1. Understanding Damages Awards and Trust Structures
Damages awards in personal injury, wrongful death, or commercial disputes are often substantial sums that create both opportunity and risk. Many lottery winners and damages recipients face immediate pressure to spend or invest without considering the legal protections available. From a practitioner's perspective, the difference between holding an award in a personal name versus a properly structured trust can mean the difference between full asset protection and significant exposure to creditors, divorce claims, or tax liability.
2. Asset Protection and Creditor Claims in New York
New York recognizes several types of trusts with creditor protection properties. The state's laws on spendthrift provisions, self-settled asset protection trusts, and domestic trusts create opportunities for damages recipients to shield awards from future claims. However, these protections are not automatic; they require careful drafting and compliance with specific statutory requirements.
Spendthrift Trusts under New York Law
A spendthrift trust includes language that restricts the beneficiary's ability to transfer or pledge their interest and prevents creditors from attaching trust assets to satisfy claims against the beneficiary. New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law Section 7-1.5 governs spendthrift provisions and generally enforces them unless the creditor is providing support or the creditor is the state seeking unpaid taxes. Courts in New York have consistently upheld spendthrift restrictions, even against aggressive creditor claims. For example, if a damages recipient later faces a lawsuit or medical lien, creditors cannot reach funds held in a properly drafted spendthrift trust. This protection is one of the primary reasons lottery winners and damages recipients should consider trust structures rather than holding awards in personal names.
New York Supreme Court Procedure in Damages Disputes
Lottery damage claims are typically brought in New York Supreme Court, the state trial court with broad jurisdiction over civil disputes. The court applies the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard: the plaintiff must show that the claimed loss is more likely true than not. Discovery in these cases often focuses on financial records, communications between parties, and lottery commission documentation. Summary judgment motions are common; if the plaintiff cannot establish a genuine factual dispute on causation or damages calculation, the court may dismiss the claim before trial. This procedural hurdle makes early case assessment critical.
3. Calculating Damages and the Duty to Mitigate Losses
Once causation is established, the court calculates damages using the but-for test: what would the plaintiff's financial position have been but for the defendant's wrongful conduct? For a winning ticket, this means the full prize amount. For a ticket that did not win, damages are limited to the ticket price and any incidental costs, such as retailer fees or travel to claim the prize.
Mitigation and Offset Principles
New York law requires plaintiffs to mitigate damages. If a lottery winner could have claimed the prize through alternative means, such as a backup ticket or registry confirmation, failure to pursue those options reduces the recoverable amount. Courts offset damages by any amount the plaintiff recovered from other sources. If the defendant already paid partial restitution or the plaintiff received insurance proceeds, the court deducts those sums from the final award. Understanding mitigation obligations early helps shape settlement strategy and prevents inflated damage claims that courts will reject.
4. Enforcement and Litigation Considerations
Damages awards are sometimes disputed or contested before they are finally paid. Defendants may appeal judgments, insurance carriers may challenge liability, or settlement agreements may require clarification. Understanding how New York courts enforce damages awards and trust-related agreements is essential for protecting the recovery.
06 Mar, 2026

