important new rule here.

 

Filed Under: Family Law Tagged With: Family Law, Parenting Coordinator

Fields and Dennis LLP Ranked as Top Tier Boston Family Law Firm in Best Lawyers Best Law Firms 2017 Edition

blf-badge-2017-siteFields and Dennis LLP is proud to announce that we have been ranked as one of Boston’s Top Tier Family Law Firms in US News & World Report’s Best Lawyers Best Law Firms 2017 Edition. The US News & World Report rankings are based on a rigorous evaluation process and is one of the most trusted and relied upon guides to legal excellence. We are honored to receive this ranking.

Filed Under: Family Law

Jon Fields to Attend AAML Annual Meeting in Chicago

Jon Fields looks forward to attending the AAML’s annual meeting in Chicago. This will be an event packed with educational opportunities, social events and the chance to mingle with some of the nation’s best family law practitioners. Issues of valuation, tax, retirement and demographics will be covered as part of the lecture program.  The event will be an opportunity to network with esteemed colleagues at the social events after a productive round of discussions at meetings scheduled all week.

The event runs from November 2nd-5th 2016 at the Renaissance Chicago Downtown.

Please click here to read the President’s description of the events and lectures scheduled to take place. To register, please click on the link.

Filed Under: Divorce, Family Law, Firm News Tagged With: AAML, AAML Annual Meeting, Family Law Practitioners, Firm News

Jon Fields Offers Expert Advice in “Hidden Costs of Divorce” Interview

How do you know if mediation or litigation is right for you? What are some of the ways the needs of affluent families affect the cost and planning process of divorce? What is a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst?

Jon Fields joins Kelli Adams, Financial Counselor, CFP®, EA to answer some of these questions in GW & Wade’s “ask the experts” interview, focusing on the hidden costs of divorce.

“If your balance sheet contains more than a few basic assets—your bank accounts, your home, your car—the cost of your divorce will probably be affected. Stock options, restricted stock, trusts, executive compensation packages, business interests: assets like these require more nuanced negotiations. You’ll want to make sure your lawyer has experience dealing in complex financial instruments.” -Jon Fields

Please click on the link to read the full interview.

Filed Under: Alimony, Divorce, Family Law, Firm News, High-Net Worth, Massachusetts Divorce, Massachusetts Family Law, Mediation Tagged With: Affluent Divorce, Certified Divorce Financial Analyst, complex divorce, Divorce and Finance, financial planning

Jon Fields Profiled in Boston Business Journal

The Boston Business Journal reports that Jonathan Fields, partner at Fields and Dennis LLP, has been appointed as a member of the Massachusetts Trial Court’s Child Support Guidelines Task Force. The Task Force is responsible for conducting the quadrennial review of the guidelines required under federal law. A link to more info can be found here.

Filed Under: Family Law, Firm News Tagged With: child support, Child Support Guidelines, Fields and Dennis News, Firm News, Massachusetts Child Support, Massachusetts Family Law, Massachusetts Trial Court

Trusts Aren’t Marital Property, Says Massachusetts Supreme Court

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in Curt Pfannenstiehl v. Diane Pfannenstiehl recently came to an important decision regarding how Massachusetts treats spendthrift trusts in divorce. By doing so, the court overthrew the controversial decisions of the lower courts, which would have radically adjusted the way trusts are viewed in Massachusetts. The function of these trusts is to protect beneficiaries from outside creditors and overspending, so it may be a relief to many that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has chosen to interpret the trust as the settlor intended it, rather than, as the lower courts did, viewing it as “property” that can be divided as a marital asset in divorce.

The case concerned a husband and wife who had an arrangement during the marriage to fund their daily living expenses from the husband’s trust. The husband’s income wasn’t sufficient to cover these expenses, and the wife had given up her career in order to look after the couple’s children. The couple used the trust to fund their lives year to year.

The Appeals Court relied upon the trusts “ascertainable standard” to determine that the trustees were “required” to make distributions to the husband Curt Pfannenstiehl. The reasoning behind this was that the trust was to provide for the welfare of the beneficiaries, and during the marriage, it was used to provide for the family’s living expenses. However the court’s interpretation seemed extreme, given that trustees generally have discretion in their distributions rather than being compelled to pay out. In addition, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court disagreed with the lower courts’ opinion that the trust was a certain interest for Curt, instead viewing it as too speculative to be considered “property”. The Supreme Court also disagreed that Curt was entitled to a quantifiable fraction of the trust (the lower courts valued his interest as a simple 1/11th piece because it was shared with 11 other people) because of the history of how the trustees used their discretion to make unequal payments or no payments at all, and of course, the spendthrift clause, which means the trust isn’t supposed to benefit creditors or ex-spouses in the first place.

It was a good thing for Curt Pfannenstiehl that the courts ruled the way they did. When after trial, he was ordered to pay his ex-wife Diane approx. $1.4 million that he didn’t have and couldn’t earn, he was prosecuted for contempt after he couldn’t pay the judgement, and put in shackles. The Appeals Court reversed based on inability to pay, and the Supreme Court eventually decided not to treat the trust as marital property, but there was a brief moment when the protection the trust had seemed to offer Curt evaporated. Pfannenstiehl v. Pfannenstiehl shows that divorce has the potential to derail even the most painstaking plans parents have made for future generations. Thankfully, even in such a fraught situation, the courts have chosen to acknowledge that the original purpose of such a trust is to provide for future generations, and that this should be safeguarded.


Contact Us

Sheryl Dennis is an expert in matters of trusts and estates. With over 24 years of experience in family law helping families resolve complex issues, Sheryl is the right choice for people looking to navigate sensitive family law issues related to estates, inheritances. Please contact Fields and Dennis today to see how we can help.

Filed Under: Alimony, Divorce, Estate Planning, Family Law, Massachusetts Divorce, Massachusetts Family Law Tagged With: Estate Planning, Massachusetts Divorce, Massachusetts Family Law, Spendthrift Trust

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    The Boston metro family law, divorce and estate planning attorneys at the law firm of Fields and Dennis LLP are based in the Newton Wellesley area and serve the city of Newton: Auburndale, Chestnut Hill, Newton Centre, Newton Corner, Newton Upper Falls, Newton Lower Falls, Nonantum, Oak Hill, Waban and West Newton and town of Wellesley: Babson Park, Wellesley Hills, Wellesley Square Fields and Dennis also serves many clients in the Greater Boston and Massachusetts region including Ashland, Dover, Holliston, Medfield, Needham, Sherborn, Westwood, and all of Massachusetts. Attorney Jonathan Fields is a recognized authority on bitcoin and divorce

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