Douglas W. du Pont v. Wilmington Trust Company

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 6, 2017
DocketCA 12836-VCS
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas W. du Pont v. Wilmington Trust Company (Douglas W. du Pont v. Wilmington Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas W. du Pont v. Wilmington Trust Company, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DOUGLAS W. DU PONT, : : Petitioner, : : v. : C.A. No. 12836-VCS : WILMINGTON TRUST COMPANY, : : Respondent. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: August 28, 2017 Date Decided: October 6, 2017

Matthew P. D’Emilio, Esquire and Thomas A. Uebler, Esquire of Cooch and Taylor, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Petitioner.

Robert S. Saunders, Esquire of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Respondent.

SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor This case concerns the trusteeship of five “total return” unitrust trusts

(the “Trusts”). Petitioner, Douglas W. du Pont (“Mr. du Pont” or “Petitioner”), is

the current beneficiary of the Trusts. Respondent, Wilmington Trust Company

(“Wilmington Trust” or “Respondent”), is the trustee of the Trusts.

In February 2016, Mr. du Pont requested that Wilmington Trust resign as

trustee. Wilmington Trust refused. Mr. du Pont then filed a “Petition to Remove

Wilmington Trust Company as Trustee and Appoint Charles Schwab Trust

Company of Delaware as Trustee” (“Petition”) with this Court. The Petition seeks

an order removing Wilmington Trust as trustee pursuant to 12 Del. C. § 3327(3)

and appointing a successor trustee—either Charles Schwab Trust Company of

Delaware (“Charles Schwab”) or a “suitable alternate successor trustee.”1

Wilmington Trust has filed a motion to dismiss the Petition pursuant to Court of

Chancery Rule 12(b)(6).

For the reasons that follow, Respondent’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED,

and the Petition is dismissed with prejudice.

I. BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from allegations in the Petition, documents integral to

the Petition and those matters of which the Court may take judicial notice. I have

assumed as true all well-pled factual allegations in the Petition.

1 Pet. ¶ 57; id. ¶¶ 47–56, 60.

1 A. The Parties

Mr. du Pont is the current beneficiary of the Trusts. He is married to Sarah

du Pont and has four children, all of whom are sui juris. Wilmington Trust is a

Delaware non-depository trust company headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware,

and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of M&T Bank Corporation (“M&T Bank”), a

New York business corporation.

B. The Trusts

The Trusts were created pursuant to four trust agreements and one will

(collectively, the “Trust Agreements”). The Trust Agreements appoint

Wilmington Trust as lone trustee of the Trusts, and Wilmington Trust has served in

that role since the Trusts were created in the 1940s and 1950s. The Trust

Agreements are silent regarding removal of the trustee or appointment of a

successor trustee.

In 2013, Wilmington Trust agreed to petition the Court of Chancery

to modify the Trust Agreements to insert provisions that authorize an “Investment

Direction Advisor” to direct all investment decisions for the Trusts. 2 The

modification was prompted in part because Mr. du Pont was dissatisfied with

Wilmington Trust’s administration of the Trusts. While Wilmington Trust did not

2 Pet. ¶ 26.

2 agree with Mr. du Pont’s criticisms, it agreed to petition for the modification,

which this court granted.

Under the modified Trust Agreements, Mr. du Pont is designated as the

Investment Direction Advisor for the Trusts and Wilmington Trust is

“relegated . . . to a purely administrative directed-trustee role.”3 In this reduced

role, Wilmington Trust now “has no investment authority or discretion over the

Trusts’ assets.”4

C. Wilmington Trust’s Alleged Misadministration of the Trusts

Petitioner alleges that “[f]or years, Wilmington Trust has improperly

administered the Trusts, to the detriment of the Trusts and their beneficiaries.” 5 As

particular examples, Petitioner alleges:

 Wilmington Trust “miscalculat[ed] the amount of Mr. du Pont’s unitrust distribution”;

 There has been “minimal contact by trust advisers (few in-person meetings and infrequent contact)”; and

3 Pet. ¶ 27; see, e.g., Pet. Ex. A (Trust Agreement of Lammot du Pont dated July 18, 1941 (as modified)), ¶¶ 6–7 (creating “Investment Direction Advisor” role; delineating the powers and responsibilities of that role). The Trust Agreements, attached to the Petition as Exhibits A–D, are integral to the Petition and incorporated therein by reference. Accordingly, the Court may consider the Trust Agreements in deciding this motion to dismiss. See In re Crimson Exploration Inc. S’holder Litig., 2014 WL 5449419, at *8 (Del. Ch. Oct. 24, 2014). 4 Pet. ¶ 27; see, e.g., Pet. Ex. A, ¶¶ 6–7. 5 Pet. ¶ 22.

3  Wilmington Trust rejected Mr. du Pont’s “reasonable request in 2015 for money to cover tax liabilities.”6

Petitioner further alleges, “Wilmington Trust’s improper administration

[of the Trusts] has resulted in a loss of confidence by the du Ponts in Wilmington

Trust and, unfortunately, created hostility between [them].”7

D. Wilmington Trust as Lender and Estate Planner

Apart from its role as trustee, Wilmington Trust has also acted as lender and

estate planner to Mr. du Pont. “As lender, Wilmington Trust . . . overextended

credit to Mr. du Pont, collateralized his personal assets, including his revocable

trust and cash account, and reduced his unitrust payout.”8 When Mr. du Pont

struggled to repay the Wilmington Trust loan, Wilmington Trust “caused [him] to

liquidate low-basis assets to pay down a portion of the loan, resulting in millions of

dollars of otherwise-unnecessary capital-gains tax.”9

As estate planner, Wilmington Trust did not inform Mr. du Pont that the

Trusts would bypass his wife upon his death. Based on Wilmington Trust’s

provision of incomplete or incorrect information, Mr. du Pont and his wife made

“substantial irrevocable gifts . . . to trusts for their children naming Wilmington

6 Pet. ¶ 23. 7 Pet. ¶ 25. 8 Pet. ¶ 31. 9 Pet. ¶ 32.

4 Trust as trustee[] . . . .”10 Mr. du Pont would not have made such gifts had

Wilmington Trust advised him that his wife would not benefit from the Trusts after

his death.

E. Changes at Wilmington Trust Since the Creation of the Trusts

Petitioner alleges that “[t]he Wilmington Trust that is a party to this action is

not the same Wilmington Trust that the du Ponts entrusted in the 1940s and 1950s

to serve as trustee of the Trusts.”11 In the 1940s and 1950s, Wilmington Trust

“was closely associated with the du Ponts.”12 And for many years thereafter,

“Wilmington Trust [remained] an independent Delaware-based bank, managed, in

part, by members of the du Pont family . . . .”13

In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Wilmington Trust’s “business nearly

collapsed, which led to federal-government investigations, lawsuits, and

indictments . . . .”14 Following the near-collapse of its business, Wilmington Trust

was acquired by a New York-based bank—M&T Bank. Today, Wilmington Trust

is a wholly-owned M&T subsidiary and its “chairman and most of its other

10 Id. 11 Pet. ¶ 33. 12 Pet. ¶ 34. 13 Pet. ¶ 35. 14 Pet. ¶ 36.

5 directors are longtime M&T officers and directors.”15 “Not a single member of the

du Pont family remains on the [Wilmington Trust] board.”16 Thus, Petitioner

alleges, “Wilmington Trust’s governance, business, culture, and du Pont

relationship would be unrecognizable to the trustors of the Trusts. The Wilmington

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