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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Gratia Schoemakers
      • Community Outreach Program
    • Testimonials
  • Virtual Services
  • Estate Planning
    • Estate Planning Basics
    • Last Will and Testament
    • Revocable Living Trusts
    • Durable Power of Attorney
    • Medical Power of Attorney
    • Living Will
    • Family Estate Planning
    • LGBTQ Estate Planning & Asset Protection
    • Kids Safety Plan™
    • Business Succession Planning
    • Guardianship
      • Guardianship Planning
    • Special Needs Planning
    • Legacy Preservation Planning
    • Asset Protection
    • Trusts
    • Pet Trusts
    • Gun Trusts
  • Probate
    • Texas Probate Guide
    • Probate of a Will
    • Texas Affidavit of Heirship
    • Texas Small Estate Affidavit
    • Texas Heirship Determination
    • Texas Muniment of Title
    • Trust Administration
  • Family Law
    • Divorce
    • Collaborative Divorce
    • Mediation
    • Custody / Visitation
  • Blog
  • FAQs
    • FAQs – Videos
    • FAQs – Estate Planning
    • FAQs – Beyond Money in Estate Planning
    • FAQs – Divorce and Estate Planning FAQs and Myths
    • FAQs – Estate Planning for Newlyweds Myths and FAQs
    • FAQs – Estate Planning for Young Adults
    • FAQs – The Estate Planning Cast of Characters
    • FAQs – Expecting an Inheritance
    • FAQs – Myths and FAQs – Planning for Conflict Prone Families
    • FAQs – New and Expanding Families
    • FAQs – Pet Trusts
    • FAQs – Probate
    • FAQs – Standalone Retirement Trust Myths and FAQs
    • FAQs – Trust Modifications
    • FAQs – Unwinding Obsolete Planning
    • FAQs – Why You Want to Avoid Probate
    • FAQs – Year-End Planning Myths and FAQs
  • Contact
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Doris Duke’s Trustee Bilked Estate for $1M: How Well Do You Know Yours?

July 28, 2016 By Gratia P. Schoemakers, Esq.

Choosing a trustee is a very personal matter and should never be left to chance.  Doris Duke, heiress of Duke’s energy and tobacco fortunes, didn’t seem to know her trustee very well at all.  After Duke passed in 1992, her trustee bilked the estate for over $1 million.  It begs the question:  How well do you know your trustee?

The Butler Did It!

That old saying certainly fits in this situation because Doris Duke had her butler appointed as her estate’s trustee.  The estate was reportedly worth $1.3 billion at the time of her death.  Perhaps all that money was too much temptation for Bernard Lafferty, an Irish immigrant with only a grade school education.

After Duke’s death in 1992, Lafferty went on a bit of a spending spree.  It was reported that he spent over $1 million on himself, including:

  • Charging hundreds of thousands of dollars on luxury store items onto estate charge cards
  • Traveling all over the world, whenever he felt the urge
  • Redecorating Doris Duke’s old bedroom for himself

Lafferty apparently had very expensive taste as he spent over $60 thousand on the bedroom redecoration alone.

The final straw was when he borrowed more than $825,000 from the U.S. Trust Company, the estate’s co-executor, apparently without having to pay interest.  He was removed as the trustee three years later.

5 Characteristics of a Good Trustee

Your trustee will ultimately manage your financial future as well as the disposition of your estate.  While it’s tempting to choose a family, friend, or say – your butler – it might be wiser to treat your choice as a strict business decision.

Trustees have a “fiduciary” responsibility toward the trust.  That means they owe the highest duty of care, good faith, honesty and diligence when it comes to managing it.  Five characteristics of a good trustee include someone who is:

  1. Organized
  2. Dependable
  3. Detail-oriented
  4. Experienced in business matters
  5. Confident in their understanding of your intentions

Whomever you choose, keep in mind that anyone who is dissatisfied with the terms of your trust might try to influence your trustee.  In many cases, family relationships are wrought with various types of emotion.  Those close bonds could put your trustee in the middle of a situation they can’t handle – especially when it involves someone where saying no simply isn’t an option.  Therefore, let’s talk about whether a professional trustee would be appropriate.

Protect Your Assets, Heirs & Wishes

Whether it’s choosing a trustee, creating a will, or coming up with a comprehensive estate plan, we can help you make the right choices.  Protect your assets, your heirs, and your wishes.  We can show you how to select the best trustee for your individual situation.  Please feel free to call now and schedule a time for us to protect you, your family, and your assets.

Filed Under: Estate Planning Tagged With: Mistakes, Trustee

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