Administration of Estates, Probate
and Decedents - Law in New Jersey
3B:10-6. Acts of administrator before notice of
will Lawful acts performed in good faith by an administrator before notice of a
will and purchases or transfers made by him in good faith before notice shall
remain valid and shall not be impeached or altered by an executor upon probate
of the will.
Nothing in this section shall be construed to
relieve the administrator of any liability to the executor under the will for
property unadministered or maladministered.
3B:10-7. Ancillary administration on estate of
nonresident intestate Where a nonresident dies intestate seized of real
property or possessed of personal property in this State, or where the evidence
of his personal property shall be in the hands of any resident of this State,
the surrogates court of the county wherein any of the real or personal property
or evidence thereof, is situate, or the Superior Court, shall, in an action
upon satisfactory proof of intestacy, issue letters of administration upon the
estate of the nonresident to the administrator of his estate or, on notice to
the administrator as the court shall require, to any person who would be
entitled to administration if the intestate had been a resident at his death.
3B:10-8. Administration by creditor of nonresident
decedent If a personal representative of a nonresident decedent fails to apply
in this State for letters testamentary or of administration within 60 days next
after the death of the decedent and there is real or personal property of the
decedent within this State, or the evidence thereof in the hands of a resident
of this State, the surrogates court of a county wherein the real property, or
personal property or evidence, is situate, or the Superior Court, may, in an
action by any person resident or nonresident, alleging himself to have a debt
or legal claim against the decedent which by the law of this State survives
against his representatives, issue letters of administration, with the will
annexed or otherwise as the case may require, to some fit person to be
designated by the court.
Prior to an appointment pursuant to this section,
notice shall be given the foreign personal representative as the court shall
prescribe.
3B:10-9. Record of appointment of personal
representative; evidentiary effect If any person shall desire to have the
appointment of a personal representative appointed in another state recorded in
this State for the purpose of manifesting the authority of the personal
representative to release or discharge real estate in this State from any
mortgage, judgment, other lien or encumbrance which was held by his decedent
the surrogate of the county wherein the real estate is situate, or the clerk of
the Superior Court, may, upon the presentation to him of an exemplified copy of
the record of the appointment of the personal representative, record and file
the exemplified copy in his office, and the record or certified copies thereof
shall be received as evidence in all courts of this State.
3B:10-10. Executor de son tort Whereas it is
sometimes practiced to the defrauding of creditors, that persons who are
entitled to the administration of the estate of an intestate will not accept
administration, but suffer or procure the administration to be granted to
others of indigent circumstances, from whom they, or others, by their means, by
deeds of gifts, or by letters of attorney, obtain the estate of the intestate
into their hands, and are not subject to the payment of the debts of the
intestate, and so the creditors cannot have or recover their just debts and
demands; therefore, if any person shall obtain, receive and have, any property
or debts of an intestate, or a release or other discharge of any debt or duty
due the intestate, upon any fraud as herein provided, without valuable
consideration as shall amount to the value of the property or debts, or near
thereabouts except it be in or towards satisfaction of some just debt, of the
value of the same property or debts, to him owing by the intestate at the time
of his decease, the person shall be charged and chargeable as executor of his
own wrong so far only, as all the property and debts coming to his hands, or
whereof he is released or discharged by the administrator, will satisfy.
However he shall not be charged for those just debts, contracted without fraud
and upon a good consideration, which are owing to him by the intestate at the
time of his decease, nor for payments made by him which lawful executors or
administrators ought to pay.
3B:10-11. Administration ad prosequendum on death
by wrongful act The surrogates court of the county wherein an intestate resided
at his death, or, if the intestate resided outside the State, the surrogates
court of the county wherein the accident resulting in death occurred, or the
Superior Court, may grant letters of administration ad prosequendum to the
person entitled by law to general administration. An administrator ad
prosequendum shall not be required to give bond.
3B:10-12. Temporary administration The Superior
Court may grant administration ad litem, temporary administration,
administration pendente lite, or any form of limited administration.
3B:10-13. Duty to apply in this State for original
letters of administration When an intestate is resident in any county of New
Jersey at his death, it shall be the duty of the heir or any other person
desiring original letters of administration upon his estate to make application
therefor to the surrogate of that county or to the Superior Court of this
State.
Any person having knowledge of the grant in a
foreign jurisdiction of original letters of administration upon the estate of a
person dying resident in any county of New Jersey, shall give information
thereof to the Superior Court.
The court may direct the clerk of the court to
issue and have served subpoenas or an order to show cause requiring the
appearance before it, at a specified time, of any persons having any interest
in the estate, and commanding them to abide the order of the court. The matter
of the grant of letters of administration shall be wholly within the
jurisdiction of the court.
3B:10-14. Appointment of debtor as executor; debt
not discharged The appointment of a debtor as executor shall not, unless
otherwise expressed in the will, be construed to discharge the executor from
payment of the debt, but the debt shall be considered an asset in the hands of
the executor and shall be accounted for in the same manner as any other part of
the decedents estate.
3B:10-15. Appointment of substituted administrators
When a sole or sole surviving or remaining executor or administrator, with or
without the will annexed, dies or is removed or discharged by the court after
qualifying and entering upon the duties of his office but before the completion
thereof, the vacancy so created shall, except as hereinafter provided, be
filled by the appointment of a fit person to exercise the vacated office. The
person so appointed shall be nominated substituted administrator with the will
annexed or substituted administrator, as the case may be.
3B:10-16. Decedents will to be observed Where
administration is granted with the will annexed, the will of the decedent
therein expressed shall be observed and performed.
3B:10-17. Manner in which appointment shall be made
The appointment shall be made by the issuance of letters of substitutionary
administration, with or without the will annexed as the case may be, by the
surrogates court or the Superior Court in the manner and upon the conditions
prescribed for granting letters of administration to the first administrators
in other cases.
3B:10-18. When appointment unnecessary The
appointment of a substituted administrator shall not be required if the
unadministered assets of the intestate or testator consist of money on deposit
in a bank, trust company or savings and loan association not exceeding
$1,000.00, in which event it shall be lawful for the Superior Court, in an
action brought by any party in interest, to authorize the bank, trust company
or savings and loan association to distribute to the persons entitled by law to
receive the assets. Payments made pursuant to the authority of this section
shall release the bank, trust company or savings and loan association from any
claim of, or liability to, any person interested in the estate.
3B:10-19. Commencement of duties and powers of a
personal representative The duties and powers of a personal representative
commence upon his appointment. The powers of a personal representative relate
back in time to give acts by the person appointed which are beneficial to the
estate occurring prior to appointment the same effect as those occurring
thereafter.
3B:10-20. Ratification of prior acts A personal
representative may ratify and accept acts on behalf of the estate done by
others where the acts would have been proper for a personal representative.
3B:10-21. Carrying out decedents written funeral
instructions Prior to appointment, a person named executor in a will may carry
out written instructions of the decedent relating to his body, funeral and
burial arrangements.
3B:10-22. Priority among letters A person to whom
general letters of appointment are issued first has exclusive authority under
the letters until his appointment is terminated or modified. If, through error,
general letters of appointment are afterwards issued to another, the first
appointed personal representative may recover any property of the estate in the
hands of the personal representative subsequently appointed, but the acts of
the latter done in good faith before notice of the first letters are not void
for want of validity of appointment.
3B:10-23. Duty of personal representative to settle
and distribute estate A personal representative is under a duty to settle and
distribute the estate of the decedent in accordance with the terms of any
probated and effective will and applicable law, and as expeditiously and
efficiently as is consistent with the best interests of the estate. He shall
use the authority conferred upon him by law, the terms of the will, if any, and
any order in proceedings to which he is a party for the best interests of
successors to the estate.
3B:10-24. Liability for acts of administration or
distribution A personal representative shall not be surcharged for acts of
administration or distribution if the conduct in question was authorized at the
time. Subject to other obligations of administration, a probated will is
authority to administer and distribute the estate according to its terms. An
order of appointment of a personal representative is authority to distribute
apparently intestate assets to the heirs of the decedent if, at the time of
distribution, the personal representative is not aware of a pending proceeding
to probate a will or to determine heirs, a proceeding to vacate an order
entered in an earlier proceeding to probate a will, a formal proceeding
questioning his appointment or fitness to continue. Nothing in this section
affects the duty of the personal representative to administer and distribute
the estate in accordance with the rights of claimants and others interested in
the estate.
3B:10-25. Standing to sue and be sued Except as to
proceedings which do not survive the death of the decedent, a personal
representative of a decedent domiciled in this State at his death has the same
standing to sue and be sued in the courts of this State and the courts of any
other jurisdiction as his decedent had immediately prior to death.
3B:10-26. Standards of care to be observed Except
as otherwise provided by the terms of a decedents will, the personal
representative shall observe the standards in dealing with the estate assets
that would be observed by a prudent man dealing with the property of another,
and if the personal representative has special skills or is named personal
representative on the basis of representations of special skills or expertise,
he is under a duty to use those skills.
3B:10-27. Right to possession of property
transferred in fraud of creditors The right to possession of property
transferred in fraud of creditors recovered for the benefit of creditors is
exclusively in the personal representative.
3B:10-28. Expeditious settlement and distribution A
personal representative shall proceed expeditiously with the settlement and distribution
of a decedents estate and do so without adjudication, order, or direction of a
court, but he may invoke the jurisdiction of a court, in proceedings authorized
by law to resolve questions concerning the estate or its administration.
3B:10-29. Possession and control of estate Except
as otherwise provided by a decedents will, every personal representative has a
right to, and shall take possession or control of, the decedents property,
except that any tangible personal property may be left with or surrendered to
the person presumptively entitled thereto unless or until, in the judgment of
the personal representative, possession of the property by him will be
necessary for purposes of administration. The request by a personal
representative for delivery of any property possessed by an heir or devisee is
conclusive evidence, in any action against the heir or devisee for possession
thereof, that the possession of the property by the personal representative is
necessary for purposes of administration. The personal representative shall pay
taxes on, and take all steps reasonably necessary for the management,
protection and preservation of, the estate in his possession. He may maintain
an action to recover possession of property or to determine the title thereto.
3B:10-30. Power over title to property Until
termination of his appointment a personal representative has the same power
over the title to property of the estate that an absolute owner would have, in
trust however, for the benefit of the creditors and others interested in the
estate. This power may be exercised without notice, hearing, or order of court.
3B:10-31. Powers and duties of successor
representative A successor personal representative has the same power and duty
as the original personal representative to complete the administration and
distribution of the estate, as expeditiously as possible, but he shall not
exercise any power expressly made personal to the executor named in the will.
3B:10-32. Powers of surviving co-personal
representative Unless the terms of the will otherwise provide, every power
exercisable by co-personal representatives may be exercised by the one or more
remaining after the appointment of one or more is terminated, and if one of two
or more nominated as co-personal representatives is not appointed, those
appointed may exercise all the powers incident to the office.
3B:11-1. Creators reserved interest in trust
alienable subject to creditors claims The right of any creator of a trust to
receive either the income or the principal of the trust or any part of either
thereof, presently or in the future, shall be freely alienable and shall be
subject to the claims of his creditors, notwithstanding any provision to the
contrary in the terms of the trust.
3B:11-2. Letters of trusteeship under a will A
testamentary trustee or substituted testamentary trustee, before exercising the
authority vested in him by virtue of any will admitted to probate by the
Superior Court, or any surrogates court of this State, shall obtain letters of
trusteeship from that court.
3B:11-3. Trustees construed to be joint tenants All
estates heretofore or hereafter granted or devised to trustees shall be
construed to have vested and to vest an estate of joint tenancy in the
trustees.
When a trustee is removed a conveyance or devise
from the removed trustee to the old and new trustees or to the new trustees
shall vest in the old and new trustees or the new trustees an estate in joint
tenancy, notwithstanding any want of unity.
When a trustee dies or resigns or his office
becomes vacant for any cause, and a new trustee is appointed, the surviving
trustees, if any there be, and the new trustees shall hold the trust estate as
joint tenants, and a conveyance of a right and interest in the trust estate
from the surviving trustees, to the new trustee shall vest in all the trustees
an estate in joint tenancy, notwithstanding any want of unity.
When a new, additional or substituted trustee is
appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction or becomes such by operation of the
terms of a will or other instrument or by operation of law, title to the trust
assets shall forthwith vest in all the trustees in office including the new,
additional or substituted trustee as joint tenants.
3B:11-4. Effect to be given consent by holders of
general powers of appointment upon beneficiaries For the purpose of granting
consent or approval with regard to the acts or accounts of a fiduciary or
trustee, including relief from liability or penalty for failure to post bond,
or to perform other duties, and for purposes of consenting to modification or
termination of a trust or to deviation from its terms, the sole holder or all
coholders of a presently exercisable general power of appointment, including
one in the form of a power of amendment or revocation, are deemed to act for
beneficiaries to the extent that the interests of the beneficiaries as objects,
takers in default, or otherwise are subject to the power. As used in this
section, a presently exercisable general power of appointment is one which
enables the power holder to presently draw absolute ownership to himself.
3B:11-4.1. Limitations on powers of trustees;
applicability; "interested party" defined 1. a. The following powers
conferred by a governing instrument upon a trustee in his or her capacity as a
trustee shall not be exercised by that trustee:
(1) The power to make discretionary distributions
of either principal or income to or for the benefit of the trustee, the
trustees estate, or the creditors of either, unless either:
(a) limited by an ascertainable standard relating
to the trustees health, education, support or maintenance, within the meaning
of 26 U.S.C. 2041 and 2514; or
(b) exercisable by the trustee only in conjunction
with another person having a substantial interest in the property subject to
the power which is adverse to the interest of the trustee within the meaning of
26 U.S.C. 2041(b) (1) (C) (ii);
If a trustee is prohibited by paragraph (1) of this
subsection from exercising a power conferred upon the trustee, the trustee
nevertheless may exercise that power but shall be limited to distributions for
the trustees health, education, support or maintenance to the extent otherwise
permitted by the terms of the trust.
(2) The power to make discretionary distributions
of either principal or income to satisfy any of the trustees personal legal
obligations for support or other purposes;
(3) The power to make discretionary allocations in
the trustees personal favor of receipts or expenses as between income and
principal, unless such trustee has no power to enlarge or shift any beneficial
interest except as an incidental consequence of the discharge of such trustees
fiduciary duties;
(4) The power to exercise any of the powers
proscribed in this subsection with regard to an individual other than the
trustee to the extent that such individual could exercise a similar prohibited
power in connection with a trust that benefits the trustee.
b. Unless otherwise prohibited by the provisions of
subsection a. of this section, a trustee may exercise a power described in that
subsection in favor of someone other than the trustee, the trustees estate, or
the creditors of either.
c. If a governing instrument contains a power
proscribed under subsection a. of this section the following shall apply:
(1) If the power is conferred on two or more
trustees, it may be exercised by the trustee or trustees who are not so
prohibited as if they were the only trustee or trustees; or
(2) If there is no trustee in office who can
exercise such power upon application of any interested party, a court of
competent jurisdiction shall appoint a trustee to exercise such power or,
except as provided in subsection d. of this section, a successor trustee who
would not be disqualified shall be appointed to exercise the power that the
other trustees cannot exercise in accordance with the provisions of the trust
instrument as if the office of trustee were vacant.
d. No beneficiary of a trust, in an individual,
trustee or other capacity, may appoint, or remove and appoint, a trustee who is
related or subordinate to the beneficiary within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 672
(c) unless:
(1) the trustees discretionary power to make
distributions to or for such beneficiary is limited by an ascertainable
standard relating to the beneficiarys health, education, support or maintenance
as set forth in subsection a. of this section;
(2) the trustees discretionary power may not be
exercised to satisfy any of such beneficiarys legal obligations for support or
other purposes; and
(3) the trustees discretionary power may not be
exercised to grant to such beneficiary a general power to appoint property of
the trust to the beneficiary, the beneficiarys estate or the creditors thereof
within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 2041.
This subsection d. shall not apply if the
appointment of the trustee by the beneficiary may be made only in conjunction
with another person having a substantial interest in the property of the trust,
subject to the power, which is adverse to the exercise of the power in favor of
the beneficiary within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 2041(b) (1) (C) (ii).
e. The provisions of this section shall not apply
during the time that a trust remains revocable or amendable by the grantor.
f. This section applies to:
(1) Any trust created under a governing instrument
executed 90 days or more after the effective date of this act, unless the
governing instrument expressly provides that this act does not apply; and
(2) Any trust created under a governing instrument
executed before 90 days after the effective date of this act, unless all
interested parties affirmatively elect on or before three years after the
effective date by a written declaration signed by or on behalf of each
interested party and delivered to the trustee, not to be subject to the
application of this act. In the case of a testamentary trust, such declarations
shall be filed with the clerk of the court in which the will was admitted to
probate.
g. In this section the term "interested party"
means:
(1) Each trustee then serving; and
(2) Each person having an interest in income or
principal whom it would be necessary to join as a party in a proceeding for the
judicial settlement of a trustees account or, if such a person has not attained
majority or is otherwise incapacitated, the persons legal representative under
applicable law or the persons agent under a durable power of attorney that is
sufficient to grant such authority.
L.1996, c.41.
3B:11-5. Trustees death or failure to act; appointment
of new trustee by court; powers When a trustee appointed by a will probated in
the surrogates court of any county or a trustee appointed under a trust inter
vivos as to real or personal property situate in any county fails or refuses to
act or dies before the execution or completion of the trust committed to him,
or absconds or removes from this State, is adjudicated a mental incompetent or
becomes in any manner legally incapable of executing the trust, the Superior
Court may remove the trustee, if he be alive, and appoint a suitable person or
persons to execute the trust, and the trustee or trustees so appointed shall be
entitled to the trust estate as fully and in the same manner as the original
trustee was and shall have all the power and discretion of the original
trustee.
3B:11-6. Vacancy in trusteeship upon discharge or
removal When a trustee is removed or discharged by the Superior Court before
the completion of the trust, the court may appoint a fit person or persons to
fill the vacated office.
3B:11-7. Powers of new, substituted or additional trustees A duly
appointed new, substituted or additional trustee shall have the same power and
discretion with respect to the investment, management, conversion, sale or
other disposition of the trust estate, whether real or personal, as was given
to or vested in the original trustee or trustees named in or appointed by the
will or other instrument creating or continuing the trust, notwithstanding the
power or discretion may be directed by the will or other instrument to be
exercised at the discretion of the original trustee or trustees unless the
power or discretion of the original trustee or trustees is expressly prohibited
by the will or other instrument to any new, substituted or additional trustee.
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