Schneider v. Finmann, 15 NY3d 306 (2010) notwithstanding, Pace v Raisman & Assoc., Esqs., LLP 2012 NY Slip Op 03989 Decided on May 23, 2012 Appellate Division, Second Department
is yet another case in which alleged legal malpractice in a trust setting is dismissed on statute of limitations grounds.
"In 2001 the plaintiff’s decedent sought to amend a trust that he had created in 1998. He approached his attorney, the defendant Myron Raisman, of the defendant Raisman & Associates, Esqs., LLP (hereinafter together the law firm defendants), who had previously provided the decedent with legal advice pertaining to the planning of his estate. The law firm defendants prepared an amendment to the trust to purportedly allow the decedent to convey his assets during his life to the trust in order to avoid the payment of estate taxes with respect to these assets at the time of his death. The decedent’s intention in amending his trust was to leave him, as grantor, with limited power over the assets that he conveyed to the trust so that those assets would not be included in his estate at the time of his death for tax purposes.
Between the time that the trust was amended on January 9, 2001, and the decedent’s death on October 7, 2005, the decedent conveyed numerous assets and gifts to the trust.
In January 2007 the law firm defendants, along with the related accounting firm of Raisman Magen and Zicht Associates, C.P.A.s, P.C. (hereinafter the accounting firm), prepared the tax returns for the decedent’s estate. In November 2009 the Internal Revenue Service (hereinafter [*2]the IRS) conducted an audit of the estate’s tax return. The audit uncovered deficiencies in the estate’s tax return, which ultimately led to the assessment of additional taxes, interest, and penalties upon the estate. The IRS determined that the value of the estate included those assets and gifts which the decedent had transferred to the trust subsequent to its amendment in January 2001 because the trust’s amendment, drafted as an "intentionally defective grantor trust," provided the decedent with too much authority to borrow the corpus or income from the trust without adequate consideration.
The plaintiff, who is the decedent’s son and executor of the decedent’s estate, commenced this action in January 2010 against the law firm defendants and the accounting firm to, inter alia, recover damages for legal malpractice against the law firm defendants in the drafting of the trust (first cause of action) and for fraud against the law firm defendants in allegedly falsely representing that the decedent could transfer assets to the trust for less than fair consideration without those assets being included as part of the decedent’s estate at the time of his death (fourth cause of action).
The complaint alleged that the decedent routinely and continuously retained the defendants for estate planning and related services because he wanted to plan his estate in a manner that maximized his children’s inheritance and that, in the course of the representation, the defendants advised the decedent to create the trust. The plaintiff alleged that the law firm defendants committed legal malpractice in drafting the amendment to the trust since it subjected the assets transferred thereto to estate tax. The plaintiff also alleged that the law firm defendants knowingly made false representations to the decedent, commencing on January 9, 2001, to the effect that the assets conveyed to the trust were outside of the decedent’s estate for estate tax purposes. The plaintiff asserted that the decedent did not know, although the law firm defendants did, that the decedent’s conveyances to the trust would be included in part of the estate for tax purposes."
"The burden then shifted to the plaintiff to "establish that the statute of limitations has been tolled or that he . . . actually commenced the action within the applicable limitations period" (Krichmar v Scher, 82 AD3d at 1165; see Fleyshman v Suckle & Schlesinger, PLLC, 91 AD3d at 593; East Hampton Union Free School Dist. v Sandpebble Bldrs. Inc., 90 AD3d at 822). The plaintiff failed to do so. Contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, the statute of limitations was not tolled by the doctrine of continuous representation where the decedent, the original client, died, severing the attorney-client relationship (see Velasquez v Katz, 42 AD3d 566, 567), and the law firm defendants’ representation of the decedent’s estate in connection with legal advice as to the estate’s tax liability, given subsequent to the decedent’s death, was separate and distinct from the alleged negligent creation of the trust, which is the act underlying the legal malpractice cause of action (see Shumsky v Eisenstein, 96 NY2d 164, 168). Further, contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, the legal malpractice cause of action did not accrue at the time that the IRS conducted its audit in 2009. [*3]Therefore, the legal malpractice cause of action was not interposed within the applicable limitations period (see McCoy v Feinman, 99 NY2d at 301; Ackerman v Price Waterhouse, 84 NY2d 535, 541). "