In 2016, Blanche Berenzweig collected a
$1.6 million inheritance from the estate of LeRoy Ern, a client
with dementia who lived the life of a hermit.
After
months of fighting over the cash, Ern's family is getting nearly all
his money, according to a settlement reached just before the case was to
go to trial Monday.
"They were not going to get
anything," said Kevin Demet, who represents 11 of Ern's 12 nieces and
nephews. "So that's a big win."
Berenzweig, whose insurance license was revoked in
June by State Insurance Commissioner Ted Nickel, will only keep up to
$150,000, basically to cover her attorney fees and associated costs,
according to Demet and Michael Ganzer, Berenzweig's lawyer.
Ern died
of advanced dementia in 2016 at the age of 92. He left everything to
Berenzweig, then a financial adviser living in Mequon and the Las Vegas
area.
Ern had little contact with relatives and
lived in a modest home on the 4600 block of North Parkway Avenue. The
house was a fire trap and had no working furnace. It was full of piles
of newspaper, junk and food, according to testimony in a 2017 hearing
over the fate of Berenzweig's insurance license.
In his final years, Ern developed a friendship with
Berenzweig, who had once sold him an annuity. Ern, a retired factory
worker, would occasionally visit Berenzweig at her Mequon office to talk
about a variety of subjects, such as history and world events, records
show.
It wasn't long before Berenzweig became Ern's
power of attorney for health and medical issues, the sole beneficiary
of two annuities, and executor and sole beneficiary of his estate. She
even arranged his private funeral and cremation.
One month after Ern's death, Berenzweig
collected $276,648 from one annuity and the following month received
$734,467 from a second policy, state records show.
Ern's
nieces and nephews objected to the will in Milwaukee County Circuit
Court, charging that Berenzweig illegally pressured Ern into making her
the sole beneficiary.
State regulators in June
ordered her to give the annuity money to the estate, and the trial that
was scheduled for this week was to determine whether Berenzweig or the
family members would collect the $1.6 million estate. Family members
asked that the court void the will that made Berenzweig the sole
beneficiary.
"In 2009 and 2010, (Berenzweig) took advantage of an
isolated, elderly customer," Rachel Pings, an administrative law
judge, wrote when she recommended in March that regulators order
Berenzweig pay the annuity money to the Ern estate. "She profited
illegally by more than $1 million."
Aggressive court examination planned
Ganzer
said Berenzweig's deteriorating health prompted the settlement talks.
Berenzweig was expected to testify for at least a full day.
"It became evident ... that she could not handle a full trial," Ganzer said. "She wanted to be back to square one."
Demet
said his cross-examination of Berenzweig would likely have been
aggressive, noting she had not turned over all of the documents he
demanded and has provided conflicting information.
Demet
said serious settlement talks began Sunday morning and finished that
evening. The family's lawyers will receive a 40% contingency fee, plus
expenses, court records show.
Demet said had the
matter gone to trial, the relatives could have sought additional money
by claiming Berenzweig acted in bad faith. If the relatives had won on
that count, Berenzweig could have been ordered to pay the family's fees
and expenses, Demet said.
But going to trial also
carries considerable risk because in this type of probate case, the
judge gives one side or the other the entire estate.
It's "all or nothing," Demet said. "So either they get everything or they get nothing."
Unlike
many probate cases where close family members fight over the estate of a
loved one, this matter was different because Ern had long lived the
life of a recluse, seldom seeing any family members or friends.
Full Article & Source:
Family of reclusive millionaire will collect nearly $1.6 million estate in last-minute settlement
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