Executors and trustees are "fiduciaries" charged to
manage the estate or trust with very high duties

DISPUTES WITH EXECUTORS OR TRUSTEES
If you are a current beneficiary of a will or a trust, but the executor
or trustee is mishandling the estate or trust, you may have legal
recourse. An executor or trustee is a fiduciary
held to high legal standards. The executor or trustee needs to keep you
informed, protect the assets in his/her care, and act in accordance with the
will or trust. An executor should not keep the estate open so he can
merely collect fees or keep his favorite attorneys and accountants well
fed. He should wrap up the estate and distribute its assets as quickly as
possible.
A trustee should regularly report to the beneficiaries
concerning the status of the trust, and the trustee should invest the trust
assets for the best interests of the beneficiaries. The trustee needs to
properly account for the trust so that its earnings and distributions are clear
and understandable.
An executor or trustee should never enter into private dealings
with the trust or estate. This is called self dealing. The trust or
the estate is not a device to help them fund their own business dealings or
through which to make their own investments. If they commingle their
investments and funds with the estate's or trust's, they have breached their fiduciary
duties.
If a trustee or executor is not properly discharging their
duties or are clearly breaching their fiduciary duties, contact a competent
attorney for help as soon as possible. Delay can cause you to lose your
legal rights!
