Miriam Stein, 90, has a feeding tube.
Her three daughters, Helen Brunswick, Frieda Oren, and Gloria Stein, were joint attorneys for personal care.
Gloria opposed the feeding tube, while Helen and Frieda supported it.
They entered into "Minutes of Settlement" for a geriatric assessment to guide decisions on the feeding tube.
When the tube needed replacement, they disagreed.
Gloria resigned as attorney for personal care, believing the Minutes would protect her position.
Helen and Frieda proceeded with the replacement.
Gloria subsequently sought to enforce the Minutes for a specific assessment.
The court found the Minutes were not a legally binding agreement, lacking offer, acceptance, consideration, and certainty of terms, and became moot upon Gloria's resignation.
The court dismissed Gloria's motion and application, and exempted Helen and Frieda from consulting Gloria on matters related to Miriam's feeding tube due to irreconcilable differences.