BE CAREFUL WITH THE DRAFTING OF PRENUPS AND BENEFICIARY DESIGNATIONS

It was a month before they were married. Toni and Charles signed a “Premarital Agreement.” They agreed that the property of each would remain separate after their marriage. They explicitly waived any right to each other’s property.

Two years after they were married, their wife died. Her estate and her father now seek to enforce the Premarital Agreement against the husband’s spousal rights in the wife’s employee stock plan and savings plan. This had been conferred on the husband by § 205(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.

The parties’ Premarital Agreement did not comport with ERISA’s formal requirements for waiver of husband’s spousal rights. So, the trial court and the appellate court both concluded that the agreement cannot be enforced to deny the husband’s spousal rights in the wife’s benefit plans.

In reaching this judgment, the courts reasoned that the Bell South ESOP and SSP were governed by ERISA. Under ERISA, the Premarital Agreement did not constitute “an effective waiver of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1055 and the plans.” The court concluded that the Estate’s request to establish a constructive trust over the property and to set aside the husband’s designation of himself as a beneficiary was preempted by ERISA.

HAGWOOD v. NEWTON, 282 F3d 285

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