The U.S. Supreme Court’s Most Important Decision Affecting the Law of Trusts & Estates Was Decided a Very Long Time Ago

[Editors’ note: This is the third in our series, What Is the Most Important U.S. Supreme Court Case in Your Area of the Law? The first two installments are here and here.]

The United States Supreme Court rarely addresses issues directly involving the law of wills and trusts.  Like most legal questions involving the transfer of private property between private citizens, such matters have usually been left to state courts.  Federal courts have even adopted special rules, like the so-called “probate exception to federal jurisdiction,” to keep wills- and trusts-related matters out of federal courts.  (This principle, described by Judge Richard Posner as “one of the most mysterious and esoteric branches of the law” prohibits federal courts from entertaining a suit that encroaches on the jurisdiction of state probate courts.)

Occasionally, a trusts and estates case reaches the Supreme Court because it involves an issue of an unconstitutionally discriminatory category or a question of federal preemption.  In ­­­­­­­­­­­Trimble v. Gordon, 430 U.S. 762 (1977), the Court declared invalid Illinois’ blanket ban on the fraternal inheritance rights of illegitimate children on equal protection grounds.  In the more recent case of Eglehoff v. Eglehoff, 532 U.S. 141 (2001), the Court ruled that on the question of the rights of a former spouse to her former husband’s ERISA-regulated pension plan, state laws automatically terminating the rights of the ex-spouse upon divorce were preempted by ERISA, which had no such provision.

However, most decisions of this sort have had very little practical impact on the operation of the rules that govern intergenerational wealth transfers. Trimble had relatively little impact on inheritance law generally, other than to expand one category of “heir.”  Similarly, Eglehoff has actually led to surprisingly little pre-emption, as lower federal courts have been regularly “discovering federal common law principles” that allow ERISA provisions to be interpreted in ways that line up perfectly with the state laws they supposedly supersede.

Cases involving the regulation of Native American property rights have raised the abstract question of whether the United States Constitution recognizes a citizen’s constitutional right to dispose of his or her property at death.  Although the Supreme Court reversed its earlier pronouncements and recognized such a right in Hodel v. Irving, 481 U.S. 704 (1987), the decision had no effect whatsoever on anyone other than the Native Americans subject to the Indian Land Consolidation Act of 1983 (which was at issue in the Hodel case).

To find a Supreme Court decision that significantly altered the course of the development of the law of trusts and estates, one arguably has to go back to 1875 and the case of Nichols v. Eaton, 91 U.S. 716 (1875).  That case recognized the legitimacy of the spendthrift trust and paved the way for its widespread acceptance as a legal means of protecting one’s beneficiaries from the meritorious claims of their creditors.

Under a spendthrift trust, the creator of the trust, the settlor, restricts the ability of the beneficiary of the trust to alienate his or her interest, either voluntarily or involuntarily.  This means that an impatient beneficiary cannot transfer his or her interest in the trust, which was likely to amount to a source of annual income, in exchange for a lump sum payment.  More importantly, it keeps the beneficiary’s creditors from attaching the income stream from the trust, as they could with wages under typical garnishment laws.

The idea that the beneficial interest of a trust could be made inalienable was a controversial suggestion in mid-19th century legal circles.  British courts categorically rejected the idea on public policy grounds.  (And they still do.)  John Chipman Gray, the great 19th-century Harvard law professor and treatise writer on property related topics, considered such an idea to be an injustice, and possibly an abomination.  In fact, Gray wrote his famous treatise on Restraints upon Alienation (1883) specifically to denounce the idea of the spendthrift trust.  Although a few states like New Jersey provided some limited spendthrift protections by statute, when such trusts began to appear after the Civil War, only the courts of Pennsylvania and Massachusetts were initially receptive to the general idea that they served a socially useful function.  Even in Massachusetts, the matter remained hotly contested until 1882, when the state’s Supreme Judicial Court issued its opinion in Broadway National Bank v. Adams.

However, in 1875, the United States Supreme Court weighed in favorably on the spendthrift trust in Nichols v. Eaton.  In a Rhode Island case that was in the federal system because of the diversity of citizenship of the parties, the court was required to interpret the legitimacy of a specially designed testamentary trust.  The trust in question provided a lifetime interest for the testator’s children but also provided limitations on the ability of creditors to reach the life interest.  In an opinion for a unanimous court, Justice Samuel Miller refused to invalidate the “sprendthrift” provisions.  While acknowledging that such a restraint would not be recognized by British courts, Miller was not persuaded that public policy dictated against such provisions.

Miller wrote, “[T]he doctrine that the owner of property, in the free exercise of his will in disposing of it, cannot so dispose of it, but that the object of his bounty, who parts with nothing in return, must hold it subject to the debts due his creditors, though that may soon deprive him of all the benefits sought to be conferred by the testator’s affection or generosity, is one which we are not prepared to announce as the doctrine of this Court.”

Although the use of the spendthrift trust did not increase dramatically in the immediate aftermath of Nichols v. Eaton, the decision proved to be a great source of legitimacy for the concept.  Over the course of the next twenty years more and more trusts were established with spendthrift clauses, and more and more state courts sanctioned their use.  By the 1890’s, even John Chipman Gray had to concede that the spendthrift trust was an accepted part of the legal landscape.  As he admitted in the second edition of Restraints upon Alienation in 1895, “State after State has given its adhesion to the new doctrine.”

The creditor-protection features of the spendthrift trust became a central feature of estate planning in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.  Long ago, the debate over spendthrift trusts shifted away from their legitimacy to questions like whether there ought to be an exception to the spendthrift principle for claims of child support or compensation for personal injury.

Although the original rule was that a trust could be a spendthrift trust only if it contained express language to that effect, many states have now reversed that presumption.  In New York, for example, all trusts are presumed to be spendthrifts, unless the language creating them contains an expression to the contrary.  This approach appears to be will on its way to becoming the new majority rule, and reflects the triumph of Justice Miller’s views expressed in Nichols v. Eaton.

The Supreme Court of the United States did not create the idea of the spendthrift trust in 1875, but it did, for better or for worse, greatly facilitate its development.

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Francis Swietlik, Marquette Law School, and Polish War Relief

Francis X. Sweitlik, Dean of the Marquette College of Law from 1934 to 1953, was a nationally recognized leader of the American Polish community from the early 1930’s until the 1960’s.  During World War II, he was a leading figure in the effort to provide relief for Polish refugees and prisoners of war, and his efforts extended to the provision of general humanitarian aid to the country once the war was over.  Although he initially cooperated with Poland’s post-war Communist government, once it became clear that Poland had become a satellite state of the Soviet Union, he joined the ranks of those who campaigned for the restoration of a non-Communist, democratic government in that country.

Swietlik was born in Milwaukee in 1889 to parents who had recently emigrated from Poland.  He was educated at Marquette where he earned his bachelors, masters, and law degrees.  He began the practice of law in Milwaukee in 1915, and in 1916, he joined the Marquette law faculty on a part-time basis.  He taught at the Law School while practicing law for the next seventeen years (save for the time he was in the military during World War I), and he was named Dean in the fall of 1933 when the previous Dean, Clifton Williams, resigned.

In addition to his career as a lawyer and legal educator, Swietlik was a leading member of the Polish-American community in the United States.  In 1931, he was elected Censor of the Polish National Alliance, the largest Polish fraternal group in the United States.  The Censor was one of the organization’s two highest offices — the President was the other — and was very much a policy-making position.  Swietlik held the position of Censor of the Polish National Alliance for sixteen years, but at the same time held a number of other important positions in the Polish-American community.  In 1934, he was selected as Vice-President of the Polish-American Chamber of Commerce, and that same year he also presided over the American delegation to the International Congress of Poles Abroad, held in Warsaw.  In 1939, he was also chosen as President of the Polish American Council, an organization founded to promote the preservation of Polish culture in the United States.

As a leader of the Polish-American community and the man who was generally recognized as the primary spokesmen for the Chicago Poles (which featured the largest concentration of Polish-Americans of any region of the United States), Swietlik opposed those who insisted that Poles living abroad remained citizens of Poland, which reappeared as an independent country in 1918, after having disappeared from the map of Europe more than a century earlier.

Such Polish nationals believed that expatriate Poles were first and foremost Polish citizen, regardless of where they lived, and as such they owed a duty of loyalty to the current Polish government.  For Swietlik, in contrast, American Poles were Americans first and Poles second, and while he was proud of his Polish heritage (and was fully fluent in Polish), he believed that Poles in the United States owed no special obligations to the relatively new government in Warsaw.

After the German and Soviet invasions of Poland in September 1939, Swietlik became actively involved in the cause of Polish war relief, first as a leader of the Polish National Alliance and then as the director of the Polish National Council which eventually changed its emphasis and name to Polish War Relief.  By one estimate, Swietlik raised almost $17 million dollars in the United States for humanitarian aid to Poles in Europe.

Swietlik was also a prominent defender of the foreign policy of President Franklin Roosevelt.  As a supporter of the President, Swietlik advocated American support for the Polish government in exile in London, but he also endorsed the idea of Polish-Soviet cooperation in the war with Germany.  Not all Polish-Americans agreed with Swietlik on the latter question.  Although the government in exile also embraced the idea of cooperation with the Soviet Union, a growing number of American Poles found it troubling that the United States was not only allied with a country that had invaded Poland (the U.S.S.R.) but was also unwilling to pressure it to agree to reestablish the pre-1939 border between the two countries.

As the scope of atrocities committed against Poland by the Soviet Union became known in 1944 and 1945, and as it became clear that the U.S.S.R. was not going to return to Poland any of the territory that it had seized in 1939, many American Poles broke with the President.  Swietlik, however, remained loyal to Roosevelt.  He supported FDR’s decision to run for an unprecedented third term in 1940, and he campaigned extensively for him inside the Polish community.  Swietlik also consulted personally with the President on Polish issues both before and after the 1940 election (which was, of course, won by Roosevelt).

By 1943, it was becoming apparent that Swietlik’s loyalty to Roosevelt and his polices were hurting his popularity among his fellow Polish-Americans, many of whom were increasingly hostile to what they viewed as FDR’s pro-Soviet Polish policy.  When the Polish American Congress was formed in the fall of 1944 with an agenda that was clearly hostile to the Soviet Union, Swietlik was conspicuously ignored by its founders even though he had been one of the best known Polish-Americans in the country for the past several years (and even though he was present at the organizational meeting).

Although his political influence waned after 1944, Swietlik remained committed to raising money for relief of Poland.  He travelled to Europe after V-E Day to survey the situation, and from 1945 to 1949 (when the Communist government of Poland announced that it would not accept any more humanitarian aid from the West) American Relief for Poland under his direction raised at least $3 million in aid.   Remarkably, he accomplished all of this without ever taking a leave of absence from his duties at the Law School, which usually involved teaching a full load of courses.

In the aftermath of the war he received numerous citations for his efforts on behalf of the Polish population.  He was honored by the governments of Poland, France, and Portugal (where American Relief for Poland had staged his rescue efforts after 1941), and in 1952, he was named a Knight of the Roman Catholic Order of St. Gregory by Pope Pius XII.  He was also involved with the resettlement of 120,000 postwar Polish refugees into the United States, which had been made possible by an act of Congress in 1948.  Although the organization was largely inactive after 1949, Swietlik remained president of American Relief for Poland into the late 1960’s.

In the postwar era, he also adopted a much more critical position on the Soviet Union and eventually denounced the policies of the Roosevelt administration that he had earlier supported.  He remained Dean at Marquette Law School until 1953 when he was elected to the Circuit Court of Milwaukee County.  He continued to teach at the Law School, even after his retirement from the bench at age 70 in 1959.  He died in Milwaukee in 1983.

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Lawyer-Comedian Summoned Before the Final Grand Jury

Comedian-actor Greg Giraldo, 44, who recently died of a drug overdose, was a lawyer before he was a stand-up comic.  Belying his scruffy appearance and man-of-the-street manner, the New York native was a graduate of Regis (New York’s elite Jesuit High School), Columbia University, and Harvard Law School.  After a brief career in the New York office of the law firm Skadden Arps, Giraldo abandoned the practice of law for the world of comedy clubs and guest appearances on late-night talk shows.

Three years later (1996), he briefly returned to the law (at least in a manner of speaking) when he won the lead role as a bohemian lawyer in the ABC sit-com, Common Law.  Unfortunately, Common Law was watched by no one other than David Papke and Gordon Hylton, and the series was cancelled after five episodes.  Giraldo was probably best known for the rants that he delivered during his frequent appearances on Comedy Central’s Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

Giraldo performed in Milwaukee a number of times during the past two decades.  An obituary that focuses on his early law-related career can be found on the Esquire Magazine website.

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