TBD (multiple cases share this caption; please provide jurisdiction and official citation)
Elective share cases sit at the intersection of marital and succession law, testing how far a decedent may go in lifetime planning to reduce or eliminate a surviving spouse's statutory portion. Courts grapple with whether transfers to revocable trusts, joint accounts, beneficiary designations, or other will substitutes should be pulled back into the base against which the elective share is calculated.
To be completed upon citation confirmation. Typically: Whether specific non-probate transfers or lifetime conveyances—particularly revocable trust assets or jointly titled accounts—must be included in the augmented/elective estate for purposes of calculating the surviving spouse's elective share, despite formal title or the decedent's use of will substitutes.
To be completed upon citation confirmation. Generally: A surviving spouse's elective share is calculated against the statutorily defined elective or augmented estate. Depending on jurisdiction, courts will (a) include assets the decedent effectively controlled at death (e.g., revocable trusts, retained life estates with powers, payable-on-death designations), (b) apply an 'illusory transfer' or 'fraud on the marital rights' doctrine when lifetime transfers were designed to defeat the spouse's share, or (c) follow the Uniform Probate Code's augmented-estate approach that aggregates probate and non-probate transfers subject to certain exclusions. Many jurisdictions focus on the decedent's retained control and economic benefit at death rather than mere formal title.
To be completed upon citation confirmation. Typically, elective-share cases hold either that (1) the contested assets are included in the elective or augmented estate because the decedent retained sufficient control or made transfers in fraud of marital rights; or (2) the assets are excluded because they were valid, irrevocable, and sufficiently divested such that the decedent held no beneficial interest or control at death.
This case (once precisely identified) will illustrate one of the principal frameworks courts use to police elective-share avoidance: either adopting an augmented-estate model that statutorily sweeps in will substitutes, or applying common-law doctrines (illusory transfer/fraud on marital rights) to recharacterize ostensibly completed transfers. For law students, it demonstrates how property formality, inter vivos trusts, and non-probate transfers interact with family-protective statutes, and how courts reconcile testamentary freedom with spousal economic security. It also provides exam-ready contrasts among jurisdictions and highlights the evidentiary markers courts emphasize—retained control, timing, and substance-over-form analysis.