Estate of Phillis T. Worrall by James Worrall v. J.P. Morgan Bank, N.A., Trustee of the James P. Thompson Trust

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2022
Docket2021 SC 0166
StatusUnknown

This text of Estate of Phillis T. Worrall by James Worrall v. J.P. Morgan Bank, N.A., Trustee of the James P. Thompson Trust (Estate of Phillis T. Worrall by James Worrall v. J.P. Morgan Bank, N.A., Trustee of the James P. Thompson Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Phillis T. Worrall by James Worrall v. J.P. Morgan Bank, N.A., Trustee of the James P. Thompson Trust, (Ky. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 28, 2022 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2021-SC-0166-DG

ESTATE OF PHILLIS T. WORRALL APPELLANT BY EXECUTOR JAMES WORRALL

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. NO. 20-CA-1561 JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 20-XX-00009 JEFFERSON DISTRICT COURT 18-P-004814

J. P. MORGAN BANK, N.A., APPELLEE TRUSTEE OF THE JAMES P. THOMPSON TRUST

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VANMETER

REVERSING AND REMANDING

The Uniform Trust Code, KRS1 Chapter 386B, sets forth the rights and

duties of trustees and beneficiaries upon termination of a trust. The specific

duties at termination are set forth in KRS 386B.8-170 and 386B.8-180,

including a prohibition on the trustee “request[ing] any beneficiary indemnify

the trustee against loss in exchange for the trustee forgoing a request to the

court to approve its accounts at the time the trust terminates or at the time the

1 Kentucky Revised Statutes. trustee is removed or resigns[.]” In this case, J. P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.

(the “Bank”), did precisely that and then proceeded to obtain a Jefferson

District Court Order which improperly directed the Bank to liquidate the trust

assets and pay them into the Jefferson Registry of Court. Because of the

violations of the Bank’s statutory and fiduciary obligations to the trust

beneficiary, we reverse the opinion of the Jefferson Circuit Court and remand

this matter to the Jefferson District Court with directions to require an

accounting and to assess any appropriate remedies or damages against the

Bank, as further set forth in this Opinion.

I. Facts and Procedural Background.

In 1958, James P. Thompson died and his probated will established a

testamentary trust for the benefit of his daughter, Phillis Worrall. James P.

Thompson Will, Article Seventh (The “Trust”). The bequest in trust was of

specific shares in one company’s stock, as to which the then trustee had

discretion to pay out to his daughter. The final dispositive sentence reads,

“[u]nless sooner terminated, this Trust shall terminate at the death of my said

daughter, and said shares of stock shall in that event be paid over to her

estate.” Mrs. Worrall died in June 2018; her son, James Worrall, was

appointed as executor of her estate six months later in December 2018.

Worrall is the sole beneficiary of her estate under her probated will. The Estate

and Worrall will be collectively referred to as “Worrall.”

Over the course of 2019, the Bank filed at least three motions asserting

its desire to liquidate the assets of the Trust and pay the proceeds into the

2 Registry of the Court. The first two motions were filed in In re: Trustee under

Will of James P. Thompson, f/b/o Phillis Thompson Worrall, Jefferson District

Court, Division Fifteen (Chief District Judge Anne Haynie), Docket No. 83-P-

002899, the case file established by registration of the Trust when the Bank’s

predecessor, Liberty National Bank & Trust Company of Louisville, had become

successor trustee in 1983.2 Both motions were apparently withdrawn for

reasons not appearing in the record.3

The third motion to liquidate was filed on December 18, 2019, in In re:

Estate of Phillis T. Worrall, Jefferson District Court, Division Four (District

Judge Julie Kaelin), Docket No. 18-P-004814.4 The Bank’s motion claimed the

liquidation, attendant payment of trustee’s and attorney’s fees, and release of

the trustee was necessitated by Worrall, as his mother’s Executor, “repeatedly

refus[ing] to sign a receipt and release as required by the [Bank] to liquidate

and transfer the assets to the Executor.” The motion attached the Bank’s trust

officer’s affidavit that Worrall, as Executor, “failed to execute the appropriate

receipt and release in order to take possession of the Trust assets[,]” that

Worrall, as Executor, “was notified of the need to sign a receipt and release to

2In 1983, the trust registration provisions were contained in KRS 386.655. Those provisions are now set out at KRS 386B.2-050. 3The Bank argues that those motions were withdrawn by Worrall’s agreement to comply with the Bank’s conditions for paying over the Trust’s assets. 4 Just as the reasons for withdrawal of the prior motions are unclear, the reasons this matter was refiled in Jefferson District Court, Division Four, instead of the division in which the Trust had been registered, Division Fifteen, are also unclear. While this process may have been a type of forum shopping, Worrall does not so claim in his brief and we thus do not address it further.

3 obtain possession of the Trust assets[,]” and that Worrall, as Executor, “has

failed to take proper action to take possession of the Trust assets.”

Significantly, the Bank’s counsel had previously corresponded with Worrall’s

counsel, and in a letter dated November 8, 2019, stated the following:

As we discussed, our firm has been retained by J.P. Morgan, Trustee of the James Thompson Trust Under Will f/b/o Phillis Worrall (the ''Trust"). Pursuant to the terms of the trust, now that Ms. Worrall has died, the Trustee is to distribute all remaining assets to the estate of Phillis Worrall. We see two options for how the Trustee can distribute the assets to the estate: Option one is for your client, James Worrall, as Executor of the Estate of Phillis Worrall, to sign the attached simple release form from the Trustee and accept the assets into the estate. Option two is a more formal and expensive option, which would include court intervention and the use of all legal avenues available. We are willing to allow Mr. Worrall to choose which option he would like to pursue, but our client will proceed one way or the other in order to meet their [sic] fiduciary duty to terminate the Trust. If Mr. Worrall would like to proceed under option one, please deliver the attached release agreement to me by November 22. If I have not received anything by that date, we will begin to seek court intervention immediately.

The first page of the attached “simple release” was titled “Receipt and

Release,” identified the Bank as trustee, the Trust, the Bank’s account number

for the Trust, and thirty assets to be distributed in “partial satisfaction of the

share of the undersigned[.]” The second page of the “simple release” contained

the following provisions by which the signatory:

2. Releases and discharges JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., individually and as the Trustee, from all claims, demands, suits, actions, liabilities and responsibilities of any kind, arising from or related to the entitlement that is described in this instrument.

4 3. Approves of the Accounts of Trustees [sic] JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. since inception of the Trust and acknowledges that statements of the activities in the Trust are available upon request. 4. Agrees to return any or all of the property described above, to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., upon demand, if recourse thereto becomes necessary for the payment of taxes, expenses, costs or other demands in connection with the administration of the Trust, and agrees to indemnify the Trustee against all such demands or claims, to the extent the property described above is subject to such demands or claims.

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Estate of Phillis T. Worrall by James Worrall v. J.P. Morgan Bank, N.A., Trustee of the James P. Thompson Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-phillis-t-worrall-by-james-worrall-v-jp-morgan-bank-na-ky-2022.