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    "judges": [
      "ALARID, J., concurs."
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    "parties": [
      "In the Matter of the ESTATE OF Jan Michelle KEROUAC, deceased. Gerald NICOSIA as Literary Personal Representative, Appellant, v. John LASH as General Personal Representative, Appellee."
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        "text": "OPINION\nWECHSLER, J.\n{1} This case poses the issue of interpreting the first codicil to a will to determine whether the general personal representative or the literary personal representative of the estate of Jan Michele Kerouac (Decedent) has the authority to make decisions regarding pending litigation involving a separate will contest at the time of Decedent\u2019s death. As part of an informal probate proceeding, the district court entered an order interpreting the first codicil determining that the general personal representative holds the authority to make decisions regarding the pending litigation, but authorized a stay pending appeal by the literary personal representative. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court\u2019s decision.\nFacts\n{2} Decedent died in June 1996 in New Mexico. Her will contained a first codicil executed on June 28, 1995, replacing the paragraphs discussing the role of the personal representative in her will executed in January 1994 and otherwise adopting the will. The first codicil states in pertinent part:\nSEVENTH: I appoint JOHN LASH as General Executor of this Will for all purposes save those concerning any rights that I now possess or may hereafter possess in any literary works or literary archival materials, including but not limited to any literary works or literary materials of my father, JACK KEROUAC, and my own literary works and materials, including but not limited to Baby Driver and Train Song. As to these literary works and materials, I appoint GERALD NICOSIA as Literary Executor. In his capacity as Literary Executor, he shall make all decisions regarding the appropriate publication, republication, sale, license or any other exploitation of any nature of any intellectual property rights I have in any literary works or materials. He shall do these things with due regard to fostering economic return without devaluing or cheapening the literary works or any intellectual .property rights flowing therefrom, or in any way reflecting negatively on me, my father, or my heirs or beneficiaries. In return for his services as Literary Executor, GERALD NICOSIA shall receive as compensation 10% (ten-percent) of any income generated by any publications, sales or other licensing arrangements that he has negotiated, payable to him at receipt of any such income by the estate. Such 10% shall be paid directly by the publisher, purchaser or licensee to the Literary Executor whenever possible. In the event of the predecease of JOHN LASH or in the event that he is unable for any reason or declines to act as General Executor as defined herein, then I nominate and appoint MAXINE BOWERS, my sister-in-law, as General Executrix of this Will, with the same power, rights, discretions, obligations and immunities. No bond shall be required of any Executor appointed in this Will; none of the Executors nominated in this Will shall be personally liable for any loss or damage in connection with the administration of my estate, except in the case of willful misconduct or gross negligence.\nEIGHTH: I authorize my General Executor to sell at either public or private sale, with or without notice, any non-literary property belonging to my estate and to invest any surplus monies subject only to any confirmation required by law.\n{3} At the time of her early death, Decedent was involved in a will contest regarding the probate of her grandmother\u2019s will in Florida. Decedent was the daughter of the late author Jack Kerouac, and his second wife, Joan Haverty. When Jack died in 1969, his third wife, Stella Sampas, took a dower\u2019s share (one-third interest) and his mother, Gabrielle Kerouac, received the remaining two-thirds of his estate. When Gabrielle passed away in 1973 in Florida, the terms of her will left all of Jack\u2019s personal property to Sampas. Sampas died in Florida in 1990 leaving her property, including the property she received from Gabrielle\u2019s estate, to her relatives.\n{4} Decedent did not receive notice of either of these probate proceedings. After she learned of Gabrielle\u2019s will, she commenced an action in Florida state court on May 16, 1994, seeking to revoke the probate of Gabrielle\u2019s will alleging that the will was a forgery. This action had not been resolved at the time of Decedent\u2019s death and is still pending. If Gabrielle\u2019s will is determined to have been a forgery, Decedent\u2019s estate and Paul Blake Jr., Gabrielle\u2019s other grandchild, or his heirs, would inherit the estate through intestacy. The estate includes certain rights to some of Jack Kerouac\u2019s literary works. After Decedent\u2019s death, John Lash, acting as the general personal representative of Decedent\u2019s estate, reached an agreement with the heirs of Sampas to confidentially settle and dismiss the litigation involving Gabrielle\u2019s will.\n{5} During a status conference before the Florida court, Gerald Nicosia, the acting literary personal representative, opposed dismissal of the litigation. The judge expressed concern's about the respective authority of the general personal representative and the literary personal representative. The Florida court subsequently entered an order staying the litigation before it, pending a determination by the New Mexico state courts as to the authority of each representative.\n{6} The general personal representative then filed a motion in New Mexico state court to interpret the codicil and determine his authority as the general personal representative. Following briefing and a hearing, the district court entered an order granting the general personal representative the authority to control the litigation in Florida. The literary personal representative appeals from this order.\nDiscussion\n{7} Despite the apparent complexity of the litigation, the issue to be resolved in this case is straightforward \u2014 whether the interpretation of Decedent\u2019s first codicil authorizes the general personal representative or the literary personal representative to make decisions regarding the Florida litigation.\n{8} Initially, we note that while the will and codicil use the term \u201cexecutor,\u201d our Uniform Probate Code recognizes the term \u201cpersonal representative,\u201d but also includes \u201cexecutor\u201d in its definition. See NMSA 1978, \u00a7 45 \u2014 1\u2014201(A)(34) (1995). Since New Mexico uses the term \u201cpersonal representative,\u201d we will use that term in our discussion. Additionally, the Uniform Probate Code does not expressly provide for the appointment of a literary personal representative, see NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 45-3-701 to -721 (1975, as amended through 1995), and no New Mexico case law exists recognizing a literary personal representative.\n{9} However, we liberally construe the Uniform Probate Code to meet its policies, which include effectuating the intent of the decedent. See NMSA 1978, \u00a7 45-1-102 (1975); see also In re Estate of Romero, 115 N.M. 85, 88, 847 P.2d 319, 322 (Ct.App.1993) (a decedent may dispose of her property as she sees fit, unless such a disposition is illegal or violates public policy). The function of a literary personal representative has been recognized by other courts and authorities. See In re Bartlett\u2019s Estate, 198 Misc. 1000, 101 N.Y.S.2d 675, 676 (Sup.Ct.1950); Cym H. Lowell & Terry R. Abel, Estate Planning for the Instantly Wealthy Including Resident and Non \u2014 Resident Aliens, 23 Univ. of Miami Inst, on Estate Planning \u00b6 1602.5, at 16-16 (1989). Although not directly applicable here, the Uniform Probate Code does recognize the use of co-representatives to act jointly when so appointed. See \u00a7 45-3-717. We see no reason not to recognize, nor do the parties oppose, use of a literary personal representative.\n{10} The fact that the parties agree that the first codicil is clear and unambiguous is significant. Interpretation of an unambiguous will or codicil is a question of law, to be reviewed de novo. See Portales Nat\u2019l Bank v. Bellin, 98 N.M. 113, 117, 645 P.2d 986, 990 (Ct.App.1982). In interpreting an unambiguous will, the long-standing rule is that \u201cthe court must attempt to give effect to the testator\u2019s intent.\u201d In re Estate of Bowles, 107 N.M. 739, 740, 764 P.2d 510, 511 (Ct.App.1988). Instead, the literary personal representative argues that we should not only examine the language of the document to determine the testator\u2019s intent, but also the surrounding circumstances. This argument is contrary to well-established New Mexico law that intent is to be ascertained from the four corners of the will. See Portales Nat\u2019l Bank, 98 N.M. at 117, 645 P.2d at 990 (\u201cWhere a will is unambiguous, extrinsic evidence is not admissible to vary, contradict or supplement the language of a will, or to give a different intention on the part of the testator from that stated in the will itself.\u201d); In re Estate of Cruse, 103 N.M. 539, 541, 710 P.2d 733, 735 (1985); Brown v. Brown, 53 N.M. 379, 387, 208 P.2d 1081, 1086 (1949).\n{11} The first codicil can be read very plainly to give the literary personal representative control over literary works that Decedent possessed or may come to possess. It states that the literary personal representative is to have control and manage \u201cany rights that I now possess or may hereafter possess in any literary works\u201d of Decedent or her father. This statement is understandable in light of the Florida litigation. See Levenson v. Mobley, 106 N.M. 399, 403, 744 P.2d 174, 178 (1987) (in order to determine if a written instrument is free from ambiguity, court may consider circumstances surrounding execution of the instrument). Decedent knew at the time she prepared the first codicil that she had commenced the Florida litigation. She signed the first codicil on June 28, 1995, eleven months after she filed the Florida action. The first codicil appoints the literary personal representative to \u201cmake all decisions regarding the appropriate publication, republication, sale, license or any other exploitation\u201d of rights in literary works. It does not mention the Florida litigation which was on-going at the time. In this context, the terminology \u201cthat I ... may hereafter possess\u201d makes sense to mean rights that result from a remedy achieved in the Florida litigation.\n{12} Our conclusion is supported when we analyze the nature of a cause of action as a property right. The parties do not dispute that Decedent\u2019s Florida cause of action is a property right which can be inherited under New Mexico law. See In re Morrow\u2019s Will, 41 N.M. 723, 735-36, 73 P.2d 1360, 1368 (1937). This property right, the cause of action, is distinguishable from a remedy. See Key v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 1996-NMSC-038, 121 N.M. 764, 768, 918 P.2d 350, 354 (\u201cA cause of action is defined as an \u2018aggregate of operative facts which give rise to a right enforceable in the courts .\u2019 \u201d (quoting 2 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore\u2019s Federal Practice \u00b6 2.06c, at 2-56 (2d ed.1998))); see also 1 Am.Jur.2d Actions \u00a7\u00a7 1, 2 (1994) (cause of action is a matter of substance concerned with violation of a right, not a matter of remedy); John Norton Pomeroy, Code Remedies: Remedies and Remedial Rights \u00a7\u00a7 346-47, at 527 (Walter Carrington, ed., rev. 5th ed.1929) (result to be obtained is the remedy or \u201cobject of the action,\u201d not the \u201ccause of action\u201d). Thus, while the cause of action is inheritable, the remedy, because it is a contingency, is not part of the inheritance. The cause of action is only the right to pursue the remedy.\n{13} The requested remedy of the Florida litigation is to revoke or set aside Gabrielle\u2019s will. If that will is set aside, Decedent\u2019s estate and other heirs will inherit Gabrielle\u2019s estate through intestacy. The contents of this estate presumably also include property other than Jack Kerouac\u2019s literary rights. As this other property would be outside the control of the literary personal representative, the literary personal representative would be under no obligation to protect Decedent\u2019s rights to such property. While the underlying reason of the Florida litigation may be to obtain control of Jack Kerouac\u2019s literary rights, that purpose is not the direct cause of action being pursued.\n{14} We recognize Decedent\u2019s intent to preserve the integrity of the literary works. By our conclusion, we are not depriving the literary personal representative of his role to manage Decedent\u2019s right to literary property. The role of the literary personal representative is to manage the rights to literary works owned by Decedent\u2019s estate by making decisions about publication and sale and doing so with \u201cdue regard to fostering economic return without devaluing or cheapening the literary works.\u201d See In re Estate of Hellman, 134 Misc.2d 525, 511 N.Y.S.2d 485, 488 (Sur.Ct.1987) (management of literary rights \u201crequires a delicate balance between economic enhancement and cultural nurture\u201d). At the present time, these works include Decedent\u2019s own literary accomplishments, and, apparently certain works of her father. Decedent\u2019s estate does not yet, and may never, own the rights to her father\u2019s works that are at stake in the Florida litigation. If the Florida litigation is resolved in favor of Decedent\u2019s position, and the estate later inherits ownership of the literary property at stake in the Florida litigation, the authority to manage them will fall under the purview of the literary personal representative. Since the cause of action is a \u201cproperty right,\u201d not a \u201cliterary right,\u201d the estate\u2019s connection to the literary property at stake in the Florida litigation is too remote at this time for the literary rights to be considered rights which fall within the first codicil.\nConclusion\n{15} Decedent\u2019s codicil is unambiguous. It carves from the general personal representative\u2019s authority \u201cany rights that I now possess or may hereafter possess in any literary works.\u201d Prior to her death. Decedent did not possess the rights to her father\u2019s literary works that are at stake in the Florida litigation. Decedent\u2019s rights to the literary property at stake in the Florida litigation are inchoate in nature; her estate will not possess them unless and until the estate is victorious in the Florida litigation. We affirm the decision of the district court.\n{16} IT IS SO ORDERED.\nALARID, J., concurs.",
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      {
        "text": "ARMIJO, Judge,\ndissenting.\n{17} This appeal decides the fate of litigation that may significantly affect Jan Kerouac\u2019s (Decedent\u2019s) rights concerning the literary works of her,father, Jack Kerouac. I respectfully dissent because I do not agree with the majority\u2019s refusal to recognize the Literary Personal Representative\u2019s authority to act within the separate domain established for him in Decedent\u2019s First Codicil to her Last Will and Testament.\n{18} The relationship of Decedent to her father and his literary works can not be understated. Jack Kerouac was a prominent figure in the \u201cbeat\u201d counterculture who authored 18 or more books, including the legendary On the Road. He was considered an icon of the \u201cBeat Generation.\u201d Decedent also was an author in her own right. Her main source of income was from book royalties, including royalties for certain works of her father. Upon her death, and in accordance with the provisions of the First Codicil to her Last Will and Testament, her ex-husband was appointed to serve as General Personal Representative and her literary agent was appointed to serve as Literary Personal Representative of her estate. The Literary Personal Representative is the author of Memory Babe: A Critical Biography of Jack Kerouac and is considered an expert on the works of Jack Kerouac. The Literary Personal Representative also possessed experience as an author, teacher, lecturer, editor and literary agent. The present appeal arises from the General Personal Representative\u2019s efforts to unilaterally dismiss litigation in Florida without the Literary Personal Representative\u2019s knowledge or consent.\n{19} The effect of such a dismissal will be to abandon any rights that Decedent\u2019s estate may have in certain literary property that once belonged to Jack Kerouac, including significant royalties. According to the Literary Personal Representative, the literary materials at stake in the Florida litigation are being sold piecemeal to various collectors, thus defeating Decedent\u2019s intent to preserve the integrity of her father\u2019s literary estate for future scholarship.\n{20} To allow the General Personal Representative to unilaterally dismiss the Florida litigation is contrary to Decedent\u2019s intent as expressed in her will and codicil. Further, it renders the Literary Personal Representative unable to effectively administer the estate\u2019s rights to literary property, an area in which he possesses particular expertise.\n{21} The Probate Code recognizes that a will or codicil may place restrictions on the authority of personal representatives. See NMSA 1978, \u00a7 45-3-715(A) (1995). This practice is consistent with the principle that:\nthe power of an executor may be limited as to the subject-matter upon which it is to be exercised. Thus, the testator may make A. his executor for his plate and household stuff, B. for his sheep and cattle, C. for his leases and estates by extent, and D. for his debts due to him. So a person may be made executor for one particular thing only, as touching such a statute or bond, and no more. And the same will may contain the appointment of one executor for general, and another for limited purposes.\n1 Sir Edward Vaughan Williams et al., A Treatise on the Law of Executors and Administrators 291 (6th Am. ed. 1877) (footnotes omitted); see also In re Will of Rubin, 143 Misc.2d 303, 540 N.Y.S.2d 944, 945 (Sur.Ct.1989) (recognizing right of testator to limit, qualify, or condition authority granted to his fiduciary as to subject matter, such that one executor may be given exclusive authority over a particular group of assets); In re Battlett\u2019s Estate, 198 Misc. 1000, 101 N.Y.S.2d 675, 676 (Sup.Ct.1950) (while there is no such thing as \u201cliterary executor\u201d under New York law, a person may be designated as executor solely for purpose of administering literary property).\n{22} In this case, the provision in Decedent\u2019s codicil \u201cconcerning any rights that [she] now possesses] or may hereafter possess in any literary works or literary archival materials\u201d is a valid restriction on the General Personal Representative\u2019s authority. In ascertaining Decedent\u2019s intent, we cannot disregard this restriction and isolate other provisions in the will or codicil such as those which authorize the Literary Personal Representative to make decisions about \u201cthe appropriate publication, republication, sale, license or any other exploitation [of] literary works or materials.\u201d We must read each part in the context of the testamentary instrument as a whole. See New Mexico Boys Ranch, Inc. v. Hanvey, 97 N.M. 771, 773, 643 P.2d 857, 859 (1982); In re Will of McDowell, 81 N.M. 562, 563, 469 P.2d 711, 712 (1970).\n{23} Reading the will and codicil as a whole and applying relevant provisions of the Probate Code, the only logical conclusion is that, within each of their respective domains, each personal representative has those powers which are necessary for him to carry out the purposes of Decedent\u2019s will and his duties thereunder. See generally \u00a7\u00a7 45-3-711, -715, -720; cf. City Bank & Trust Co. v. Morrissey, 118 Ill.App.3d 640, 73 Ill.Dec. 946, 454 N.E.2d 1195, 1199 (Ill.App.Ct.1983) (trustee will take whatever legal estate is necessary for him to carry out the purposes of testamentary trust and his duties thereunder); Rentz v. Polk, 267 S.C. 359, 228 S.E.2d 106, 108 (S.C.1976) (where testamentary trust gave trustee power to borrow, rent, invest, and collect income with expectation that assets increase in value, it would be impossible for trustee to perform duties imposed upon her unless she had legal title to trust property).\n{24} The majority\u2019s decision today effectively denies the Literary Personal Representative any powers with respect to the Florida litigation on the basis of an arcane distinction between a cause of action and a remedy. This ignores both Decedent\u2019s intent to restrict the General Personal Representative\u2019s authority to non-literary property and the practical aspects of administering a literary estate. As one scholar notes,\nthe estate of a[ ] [famous] author is ... likely to consist of a mass of intangible rights, contracts, rights to receive royalties and other income, rights to exercise artistic control and business control, merchandising rights and the like. All of these require active management, exploitation, unity of purpose in management and constant police work to maximize their value.... A cumbersome division of the rights into competitive shares will substantially reduce their value.\nAllen H. Arrow, Estate Planning Problems of Authors, Performers, and Other Creative Persons, 9 Univ. of Miami Inst, on Estate Planning \u00b6 1709, at 17-14 (1975); see also In re Estate of Hellman, 134 Misc.2d 525, 511 N.Y.S.2d 485, 488 (Sur.Ct.1987) (giving effect to testator\u2019s intent that her rights in literary property \u201cbe handled in a unified, expert and appropriate manner\u201d); Cym H. Lowell & Terry R. Abel, Estate Planning for the Instantly Wealthy Including Resident and Non-Resident Aliens, 23 Univ. of Miami Inst, on Estate Planning \u00b6 1602.5, at 16-15 to 16-16 (1989) (\u201cThe ongoing monitoring of rights pursuant to copyright laws, handling intangible assets and enforcing merchandising and contractual rights may well necessitate a unity of action.\u201d).\n{25} I fear that the majority\u2019s distinction between a cause of action and a remedy will result in a cumbersome division of authority between the two personal representatives in this case, one who possesses the requisite expertise to administer literary assets, one who does not. Such a cumbersome division would be contrary to the provision in Decedent\u2019s codicil which assigns the Literary Personal Representative the task of \u201cfostering economic return without devaluing or cheapening the literary works or any intellectual property rights flowing therefrom, or in any way reflecting negatively on me, my father, or my heirs or beneficiaries .\u201d For these reasons, I must respectfully dissent.",
        "type": "dissent",
        "author": "ARMIJO, Judge,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Jerome N. Field, Jerome N. Field, Inc., San Francisco, CA, John S. Campbell, Wiggins, Campbell & Wells, P.A., Albuquerque, NM, for appellant.",
      "Rodney L. Schlagel, Sherrill K. Filter, Emily A; Franke, Butt, Thornton & Baehr, P.C., Albuquerque, NM, for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "1998-NMCA-159\n966 P.2d 191\nIn the Matter of the ESTATE OF Jan Michelle KEROUAC, deceased. Gerald NICOSIA as Literary Personal Representative, Appellant, v. John LASH as General Personal Representative, Appellee.\nNo. 18,495.\nCourt of Appeals of New Mexico.\nSept. 11, 1998.\nCertiorari Granted, No. 25,394, Oct. 28, 1998.\nJerome N. Field, Jerome N. Field, Inc., San Francisco, CA, John S. Campbell, Wiggins, Campbell & Wells, P.A., Albuquerque, NM, for appellant.\nRodney L. Schlagel, Sherrill K. Filter, Emily A; Franke, Butt, Thornton & Baehr, P.C., Albuquerque, NM, for appellee."
  },
  "file_name": "0024-01",
  "first_page_order": 62,
  "last_page_order": 68
}
