Probate & Property - November/December 2021, Vol. 35, No. 6

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UNIFORM LAWS U P D AT E News from the ULC 2021 Annual Meeting The Uniform Law Commission (ULC) held its 130th Annual Meeting in Madison, Wisconsin, in July. Seven new uniform acts were approved, and four other draft acts were read and critiqued. The ULC also announced new projects: four drafting committees and two study committees. This issue of Uniform Laws Update will summarize the acts and projects involving real property, trust, and estate law. For a complete report from the 2021 annual meeting, visit the “News” page at www.uniformlaws.org. Uniform Community Property Disposition at Death Act (UCPDDA). Community property acquired by a married couple retains its character as community property even when the couple relocates to reside in a noncommunity property state. This result creates potential distribution problems at the death of the first spouse and also creates potential estate planning opportunities. A probate court or trustee in a non-community property state may not recognize the character of community property in a decedent’s estate, which could lead to a misallocation of the decedent’s property or disputes between a surviving spouse and the decedent’s other heirs. This act is an update of a 1971 act, adopted by many jurisdictions, which applies only to probate proceedings. The UCPDDA also addresses non-probate transfers of community property and provides clear default rules to ensure the proper disposition of community property from any estate, in any jurisdiction. It is Uniform Laws Update Editor: Benjamin Orzeske, Chief Counsel, Uniform Law Commission, 111 N. Wabash Avenue, Suite 1010, Chicago, IL 60602.

Uniform Laws Update provides information on uniform and model state laws in development as they apply to property, trust, and estate matters. The editors of Probate & Property welcome information and suggestions from readers.

recommended for adoption by all non– community property states. Uniform Cohabitants’ Economic Remedies Act (UCERA). The rate of nonmarital cohabitation within the United States is increasing rapidly. Today, states have no consistent approach for addressing whether and how cohabitants can enforce contract and equitable claims against each other when the relationship ends. The UCERA provides clear guidance for courts adjudicating these claims but does not create any new legal status for cohabitants. In most instances, the act defers to other state laws governing contracts and claims between individuals. The UCERA enables cohabitants to exercise the same rights as noncohabiting citizens to contract and to maintain breach-of-contract and equitable claims based on “contributions to the relationship.” Those contributions can include domestic services like cooking, cleaning, performing household maintenance, and caring for the other cohabitant or the cohabitant’s child or relative but do not include sexual relations. The UCERA will help ensure more consistent treatment of cohabitants’ claims in state courts without

subjecting claimants to any additional hurdles that would not be imposed on litigants who live apart. Amendments to the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (UCIOA). The UCIOA is a comprehensive statute governing three forms of common ownership of real estate: condominiums, homeowners associations, and cooperatives. This set of amendments addresses recent legal developments concerning, among other issues, retained rights by a developer, mandatory versus default rules, limited common elements, and termination of common interest communities. Another new act does not directly involve the law of property but has broad implications for legal practitioners, among others. The Uniform Personal Data Protection Act (UPDPA) is a comprehensive privacy law, similar in scope to the laws adopted in the European Union and a few US states but with an innovative new standard for protecting personal data. Privacy issues are controversial because the stakes are high for both consumers and businesses. The UPDPA recognizes that the collection and use of personal data are important features of our modern economy and outlines compatible, incompatible, and prohibited data practices based on a consumer’s expectations. The act provides a reasonable level of consumer protection without incurring the compliance and regulatory costs associated with the first-generation statutes governing personal data. A new drafting committee on Mortgage Modifications will draft a uniform or model act to standardize state laws concerning whether modifying the

Published in Probate & Property, Volume 35, No 6 © 2021 by the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion thereof may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.

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November/December 2021


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Probate & Property - November/December 2021, Vol. 35, No. 6 by ABA Section of Real Property, Trust & Estate Law - Issuu