In the Matter of the Revocable Trust Agreement Created by the Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar, Dipa Sarkar v. Anuradha ("Mili") Sarkar Naugle ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    Mar 24 2020, 9:37 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                                    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Karl L. Mulvaney                                           Mark D. Hassler
    Gregory J. Duncan                                          Jacob H. Miller
    Nana Quay-Smith                                            Hassler Kondras Miller, LLP
    Bingham Greenebaum Doll, LLP                               Terre Haute, Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Gerald H. McGlone
    Terre Haute, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In the Matter of the Revocable                             March 24, 2020
    Trust Agreement Created by the                             Court of Appeals Case No.
    Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar                                 19A-TR-1814
    Dipa Sarkar,                                               Appeal from the Vigo Superior
    Court
    Appellant-Petitioner,
    The Honorable Sarah K. Mullican,
    v.                                                 Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    Anuradha (“Mili”) Sarkar                                   84D03-1503-TR-1438
    Naugle,
    Appellee-Respondent.
    Riley, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020                           Page 1 of 21
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    [1]   Appellant-Petitioner, Dipa Sarkar (Dipa), appeals the trial court’s findings of
    facts and conclusions thereon in favor of Appellee-Respondent, Anuradha
    Sarkar Naugle (Mili), concluding that the revocable trust was not created in
    contemplation of death and for the purpose of defeating Dipa’s spousal elective
    share.
    [2]   We affirm.
    ISSUE
    [3]   Dipa presents this court with one issue on appeal, which we restate as:
    Whether a surviving spouse can satisfy her election to take against the will of
    her deceased husband when he transferred the majority of his assets into a
    revocable trust.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    [4]   Dipa is the surviving spouse of Anil Sarkar (Anil), who died on February 24,
    2015. Dipa and Anil were married in 1958 in India, where they attended
    medical school, and remained married for fifty-six years until Anil’s death. At
    the time of their marriage, Anil was a widower with two children from his
    previous marriage, Ashoke Sarkar (Ashoke) and Mili. Dipa and Anil had one
    child together, Rumu Sarkar (Rumu). They immigrated to the United States to
    complete their medical residencies in pathology and became permanent
    residents in 1961. Dipa and Anil brought Rumu with them to the United
    States, while Ashoke and Mili remained in India for many years.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 2 of 21
    [5]   In 1969, Dipa became the laboratory director at Mary Sherman Hospital in
    Terre Haute, Indiana, while Anil became the laboratory director at Clay
    County Hospital. Anil created the Sarkar Medical Corporation, which received
    the couple’s salaries and provided a profit-sharing plan. Both Dipa and Anil
    retired in 1990 due to Anil’s poor health.
    [6]   Beginning in the 1970’s and continuing throughout their marriage, Dipa and
    Anil kept separate bank accounts, pension plan accounts, and investment
    accounts. Anil spent a big part of his income on his extended family in India.
    He took care of his parents and their farm; he built homes for his eight living
    siblings as well as a school and latrines for the village, in addition to gifts and
    supplies. Anil also financially supported Ashoke and Mili as adults, while Dipa
    paid for Rumu’s expenses and education.
    [7]   In 1992, after they both retired, Dipa retained attorney Keith Lyman (Attorney
    Lyman) to create a revocable trust of which she was the settlor and primary
    beneficiary during her life. The primary purpose of the trust was “to provide for
    the management of the settlor’s assets, both presently and during any future
    period of disability; being a preferred alternative to guardianship proceedings
    and a simplified means of accomplishing both lifetime and death transfers of
    those assets.” (Exh. Vol. V, p. 173). The trust agreement provided that Dipa
    was the primary beneficiary during her life, and for the administration of the
    trust for her benefit during any period of incapacitation. Dipa’s trust agreement
    specified that upon her death, the trustee would distribute to Anil “the
    minimum amount necessary to reduce the federal estate tax payable as a result
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020          Page 3 of 21
    of my death to the least amount possible,” and “I acknowledge that is it my
    intent that the amount to be distributed to my spouse shall not exceed an
    amount which will provide for zero tax upon my death.” (Exh. Vol. V, pp. 178-
    79). Rumu was the sole primary beneficiary of the residue of the trust corpus
    following any transfer to Anil necessary to reduce estate tax liability. Dipa’s
    trust agreement also included that Anil, as successor trustee, would not have
    the power to appoint any trust property for his benefit, and he was prohibited
    from exercising discretion in his own favor.
    [8]   In 1993, at Dipa’s insistence, Anil also sought Attorney Lyman’s services, and
    on August 23, 1993, Anil executed the Anil Kumar Sarkar Revocable Trust
    Agreement, which was nearly identical in all respects to Dipa’s, except that Mili
    was named as the residuary beneficiary. Both Dipa and Anil transferred their
    respective investment accounts to their respective trusts, and on March 4, 1994,
    both executed their own beneficiary designations naming their respective trusts
    as beneficiaries of their respective interests in the Sarkar Medical Corporation
    Profit-Sharing Trust and Pension Plan. By amendment on August 23, 1996,
    Dipa and Anil both executed beneficiary designations for their respective
    interests in the Sarkar Medical Corporation Profit-Sharing Trust and Pension
    Plan naming the other as the primary beneficiary, with their respective trusts as
    secondary beneficiary.
    [9]   On October 23, 1996, Attorney Lyman wrote a letter, addressed to both Anil
    and Dipa, in which he restated the couple’s respective goals and objectives,
    Anil’s being to provide for Mili and Dipa’s being to provide for Rumu. The
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020       Page 4 of 21
    letter acknowledged a recent discussion with Anil and Dipa about “the
    advantages of designating each spouse as the primary beneficiary on your
    IRA’s” but stated that, “[b]oth of you have indicated to me that you do not
    wish to leave your respective IRA accounts to each other,” and that “[e]ach of
    you are generally uncomfortable with designating the spouse as the primary
    beneficiary of the IRA proceeds because you would no longer maintain control
    over the ultimate beneficiaries of each such IRA account after your respective
    deaths.” (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 42). Additionally, Attorney Lyman included a
    summary of a surviving spouse’s right to elect to take against a deceased
    spouse’s will. After describing this right, Attorney Lyman advised,
    Indiana law has determined that the spouse’s statutory election
    can be made only against the probate assets of the spouse who
    died first. It has been ruled that this right of election does not
    extend to trust assets. Whether that would continue to be the law
    of the State of Indiana remains to be seen. It is therefore possible
    that the second spouse to die could make a claim against the first
    to die’s IRA proceeds or possibly the trust. Therefore if you are
    willing to assume that risk, then you may proceed without any
    additional documentation.
    (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 44). Lyman continued that if Anil and Dipa wished to
    foreclose this possibility, another document would be required, but reiterated,
    “[a]s I mentioned earlier, it is my opinion that this right of election would not
    extend to the IRA’s or trust property.” (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 45). Neither Dipa nor
    Anil executed any agreement to waive their spousal right to an elective share.
    On November 1, 1996, Dipa and Anil both amended their respective trust
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 5 of 21
    agreements, opting for distributions to each other’s respective non-spouse
    beneficiaries and acknowledging that they chose to leave nothing to each other.
    [10]   Dipa continued to make amendments to her trust agreement with the aid of
    Attorney Lyman. By letter, dated March 11, 1998, Attorney Lyman advised
    Dipa of the benefits of purchasing life insurance and gifting, stating that
    [w]e have discussed the tax advantages of naming your husband
    as primary beneficiary on those retirement accounts. You have
    informed me, however, that you would prefer not to name him as
    primary beneficiary because he has sufficient retirement assets in
    his own name and you have a desire to provide for your daughter
    primarily with retirement accounts, and other beneficiaries with
    your non-retirement accounts currently in your revocable trust.
    (Exh. Vol. VI, pp. 212-14). On July 15, 1998, Attorney Lyman informed Dipa
    that he could no longer represent either spouse. Referencing his letter of March
    11, 1998, Attorney Lyman noted a potential conflict of interest between Dipa
    and Anil, as Dipa indicated to him that she did not wish for him to discuss her
    estate planning with Anil.
    [11]   On March 31, 1997, Anil restated his entire trust agreement (Trust or Trust
    Agreement). The Trust Agreement provided that “because my spouse, [Dipa],
    has more assets than I have and will not need my money or property to support
    herself, I choose to leave nothing to her.” (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 110). In
    accordance with this expressed intention, the Trust Agreement devised
    $250,000 to Rumu, $100,000 to each of Mili’s two sons, $10,000 to Anil’s
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 6 of 21
    brother Sekhar Sarkar, and $5,000 to Ashoke, with the remainder of the corpus
    to Mili.
    [12]   Anil amended his Trust Agreement seven times, with the seventh and final
    Trust amendment occurring on March 14, 2014. From the original Trust
    Agreement through the fourth amendment, Anil made no provision for
    distribution of any Trust assets to Dipa, stating, [b]ecause my spouse, [Dipa],
    has more assets than I have and will not need my money or property to support
    herself, I choose to leave nothing to her.” (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 110). Beginning
    with the fifth amendment through the final amendment, Anil provided for Dipa
    to receive $50,000. Specifically, in the final amendment, he named Mili as
    successor trustee and directed her to distribute $250,000 to Rumu, $30,000 to
    Ashoke, $50,000 to Sekhar, and $50,000 to Dipa if she survived him by thirty
    days. The remainder of the Trust assets were to be distributed to Mili, or if she
    was deceased, to her descendants per stirpes.
    [13]   The Trust Agreement was funded by two investment accounts owned by Anil.
    One account, titled in the name of the Trust and held by Anil as trustee,
    consisted of stocks and bonds and was valued at $924,635 at the time of Anil’s
    death. The second account that funded the Trust Agreement was the IRA
    valued at $1,007,614. Shortly before he died, Anil also had his monthly social
    security payments diverted from his checking account into the Trust
    Agreement.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020       Page 7 of 21
    [14]   In 2000 and again in 2003, Dipa signed consent forms of persons other than
    herself as beneficiaries of Anil’s Individual Retirement Account (IRA). On
    August 23, 2007, Anil and Dipa both signed nearly identical sets of documents
    for the transfer of their respective trust accounts and IRAs to Morgan Stanley,
    and both designated their respective trust accounts as beneficiaries of their
    respective IRAs. Neither spouse signed the other’s designation where indicated
    for spousal consent required in community property states. Both Anil and Dipa
    signed a joint letter to their joint financial adviser, directing payment from their
    respective IRAs to their respective trusts, and on August 2, 2010, Dipa received
    a mailing from Morgan Stanley which included detailed information about
    Dipa’s and Anil’s investment plan and amounts invested.
    [15]   On January 20, 2014, thirteen months before his passing, Anil executed a
    simple pour-over will that transferred his remaining probate assets, if any, to the
    Trust Agreement. Anil appointed Rumu as his personal representative and
    directed that she use his probate estate to pay all of his debts, medical expenses,
    funeral expenses, estate administration expenses, and “all inheritance, estate,
    and like taxes . . . payable by reason of [his] death and in connection with any
    property, whether passing under this will or otherwise” without reimbursement
    from any person. (Exh. Vol. II, pp. 16-18). Anil made no provision for Dipa in
    his will other than to leave her his tangible personal property, such as his
    clothes and household goods.
    [16]   Shortly after Anil’s death on February 24, 2015, Rumu filed a petition to
    probate the will. The will was admitted to probate and Rumu was appointed as
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020         Page 8 of 21
    personal representative the following day. On March 10, 2015, Dipa filed a
    petition to docket the Trust and for relief, challenging the validity of Anil’s
    Trust and the propriety of Anil’s decision to divert the majority of his assets to
    the Trust in an attempt to disinherit her. Dipa subsequently filed an election to
    take against the will under Indiana Code section 29-1-3-1, which Mili contested
    as untimely. Mili moved for summary judgment on Dipa’s petition, which was
    granted by the trial court. Consequently, Dipa timely appealed.
    [17]   On appeal, we concluded that Dipa had made a timely election to take against
    Anil’s will and that, therefore, Dipa was allowed to amend her petition to more
    specifically allege her elective share claim against the assets of Anil’s trust. See
    Matter of Sarkar, 
    84 N.E.3d 666
    , 675 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017) (Sarkar I). Finding
    genuine issues of material fact with respect to Dipa’s ability to satisfy her
    elective share with the assets of Anil’s Trust, we remanded to the trial court for
    further proceedings.
    [18]   On remand and after extensive discovery, the trial court conducted a trial over
    four separate days, beginning July 6, 2018. Prior to trial, the parties stipulated
    that Dipa suffered from an irreversible degenerative neurological condition and
    lacked the capacity to testify. An agreement was reached that Dipa’s testimony
    at trial would be limited to the deposition testimony she gave in August 2015.
    On May 24, 2019, the trial court entered its findings of fact and conclusions
    thereon, issuing judgment in favor of Mili. Recognizing that Anil’s Trust assets
    were not subject to Dipa’s elective share, the trial court concluded, in pertinent
    part, that:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020          Page 9 of 21
    10. [] Anil’s [T]rust was established in 1993, twenty-two (22)
    years prior to his death, for the purpose of obtaining assistance in
    personal and business affairs as well as disposing of his property
    at death. Anil had check writing authority on his [T]rust and
    could amend or modify it at any time. Both Anil and Dipa were
    present with [Attorney Lyman] when the original estate planning
    advice was provided. The couple agreed to dispose of their assets
    separately and not to each other. Dipa was aware of Anil’s
    [T]rust and its provisions because it was identical to hers.
    Further, Anil and Dipa used a joint financial adviser, [], who
    testified that the couple’s investments were identical. [The
    financial advisor] testified that Anil and Dipa came together to
    her office to execute financial documents and that each was
    aware of the others IRA and trust.
    12. The [c]ourt finds no evidence that Anil’s intent in creating the
    [T]rust was to frustrate Dipa’s right to a statutory elective share.
    The [c]ourt further finds that Anil’s [T]rust was not created in
    contemplation of his death and is therefore not testamentary.
    Therefore, the [c]ourt finds that Anil’s [T]rust assets are not
    subject to Dipa’s statutory elective share.
    (Appellant’s App. Vol. II, pp. 39-40).
    [19]   Dipa now appeals. Additional facts will be provided if necessary.
    DISCUSSION AND DECISION
    I. Standard of Review
    [20]   The trial court entered special findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant
    to Indiana Trial Rule 52(A). These special findings should contain all the facts
    necessary for recovery by the party in whose favor the conclusions of law are
    found and should contain a statement of the ultimate facts from which the trial
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 10 of 21
    court determines the legal rights of the parties to the action. Seslar v. Seslar, 
    569 N.E.2d 380
    , 383 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980). Special findings provide the parties and
    the reviewing court with the theory on which the trial court decided the case so
    that the right of review may be effectively preserved. See Display Fixtures Co. v.
    R.L. Hatcher, Inc., 
    438 N.E.2d 26
    , 30 (Ind. Ct. App. 1982). Where a party
    challenges special findings and conclusions, our standard of review is two-
    tiered. First, we determine whether the evidence supports the findings, and
    second whether the findings support the judgment. Dunnewind v. Cook, 
    697 N.E.2d 485
    , 487 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998). The trial court’s findings and
    conclusions will be set aside only if they are clearly erroneous.
    Id. Findings of
    fact are clearly erroneous if the record lacks any evidence or reasonable
    inferences to support them.
    Id. In reviewing
    the trial court’s entry of special
    findings, we neither reweigh the evidence nor reassess the credibility of the
    witnesses.
    Id. Rather, we
    must accept the ultimate facts as stated by the trial
    court if there is evidence to sustain them.
    Id. This court
    may affirm the
    judgment on any legal theory supported by the findings, but only if the
    alternative theory has been briefed by all parties and is consistent with all of the
    trial court’s findings and inferences drawn therefrom. Mitchell v. Mitchell, 
    695 N.E.2d 920
    , 923-24 (Ind. 1998).
    II. Elective Share of Surviving Spouse
    [21]   Dipa contends that Anil’s transfer of assets to his Trust Agreement signaled a
    clear intent to disown her and divest her of her right to take against the will. As
    Anil’s Trust was created in contemplation of death and with a clear intent to
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020         Page 11 of 21
    disinherit her, Dipa maintains the trial court erred to deny her right to take her
    statutory elective share from the Trust’s assets.
    [22]   It is well-established that in Indiana, surviving spouses hold certain statutory
    rights upon the death of their spouse. Boetsma v. Boetsma, 
    768 N.E.2d 1016
    ,
    1020 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans. denied. As such, pursuant to Indiana Code
    section 29-1-3-1, the surviving spouse of an individual who dies testate may
    elect to take against the will if the surviving spouse is not satisfied with the
    provision made for him or her in the will. In re Estate of Weitzman, 
    724 N.E.2d 1120
    , 1122 (Ind. Ct App. 2000). Thus, our statutory law protects a spouse from
    being disinherited by providing a spousal allowance from their deceased
    spouse’s estate and the ability of the surviving spouse to take against the
    provisions of the deceased spouse’s will, thereby ensuring a certain degree of
    future support. Brown v. Guardianship of Brown, 
    775 N.E.2d 1164
    , 1167 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2002). A surviving spouse may only waive his or her right to take against
    the will by a written agreement after full disclosure of the nature and extent of
    that right. I.C. § 29-1-3-6. No such written agreement was executed in this
    case.
    [23]   In determining the estate of the deceased spouse for the purpose of computing
    the amount due to the spouse electing to take against the will, the court is to
    consider only such property as would have passed under the laws of descent
    and distribution. In re Estate of 
    Weitzman, 724 N.E.2d at 1123
    . A valid inter
    vivos trust does not pass under the laws of descent and distribution and thus
    does not become part of the decedent’s probate estate. Dunnewind, 697 N.E.2d
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020         Page 12 of 21
    at 488. In In re Walz, 
    423 N.E.2d 729
    , 732 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981), we described
    the effect of an inter vivos trust as follows:
    The inter vivos trust is a unique legal entity. Through its use, the
    settlor may transfer property to a trustee reserving for the life of
    the settlor the beneficial use of the property with the remainder to
    designated beneficiaries. Although the settlor enjoys the
    beneficial use of the trust property until his death that trust
    property is not subject to the administration of his estate. That is,
    the trust property is not in the decedent-settlor’s estate. The
    Probate Code, which controls the distribution of the decedent’s
    property, does not control the inter vivos distributions of property.
    [24]   However, in recent years, Indiana jurisprudence started recognizing a spouse’s
    ability to enforce his or her elective share claim against the deceased spouse’s
    non-probate property under certain circumstances. Through Leazenby v. Clinton
    Co. Bank & Trust, 
    355 N.E.2d 861
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1976) and its progeny, Indiana
    precedents have shaped the conditions in which a surviving spouse may reach
    beyond the will into a valid inter vivos trust to satisfy the statutory elective right
    when faced with insufficient probate assets.
    [25]   In Leazenby, we held that an inter vivos trust established by a wife successfully
    transferred her property and removed it from the estate, thereby in effect
    defeating her husband’s interest in his statutory elective share.
    Id. at 866.
    We
    reached this conclusion by recognizing that a transfer solely for the purpose of
    defeating the spouse’s statutory share is void. However, we found that wife and
    husband, a subsequent childless spouse, had maintained separate properties and
    that wife had gone to the bank to establish a trust for the purpose of obtaining
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020           Page 13 of 21
    aid in handling her affairs three years prior to her death.
    Id. at 862.
    The trust
    agreement reserved to the wife the right to income from the trust for life, the
    right to control the actions of the trustee, and the right to revoke.
    Id. Husband was
    granted the right to reside in the settlor’s former house for six months
    following her death.
    Id. As time
    went on, wife was confined to a nursing home
    and her separate funds were used to pay for her care.
    Id. The Leazenby
    court
    observed that it was obvious husband was aware of this situation and had
    acceded to it.
    Id. at 866.
    There was no indication that it was the settlor’s intent
    to use the device of a trust to defeat her husband’s statutory share in her estate;
    rather, she had merely conveyed a portion of her estate during her lifetime,
    which she had every right to do. See
    id. at 866-67.
    [26]   Approximately ten years later, in Walker v. Lawson, 
    526 N.E.2d 968
    , 969 (Ind.
    1988), our supreme court was faced with the question of whether it was
    malpractice for an attorney to draft a will, and not a trust, for a client who had
    recently learned of a fatal diagnosis and who “had come [to the attorney] for
    the stated purpose of depriving her husband of any interest in her estate.”
    Acknowledging both the rule set forth in Leazenby and the holding of
    Crawfordsville Trust Co. v. Ramsey, 100 N.E.1049 (Ind. Ct. App. 1913), in which
    the court upheld the trial court’s invalidation of assignments of stock and bonds
    by a spouse who made the assignments knowing he would soon die and for the
    sole purpose of defeating his spouse’s elective rights with respect to the assigned
    property, the Walker court ruled that neither the conveyance of her land to a
    trust naming her children as beneficiaries nor a conveyance of that land to
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 14 of 21
    herself and her children with survivorship rights would have been effective
    against the surviving spouse’s elective rights.
    Id. [27] Again
    after a ten-year interval, this court decided 
    Dunnewind, 697 N.E.2d at 487
    , where we found in favor of the surviving spouse’s right of election. Here,
    the settlor executed a will in 1976 in which she left all her assets to her children
    from a prior marriage.
    Id. at 487.
    After discovering she was terminally ill in
    1995, she created a trust under which her husband would receive a life estate in
    the marital residence and household goods, as well as a predetermined sum of
    money, with the remainder to go to settlor’s children.
    Id. The trust
    made no
    provision for payment of income to the settlor. Based on the evidence
    presented, the Dunnewind court opined that “there was no showing that the trust
    was executed to assist the [settlor] with business or financial affairs,” and held
    that “the evidence presented at the hearing supports the trial court’s findings
    that [the settlor] executed the trust in contemplation of her impending death
    and did so to defeat [husband’s] statutory share . . . Given such circumstances,
    the trust fails to defeat the spouse’s share given the law announced in
    Crawfordsville and Walker.”
    Id. at 487,
    490. We also noted that the trust had a
    “testamentary character,” because the trust agreement did not give the settlor a
    life interest in the trust property, yet the trustee, the settlor’s daughter, permitted
    her to reside in the residential property and paid to her the trust’s income until
    the settlor’s death.
    Id. The court
    found that neither the settlor nor the
    beneficiaries intended the transfer to the trust to take effect until the settlor’s
    death, similar to the finding in Crawfordsville.
    Id. at 490.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020          Page 15 of 21
    [28]   Finally, in In re Estate of Weitzman, 
    724 N.E.2d 1120
    , 1121 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000),
    both husband and wife had children from a prior marriage. Before the
    marriage, Wife refused to sign a prenuptial agreement that would have waived
    her elective share rights to her husband’s estate.
    Id. Four years
    into the
    marriage, husband executed a revocable living trust, benefiting his children and
    appointing the bank as trustee while husband retained the power to direct all
    trust investment and receive the income from the trust.
    Id. Within three
    years,
    husband transferred significant assets into the trust.
    Id. Wife knew
    that
    husband had a trust; however, there was no evidence she was aware of the
    provisions of the trust.
    Id. at 1121-22.
    Husband died six years after creating the
    trust and several years after funding it.
    Id. After describing
    the nature and
    effect of an inter vivos trust and restating the general rule in Leazenby and the
    policy grounds upon which that decision was reached, the Weitzman court
    stated, “[t]here is one pertinent exception to the rules and policies we relied on
    in Leazenby. When a testator executes a trust in contemplation of his impending
    death and does so in order to defeat the surviving spouse’s statutory share, the
    trust will be considered testamentary in nature and will not defeat the spouse’s
    share.”
    Id. at 1123.
    Finding that the facts did not negate the possibility that
    husband’s intent was to defeat the surviving spouse’s elective share, we reversed
    the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of husband and remanded for trial.
    Id. at 1125.
    [29]   Accordingly, based on these precedents, the determinative issue before us is
    whether the trial court properly found that Anil did not establish the Trust in
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020         Page 16 of 21
    contemplation of his death and with the purpose of defeating Dipa’s statutory
    share. As we noted in Sarkar I, “[t]he question of whether a testator has
    established a trust in contemplation of death and with the intent of defeating his
    surviving spouse’s statutory share is a fact-sensitive inquiry.” Sarkar I, at 677.
    A. In Contemplation of Death
    [30]   Although Anil created the Trust in 1993, he restated the instrument in its
    entirety on March 31, 1997. Anil passed away eighteen years later, on
    February 24, 2015. When a trust agreement is restated, the reader should
    “forget all prior documents and just look at this document, because these are
    the trust provisions that are currently in effect.” Bender, 1 Living Trusts, Forms
    and Practice, § 9.07 (2019). However, to analyze and determine Anil’s actions
    and intent, we will need to take into account the circumstances surrounding the
    prior version of the Trust.
    [31]   Anil’s purpose of his restated Trust indicated that he pursued “a simplified
    means of accomplishing both lifetime and death transfers” of his assets, with
    assistance in his personal and business affairs. (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 109). Unlike
    Dunnewind where there was no showing that the trust was executed to assist in
    financial affairs, Anil’s Trust, created after he retired, was initially utilized as
    part of his estate and income tax planning efforts, and it later held and managed
    the trust assets, with Anil having check writing authority. See 
    Dunnewind, 697 N.E.2d at 487
    . Appointing himself as trustee, Anil retained all trust property
    under his control, “with no restrictions on the transferability of such property.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020          Page 17 of 21
    (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 112). He amended the Trust seven times, with the final
    amendment executed approximately one year prior to his death.
    [32]   Although the record is documented with Anil’s extensive cardiac health
    problems, contrary to Dunnewind and Walker, there is no evidence indicating
    that Anil expected to die anytime soon after the effectuation of the Trust
    instrument. See 
    Dunnewind, 697 N.E.2d at 487
    (trust was created after
    becoming terminally ill); 
    Walker, 526 N.E.2d at 969
    (trust was created after
    settlor learned of fatal diagnosis). Rather, it was not until 2013, or twenty years
    after creating the initial trust, that Anil voiced his concerns to Rumu of an
    impending death. There is no evidence in the record that throughout the
    lifetime of the Trust—original or restated with amendments—Anil’s position
    with respect to the purpose of the Trust and identification of the remainder
    beneficiaries ever changed. Likewise, there is no evidence that any amendment
    was effectuated in expectation of death. Rather, the amendments only
    fluctuated the amount left to each remainder beneficiary, leading us to conclude
    that internal family relationships played a significant role in the creation of the
    amendments and not any belief that Anil was to die shortly.
    [33]   As in Weitzman, significant assets were transferred into the trust throughout the
    years, with the most recent transfer being Anil’s social security payments. See
    In re 
    Weitzman, 724 N.E.2d at 1122
    . However given the fact that the Trust had
    been assembling Anil’s assets since 1993—the investment account and IRA had
    been transferred to the Trust by 1998—and that the social security payments
    only amount to a minor addition to the complete Trust corpus, we cannot
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020        Page 18 of 21
    conclude that this transfer alone would change our conclusion that Anil’s Trust
    and corresponding transfers of assets were not created in contemplation of
    death.
    B. Intention to Disinherit
    [34]   While the Trust’s express stated purpose was to assist Anil with his business
    and financial affairs, at the same time, Anil also acknowledged in the
    instrument that “[b]ecause my spouse, [Dipa], has more assets than I have and
    will not need my money or property to support herself, I choose to leave
    nothing to her.” (Exh. Vol. VI, p. 110). Attorney Lyman testified extensively
    about Anil and Dipa’s corresponding estate planning goal to leave their
    significant assets to their non-spousal beneficiaries. Nevertheless, this explicit
    intent appears to be contradicted beginning with the fifth amendment through
    the final amendment, where Anil directed “the trustee to distribute, to [his]
    spouse, [Dipa], the sum of Fifth [sic] Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00), outright
    and free of trust, if she survives me by thirty (30) days[.]” (Exh. Vol. II, p. 21).
    [35]   Throughout their married life, Anil and Dipa kept their financial affairs divided
    with separate bank accounts, pension plan accounts, and investment accounts.
    Although Anil and Dipa initially retained Attorney Lyman to create their
    individual trust accounts and to advise them on the legal ramifications thereof,
    by July 1998, a potential conflict of interest ceased Attorney Lyman’s
    representation and Anil and Dipa consulted with their individual attorneys, but
    were still advised by the same financial advisor at Morgan Stanley. However,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020         Page 19 of 21
    throughout the time that Attorney Lyman represented Anil and Dipa, they met
    with him together on most, if not all occasions, and discussed their respective
    trust provisions in the presence of each other. Attorney Lyman testified that
    Anil and Dipa had an agreement “to dispos[e] of their assets to their respective
    beneficiaries and not to each other.” (Exh. Vol. V, p. 49). After designating a
    non-spousal remainder beneficiary of the trust corpus at the creation of their
    respective trusts, both Anil and Dipa amended their trust agreements on
    November 1, 1996, again opting for distributions to non-spousal beneficiaries
    and acknowledging that they chose to leave nothing to each other.
    [36]   In 2007, Anil and Dipa signed a joint letter to their joint financial advisor
    directing payment from their respective IRAs to their respective trusts. On
    August 2, 2010, Dipa received a mailing from Morgan Stanley, which included
    detailed information about both Dipa’s and Anil’s respective investment plan,
    IRA, and IRA beneficiary. They continued to meet jointly with their financial
    advisor and they reviewed “both client account assets at the same time.” (Exh.
    Vol. VIII, p. 15).
    [37]   Accordingly, unlike Weitzman, where the wife knew that husband had a trust
    but was unfamiliar with its provisions, here, there is overwhelming evidence
    from which the trial court could have reasonably inferred that Anil and Dipa
    were aware of the other spouse’s trust provisions and estate planning. See In re
    
    Weitzman, 724 N.E.2d at 1121
    . In fact, Anil and Dipa commenced their trust
    creation with the same attorney and although they later retained individual
    counsel, they were advised by the same financial planner, and had joint
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020       Page 20 of 21
    meetings in which their respective assets were discussed. Anil transferred his
    assets to the Trust with Dipa’s full knowledge while at the same time she
    transferred her own assets to a nearly identical trust. As there is “no conclusive
    evidence that there was a secreting of the real ownership of the property, or that
    [Dipa] did not know and fully approve of the trust agreement,” we conclude
    that Anil did not create the Trust with the intent to disinherit Dipa. See
    
    Leazenby, 355 N.E.2d at 866
    . Consequently, as there is substantial evidence that
    Anil did not create the Trust in contemplation of death and with the intent to
    disinherit Dipa, we affirm the trial court’s decision to deny Dipa’s claim to
    satisfy her spousal elective share from the Trust corpus.
    CONCLUSION
    [38]   Based on the foregoing, we hold that Dipa cannot satisfy her statutory election
    to take against the will with the assets in her deceased husband’s inter vivos
    Trust.
    [39]   Affirmed.
    [40]   Baker, J. and Brown, J. concur
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-1814 | March 24, 2020       Page 21 of 21