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Arkansas, 2017. A 45-year-old widow receives $3 million from her husband's estate—$13,000 monthly checks plus discretionary distributions. But she doesn't control it. Every major decision requires trustee approval. The same lawyer who wrote the premarital agreement and drafted the estate plan now controls her financial future. The distribution directives? Secret, even from her. Three no-contest clauses threaten complete disinheritance for any challenge—not just future benefits, but potentially everything already received. This episode analyzes the 2025 Arkansas Court of Appeals Lasseter decision, ending a nine-year legal battle with losses for everyone.
What You'll Learn
Case Background
The Estate Plan
The Six Potential Contests Each one triggered complete disinheritance:
The Pilot's License Curveball $2M additional trust for wife—IF husband had "active pilot's license" at death. Problem: He had valid airman certificate but no current medical certificate. FAA requires BOTH to legally fly. Husband diagnosed with cancer September 2015; trust created same month. Condition likely impossible from inception—yet wife demanded $2M outright, triggering contest.
Key Takeaways
✅ No-contest clauses can create clawback liability for already-distributed assets
✅ Secret distribution directives eliminate beneficiary oversight while preserving challenge rights
✅ Incorporating prenuptial agreements into trusts weaponizes both documents
✅ Ambiguous conditions precedent become litigation traps
✅ Threading the needle: challenge trustee's interpretation, not the provision itself
Critical Lessons
Timeline
The Impossible Math Legal opinion to wife: "The trust has left you in a much better financial situation than the prenuptial agreement alone. This may not be something you want to challenge." She had to win ALL six challenges to avoid disinheritance. Lose one = lose everything + potential $1.4M repayment.
Professional Applications
Estate Planning Attorneys: Objective criteria prevent litigation; consider how beneficiaries will interpret conditions years later
Wealth Managers: Document asset transmutation; show clients numerical downside of challenging trusts with no-contest clauses
Divorce/Family Law: Prenuptial agreements incorporated into trusts create dual vulnerabilities
Fiduciaries: When drafting attorney becomes trustee, conflicts multiply; independent review is critical
Primary Case: Lasseter (Arkansas Court of Appeals, 2025)
About the Host Professor Kelly Lise Murray, JD | Retired Vanderbilt Law (18 years) | Asset protection specialist
📧 WealthLitigated.com/questions | ⭐ Subscribe | 🔔 Follow
#WealthLitigated #NoContestClause #TrustLitigation #EstatePlanning #AssetProtection #Fiduciary
By Kelly Lise MurrayArkansas, 2017. A 45-year-old widow receives $3 million from her husband's estate—$13,000 monthly checks plus discretionary distributions. But she doesn't control it. Every major decision requires trustee approval. The same lawyer who wrote the premarital agreement and drafted the estate plan now controls her financial future. The distribution directives? Secret, even from her. Three no-contest clauses threaten complete disinheritance for any challenge—not just future benefits, but potentially everything already received. This episode analyzes the 2025 Arkansas Court of Appeals Lasseter decision, ending a nine-year legal battle with losses for everyone.
What You'll Learn
Case Background
The Estate Plan
The Six Potential Contests Each one triggered complete disinheritance:
The Pilot's License Curveball $2M additional trust for wife—IF husband had "active pilot's license" at death. Problem: He had valid airman certificate but no current medical certificate. FAA requires BOTH to legally fly. Husband diagnosed with cancer September 2015; trust created same month. Condition likely impossible from inception—yet wife demanded $2M outright, triggering contest.
Key Takeaways
✅ No-contest clauses can create clawback liability for already-distributed assets
✅ Secret distribution directives eliminate beneficiary oversight while preserving challenge rights
✅ Incorporating prenuptial agreements into trusts weaponizes both documents
✅ Ambiguous conditions precedent become litigation traps
✅ Threading the needle: challenge trustee's interpretation, not the provision itself
Critical Lessons
Timeline
The Impossible Math Legal opinion to wife: "The trust has left you in a much better financial situation than the prenuptial agreement alone. This may not be something you want to challenge." She had to win ALL six challenges to avoid disinheritance. Lose one = lose everything + potential $1.4M repayment.
Professional Applications
Estate Planning Attorneys: Objective criteria prevent litigation; consider how beneficiaries will interpret conditions years later
Wealth Managers: Document asset transmutation; show clients numerical downside of challenging trusts with no-contest clauses
Divorce/Family Law: Prenuptial agreements incorporated into trusts create dual vulnerabilities
Fiduciaries: When drafting attorney becomes trustee, conflicts multiply; independent review is critical
Primary Case: Lasseter (Arkansas Court of Appeals, 2025)
About the Host Professor Kelly Lise Murray, JD | Retired Vanderbilt Law (18 years) | Asset protection specialist
📧 WealthLitigated.com/questions | ⭐ Subscribe | 🔔 Follow
#WealthLitigated #NoContestClause #TrustLitigation #EstatePlanning #AssetProtection #Fiduciary