Opinion
NORCOTT, J.
The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether a fiduciary, which has been involuntarily removed from its position by an order of the Probate Court under the authority of General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 45a-242 (a), as amended by Public Acts 2001, No. 01-114 (P.A. 01-114),1 has been removed “for cause” [232]*232and, therefore, has standing to challenge such removal by way of an appeal to the Superior Court pursuant to General Statutes § 45a-243.2 The plaintiff, Fleet National Bank, appeals3 from the judgment of the Superior Court dismissing the plaintiffs appeal from the order of the Probate Court that had removed the plaintiff as fiduciary. We conclude that a fiduciary removed from its position pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has not been removed “for cause” for the purposes of § 45a-243 and, therefore, does not have standing to appeal its displacement. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The record reveals the following relevant facts and procedural history. In 1966, the John B. Faile Irrevocable Trust (trust) was created for the benefit of the defendants, certain individuals named as beneficiaries of the trust.4 The instrument creating this trust named an individual fiduciary, James J. Preble, and a corporate fiduciary, the United Bank and Trust Company (United), as cotrustees while making no provision for the involuntary removal of either fiduciary. Thereafter, Preble passed away and United was left as the sole administrator of the trust. Following a corporate merger, the plain[233]*233tiff became the successor in interest to United and assumed its role as the sole fiduciary.
On December 10, 2001, the defendants filed a petition in the Probate Court for the district of Hartford asking that the plaintiff be removed, pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4), as fiduciary for the trust, and that Putnam Trust (Putnam) be installed as the successor fiduciary. Thereafter, the Probate Court, Killian, J., issued a written memorandum of decision granting the defendants’ petition to remove the plaintiff as fiduciary. As a threshold matter, the Probate Court indicated that “[p]rior to October 1,2001, the removal of a fiduciary [under § 45a-242 (a)] was permitted only in those circumstances where it was demonstrated that a fiduciary either lacked the capacity to perform the duties of the [t]rustee or [was] neglectful of those duties,” and that the plaintiffs performance as fiduciary was such that the court “would be incapable” of finding such inadequacy in this matter. The Probate Court, however, went on to recognize that General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 45a-242 (a), as amended by P.A. 01-114, now supplied “significant new grounds for removal of [a] [t]rustee . . . .” In particular, P.A. 01-114 added subdivision (4) to § 45a-242 (a), which provides for the removal of a fiduciary when “there has been a substantial change in circumstances or removal is requested by all of the beneficiaries, the court finds that removal of the fiduciary best selves the interests of all the beneficiaries and is not inconsistent with a material purpose of the governing instrument and a suitable cofiduciary or successor fiduciary is available.” The Probate Court concluded that, “[i]n contrast to the other subdivisions] of § 45a-242 (a), all of which require some blamable acts on the part of the fiduciary in order to justify removal, [§ 45a-242 (a) (4) authorizes] removal by a unanimous request of the beneficiaries . . . and requires no blamable act on the part of the [t]rustee . . . .”
[234]*234The Probate Court went on to determine that the removal of the plaintiff was permissible under § 45a-242 (a) (4) because: (1) the defendants were unanimous in their desire to remove the plaintiff; (2) removal was in the best interests of the defendants as it was undisputed that (a) Putnam already administered other trusts for the benefit of the defendants and to centralize management in one fiduciary would increase convenience and efficiency, (b) the services offered by Putnam were more personalized than those of the plaintiff, and (c) the fees charged by Putnam were lower than those imposed by the plaintiff; and (3) removal did not conflict with a material purpose of the trust because (a) the plaintiff was not the entity chosen by the settlor to administer the trust, and (b) the trust did not vest any special discretion in the trustee and did not require unique skills such that the plaintiff was the sole entity capable of effective administration of the trust. Accordingly, the Probate Court issued an order removing the plaintiff as fiduciary and turned administration of the trust over to Putnam.
Thereafter, the plaintiff appealed from this order of removal to the Superior Court. On appeal to the Superior Court, the plaintiff claimed that the Probate Court had abused its discretion by improperly concluding that: (1) the defendants to the trust unanimously had requested the plaintiffs removal; (2) § 45a-242 (a) (4) permits the removal of a fiduciary without a demonstration that the current administration of the trust was detrimental to the interests of the beneficiaries in some manner; (3) the removal of the plaintiff as fiduciary best served the interests of the defendants; and (4) the removal of the plaintiff did not conflict with a material purpose of the trust.
Subsequently, the defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiffs appeal. Specifically, the defendants claimed that while § 45a-243 confers standing to appeal “when [235]*235the fiduciary has been removed ‘for cause’ by a court of probate,” § 45a-242 (a) (4), the provision under which the plaintiff had been removed, authorizes the removal of a fiduciary without a showing of “cause” and, therefore, is outside the scope of § 45a-243. Put differently, the defendants claimed that “[w]hen there has been removal of a fiduciary because of the fiduciary’s unfitness, an appeal of the removal is authorized; however, where the removal of a fiduciary is not based on any reasons attributable to the fiduciary . . . that is, the removal was not ‘for cause’ but for the reason [s] set forth in § 45a-242 (a) (4) . . . no appeal of the removal is authorized.”
On October 11, 2002, the Superior Court, Koletsky, J., issued a written memorandum of decision granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss. In dismissing the plaintiffs appeal, the Superior Court reviewed the text and legislative purposes of §§ 45a-242 and 45a-243, and determined that the standing to appeal conferred by § 45a-243 is implicated only when a fiduciary has been removed “for cause” and that a removal effected pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) is not such a removal. Therefore, the Superior Court concluded that the plaintiff was without standing to pursue an appeal of its removal. This appeal followed.
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the removal of a fiduciary from its position pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) is a removal “for cause” within the meaning of § 45a-243 and, therefore, a fiduciary has standing to appeal such removal.5 Specifically, the plaintiff relies upon our [236]*236interpretation of the phrase “ ‘for cause’ ” in Robinson v. Unemployment Security Board, 181 Conn. 1, 7, 434 A.2d 293 (1980), citing Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, which expressed that “[t]he ordinary and customary meaning of the phrase ‘for cause’ is ‘[for] a good or adequate reason’ . . . .” Under this inteipretation, the plaintiff claims, the removal of a fiduciary based upon the factors articulated in § 45a-[237]*237242 (a) (4); see footnote 1 of this opinion; is a removal “for cause” and, therefore, the fiduciary may appeal such removal pursuant to § 45a-243. Moreover, the plaintiff claims that the relevant legislative histories and underlying legislative purposes of these statutes support the conclusion that a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) may appeal the removal by means of § 45a-243.
In response, the defendants claim that the phrase “for cause” in § 45a-243 has a more narrow meaning than that advanced by the plaintiff. In the defendants’ view, the phrase “for cause” is to be interpreted, in accordance with the definition provided in West’s Legal Dictionary (1986), as “a reason that is relevant to ability and fitness to perform one’s duty.” Under this interpretation, the defendants assert, a removal pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) is a removal based upon factors entirely unrelated to the plaintiffs ability or fitness as a fiduciary and, therefore, is not a removal “for cause” within the ambit of § 45a-243. Furthermore, in direct contrast to the position of the plaintiff, the defendants claim that the relevant legislative histories and motivating purposes of these statutory provisions buttress the conclusion that a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) may not challenge such removal by an appeal taken under § 45a-243. We agree with the defendants that a fiduciary that has been removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has not been removed “for cause” and, therefore, lacks standing to appeal that removal under § 45a-243.
As a threshold matter, we set forth the applicable standard of review. The plaintiff is challenging the conclusion of the trial court with regard to the interpretation of §§ 45a-242 (a) (4) and 45a-243. Issues of statutory construction raise questions of law, over which we exercise plenary review. Commissioner of Transportation v. Kahn, 262 Conn. 257, 272, 811 A.2d 693 (2003). “[T]he [238]*238process of statutory interpretation involves a reasoned search for the intention of the legislature. ... In other words, we seek to determine, in a reasoned manner, the meaning of the statutory language as applied to the facts of [the] case, including the question of whether the language actually does apply. In seeking to determine that meaning, we look to the words of the statute itself, to the legislative history and circumstances surrounding its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation and common law principles governing the same general subject matter.”6 (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Commissioner of Social Services v. Smith, 265 Conn. 723, 734, 830 A.2d 228 (2003).
Thus, our interpretive task begins with the relevant statutory language. Section 45a-242 (a) provides that “[t]he court of probate having jurisdiction may, upon its own motion or upon the application and complaint of any person interested or of the surety upon the fiduciary’s probate bond, after notice and hearing, remove any fiduciary if: (1) The fiduciary becomes incapable of executing such fiduciary’s trust, neglects to perform the duties of such fiduciary’s trust, wastes the estate in such fiduciary’s charge, or fails to furnish any additional or substitute probate bond ordered by the court, (2) lack of cooperation among cofiduciaries substan[239]*239tially impairs the administration of the estate, (3) because of unfitness, unwillingness or persistent failure of the fiduciary to administer the estate effectively, the court determines that removal of the fiduciary best serves the interests of the beneficiaries, or (4) there has been a substantial change of circumstances or removal is requested by all of the beneficiaries, the court finds that removal of the fiduciary best serves the interests of all the beneficiaries and is not inconsistent with a material purpose of the governing instrument and a suitable cofiduciary or successor fiduciary is available. A successor corporate fiduciary shall not be removed in such a maimer as to discriminate against state banks or national banking associations, nor shall any consolidated state bank or national banking association or any receiving state bank or national banking association be removed solely because it is a successor fiduciary, as defined in section 45a-245a.”
Section 45a-243 (a) provides in relevant part: “When any fiduciary has been removed for cause by a court of probate, as provided in section 45a-242, the fiduciary may appeal from such order of removal in the manner provided in sections 45a-186 to 45a-193, inclusive. . . .” By its plain terms, therefore, the right of a removed fiduciary to appeal its removal pursuant to § 45a-243 is limited to those instances in which the “fiduciary has been removed for cause ... as provided in section 45a-242 . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
The phrase “for cause” is not defined statutorily in §§ 45a-242, 45a-243, or in any other provision within chapter 802 of the General Statutes.7 Following a comprehensive review of various other sources for the [240]*240meaning of the phrase, including dictionaries and sundry other provisions of the General Statutes and the Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies that also employ the wording, we conclude that the phrase “for cause” is ambiguous and, depending upon the context, can be used in either the manner advanced by the plaintiff or as advanced by the defendants.8 We further con-[241]*241elude, however, that the legislative histories surrounding §§ 45a-242 and 45a-243, as well as the legislative purposes underlying these enactments, are consonant with the inteipretation of the phrase “for cause” in § 45a-243 as a reason that is related to one’s fitness or ability to perform its duties.
Prior to beginning our analysis of the legislative histories and statutory purposes of §§ 45a-242 and 45a-243, we place our inquiry into the proper context with a brief review of the historical backdrop for these statutory provisions. Since their creation, “[p]robate courts [have been] strictly statutory tribunals and, as such, they have only such powers as are expressly or implicitly conferred upon them by statute.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Gaynor v. Payne, 261 Conn. 585, 596, 804 A.2d 170 (2002). In 1800, as the legislature began to define more precisely the scope of jurisdiction for courts of probate, a statutory provision was enacted that allowed a probate court, in certain instances, to remove a fiduciary from its position. See General Statutes (1902 Rev.) § 371. Specifically, the legislature authorized the removal of a fiduciary following a deter[242]*242mination that such fiduciary was incapable of administering its trust, had neglected its duties, or had committed waste. General Statutes (1902 Rev.) § 371. The current version of this statutory provision is now codified at § 45a-242 (a) (l).9 See footnote 1 of this opinion.
Furthermore, in Connecticut there has long existed a right for a party to appeal the decision or order of a court having jurisdiction over probate matters. See General Statutes (1808 Rev.) tit. XLII, c. 1, § 95 n.79. This right of appeal, however, always has been contingent upon a threshold showing of aggrievement. General Statutes (1808 Rev.) tit. XLII, c. 1, § 95 n.79. Without such a demonstration of aggrievement, the appealing party may not maintain an appeal.10 That broad right of appeal for an aggrieved party currently is codified [243]*243at General Statutes § 45a-186. See footnote 2 of this opinion.
In a number of early cases, this court had the opportunity to analyze the intersection between these two statutory provisions, one allowing a party aggrieved in a probate matter the right of appeal, and the other conferring upon courts of probate the power to remove fiduciaries. See, e.g., Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Malcolm-Smith, 129 Conn. 67, 69, 26 A.2d 234 (1942); Avery’s Appeal, 117 Conn. 201, 205-206, 167 A. 544 (1933). “These cases held that a fiduciary was not aggrieved, in the absence of some demonstrated pecuniary loss, by impairment of potential future compensation or injury to his status in the community as a professional fiduciary.” Weill v. Lieberman, 195 Conn. 123, 126, 486 A.2d 634 (1985).11 As mere removal from its position did not confer aggrievement upon a fiduciary, displaced fiduciaries generally were unable to bring appeals challenging their removals.
Following these decisions, in 1955, spurred on by the banking lobby, the legislature undertook consideration of House Bill No. 1591, which was entitled “An Act Concerning the Removal for Cause of Executors, Administrators and Other Persons Acting in a Fiduciary Capacity and Providing Such Fiduciary so Removed the Right of Appeal from the Order of Removal.”12 In the [244]*244House of Representatives, Representative Francis C. Cady introduced this bill as an enactment “giving the right of appeal to an executor, administrator or other fiduciary which [has been] removed for cause by order of [a] probate court.” 6 H.R. Proc., Pt. 5, 1955 Sess., p. 2299.13 House Bill No. 1591 subsequently was enacted as General Statutes (1955 Rev.) § 2942d, now codified at § 45a-243 (a). Since its adoption, § 45a-243 (a) has provided fiduciaries “removed for cause by a court of probate, as provided in section 45a-242” with a right of appeal from the removal decree.
Thereafter, this court indicated that the stated purpose of this provision was to “enlarge the rights of appeal of removed fiduciaries.” Weill v. Lieberman, supra, 195 Conn. 126. In essence, this statutory provision was “designed to put the aggrievement issue to rest”; id., 126-27; and to confer statutory aggrievement [245]*245upon fiduciaries removed for cause. See footnote 10 of this opinion.
Until 2001, this statutory scheme remained materially unchanged. In that year, however, the legislature considered a substantial revision to § 45a-242 (a) through Senate Bill No. 419, which was entitled, “An Act Concerning a Petition for Change in Trustee.” With its genesis in the bank acquisition and merger phenomenon of the 1990s,14 and in the failure of many older trust instruments to provide a means by which a fiduciary could be removed involuntarily,15 the express purpose of the bill was to “widen the circumstances under which [a] Probate Court can relieve a fiduciary ... of [its] duties under a trust.” 44 H.R. Proc., Pt. 14, 2001 Sess., p. 4720, remarks of Representative Arthur J. Feltman. Accordingly, P.A. 01-114 placed the previously existing grounds for the removal of a fiduciary within § 45a-242 (a) (1), and added subdivisions (2), (3) and (4) as new [246]*246grounds for the removal of a fiduciary. See footnote 1 of this opinion.
In response to concerns that the bill as proposed would open the door to discrimination against state or national banks or banking associations simply because of their status as a successor fiduciary, Senate Bill No. 419 later was amended to include a provision barring discrimination against such an entity “solely because it is a successor fiduciary . . . .” General Statutes § 45a-242 (a). As Senator Eric Coleman explained, “the whole purpose of the amendment is to make clear that mergers and acquisitions would not constitute . . . the substantial change of circumstances [that is] referred to in the bill.” 44 S. Proc., Pt. 7, 2001 Sess., pp. 2015-16.
Notably, P.A. 01-114, although substantially revising § 45a-242 (a), did not alter the statutory text of § 45a-243. Furthermore, the legislative history surrounding P.A. 01-114 reveals no discussion of the proposed bill’s impact upon § 45a-243, and indeed discloses no reference at all to § 45a-243 in the discussions surrounding the modification of § 45a-242 (a). Instead, following the enactment of P.A. 01-114, § 45a-243 (a) continues to provide, as it previously had provided: “When any fiduciary has been removed/or cause by a court of probate, as provided in section 45a-242, the fiduciary may appeal from such order of removal in the manner provided in sections 45a-186 to 45a-193, inclusive. . . .” (Emphasis added.)
Having reviewed the legislative genealogy of §§ 45a-242 and 45a-243, we now turn to the interpretive issue presented in this appeal. Although, as previously mentioned, the phrase “for cause” in the text of § 45a-243 is ambiguous, the legislative purpose underlying § 45a-243, as well as the subsequent statutory development of § 45a-242, lead to the conclusion that the most reasonable interpretation of § 45a-243 is the reading that [247]*247excludes from its ambit the removal of a fiduciary pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4). Accordingly, a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has not been conferred with statutory aggrievement pursuant to § 45a-243 and may not maintain an appeal pursuant to that statutory-provision.
As demonstrated, the statutory precursor to § 45a-243 was bom in response to several decisions of this court that had concluded that the mere removal of a fiduciary from its position did not aggrieve it in the classical sense and, therefore, such a removed fiduciary could not sustain an appeal under the general right of appeal statute, now codified at § 45a-186. At the time this right of appeal provision was enacted in 1955, a fiduciary was subject to removal only if it had become incapable of administering the trust, neglected its duties, or committed waste. General Statutes (1958 Rev.) § 45-263. As classical aggrievement was lacking, the purpose of the appeal provision was to confer statutory aggrievement upon fiduciaries removed for those performance related reasons. Put differently, the spirit and import of the precursor to § 45a-243 was to allow a fiduciary, charged with ignominious wrongs bearing directly upon its fitness or ability to perform in its role as fiduciary, the opportunity to defend itself from such allegations.
Over time, § 45a-242 and its statutory ancestors have been amended to incorporate several additional grounds for the removal of a fiduciary, including the failure to furnish a court-ordered probate bond, now codified in § 45a-242 (a) (1), and the various justifications articulated in subdivisions (2), (3) and (4) of § 45a-242 (a). Although the grounds for removal have been supplemented, the language of the appeal provision has not been modified and, perhaps more importantly, the spirit of the provision has never been altered. All that is left, therefore, is to apply § 45a-243 to the modified [248]*248§ 45a-242 in a manner that is both in harmony with the purpose behind the appeal provision and in keeping with the language of § 45a-243.
In this inquiry, it is critical to recognize that while the grounds for removal articulated in § 45a-242 (a) (1), and those qualitatively similar grounds as listed in § 45a-242 (a) (2) and (3), consist of factors inextricably intertwined with the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to perform its duties adequately, the grounds for removal as set forth in § 45a-242 (a) (4) are different in kind. In each of the grounds listed in § 45a-242 (a) (1), (2) and (3) , the basis for the removal of a fiduciary is something the fiduciary has done, or has failed to do, which adversely has impacted the administration of the trust that has been committed to its charge. The focus of the inquiry under § 45a-242 (a) (4), however, is not so bound up with a showing as to the current fiduciary’s insufficient performance. Rather, § 45a-242 (a) (4) indicates that a fiduciary can be removed, even if it adequately is performing its function as administrator, if removal: is requested by each beneficiary; would best serve the interests of the beneficiaries, as for example in an instance in which an alternative entity could better function as fiduciary, and is not inconsistent with a material purpose of the trust; and an alternative entity is available to serve as successor fiduciary.16 Under this provi[249]*249sion, there need not be an allegation that a fiduciary is or has been performing inadequately. Rather, the focus of subdivision (4) is upon whether there is another entity that, for some reason, may perform better or provide different and more desirable benefits as administrator, or is otherwise better suited to serve as fiduciary for a particular trust.17
Accordingly, the motivating purpose behind § 45a-243, that a fiduciary be afforded a right of appeal in order to defend itself from scurrilous allegations of misfeasance, nonfeasance, or inadequate performance, is absent from a removal that has been effected pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4). Given what we view as this unmistakable legislative purpose in affording removed fiduciaries a right of appeal, we conclude that the most reasonable interpretation of the phrase “for cause” in § 45a-243 is to provide a fiduciary, removed from its position for a reason that is related to its fitness or ability to perform its duties, with a right of appeal to defend itself from such allegations. As removal pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) is not predicated upon reasons related to fitness or ability to perform, such a removal is not within the scope of § 45a-243.
The plaintiff contends, however, that to interpret the phrase “for cause” in § 45a-243 as a reason related to the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to discharge its duties would be to render that phrase superfluous to the statute, as it had existed prior to the enactment of P.A. 01-114. Put differently, the plaintiff notes that, prior to P.A. 01-114, all of the grounds for removal listed in General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 45a-242 (a) were related to [250]*250the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to perform its duties. See footnote 1 of this opinion. As such, the plaintiff claims that if all of the grounds for removal under § 45a-242 (a) were “for cause,” the use of the phrase “for cause” within § 45a-243 would have been mere surplusage.
Although we agree with this proposition to the extent that it asserts that, without legislative modification to § 45a-243, “for cause” under § 45a-243 must mean the same after P.A. 01-114 as it did prior to the amendment, we do not agree that our reading of the phrase as related to the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to perform its duties renders the phrase “for cause” superfluous in the scheme as existing prior to P.A. 01-114. “[I]t is a basic tenet of statutory construction that the legislature [does] not intend to enact meaningless provisions. . . . [I]n construing statutes, we presume that there is a purpose behind every sentence, clause, or phrase used in an act and that no part of a statute is superfluous.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Kuehl v. Z-Loda Systems Engineering, Inc., 265 Conn. 525, 536-37, 829 A.2d 818 (2003). In this regard, it is important to note that § 45a-243 provides a right of appeal to a fiduciary removed “for cause ... as provided in section 45a-242 . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Both before and after the enactment of P.A. 01-114, § 45a-243 referenced the preceding provision in whole, without a more pointed reference to any particular subsection or subdivision of § 45a-242. We also note that § 45a-242, and its statutory precursors dating back to the original passage of the provision in 1955, not only always has provided the particular grounds by which a fiduciary may be removed involuntarily from its position, in subsection (a) of the statute, but also, in subsection (b) of § 45a-242 and its earlier variations, has provided for the removal of a fiduciary by means of resignation.18
[251]*251Our reading of the phrase “for cause” as a reason related to the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to perform its duties not only renders no portion of § 45a-243 superfluous following enactment of P.A. 01-114, but is also in keeping with a proper interpretation of the statute prior to P.A. 01-114. The phrase “for cause,” as used in § 45a-243, means, as it always has, that a fiduciary removed for reasons related to its fitness or ability to perform has a right of appeal to clear its name from scurrilous or ignominious allegations. Prior to P.A. 01-114, the phrase “for cause” had distinguished removals pursuant to subsection (a) of § 45a-242, for which aright of appeal was afforded, from a resignation pursuant to § 45a-242 (b), for which no right of appeal was afforded. Essentially, the distinction precluded a fiduciary that had resigned its position from later changing its mind and seeking reinstatement by way of an appeal. Following the enactment of P.A. 01-114, the phrase “for cause” in § 45a-243 differentiates between removals pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (1), (2) and (3), which are all related to the fitness or ability of a fiduciary to perform and for which a right of appeal is afforded, from removals pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) or resignations pursuant to § 45a-242 (b), which are unrelated to a fiduciary’s fitness or ability to perform and for which no right of appeal is afforded.19
[252]*252While we conclude that a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has not been conferred with statutory aggrievement to pursue an appeal under § 45a-243, our inquiry is not at an end. As previously noted, the early cases concluding that a fiduciary has not been classically aggrieved by its removal and may not maintain an appeal pursuant to the broad right of appeal from a probate decree now codified at § 45a-186 have since been questioned as having looked too narrowly upon the common law of aggrievement. See footnote 11 of this opinion and the accompanying text. Given this erosion, our conclusion that a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has not been conferred with statutory aggrievement under § 45a-243 does not foreclose the possibility that such fiduciaries, under our current principles of classical aggrievement, may now maintain an appeal pursuant to § 45a-186.
We conclude, however, that a fiduciary removed pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) is not, under our well settled standard with regard to classical aggrievement, an “aggrieved” person pursuant to § 45a-186. See footnote 10 of this opinion. As previously mentioned, our early cases concerning “aggrievement” within the context of an appeal from a probate decree required that, in order to be aggrieved, a party must demonstrate ii\jurious impact upon a pecuniary interest. Spencer’s Appeal, 122 Conn. 327, 331-32, 188 A. 881 (1937); Avery’s Appeal, supra, 117 Conn. 205-206. This requirement could be satisfied either by a showing of a direct pecuniary interest in the decree, such as a creditor, legatee or heir-at-law would possess; Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Malcolm-Smith, supra, 129 Conn. 69; or a showing that an entity was acting in a representative capacity for one whose interest was so affected. Spencer’s Appeal, supra, 331.
While we have abandoned the requirement of a pecuniary interest, either directly or in a representative [253]*253capacity; Stanley v. Stanley, supra, 175 Conn. 202; it has remained well settled that “[a] grievance to one’s feelings of propriety or sense of justice is not a grievance which gives a right of appeal.” Id. Under our current formulation of classical aggrievement, an allegedly aggrieved party must have a “specific, personal and legal interest in the subject matter of a decision . . . and . . . this interest [must have] been specially and injuriously affected by the decision.” Gladysz v. Planning & Zoning Commission, supra, 256 Conn. 256.
We have concluded that “[o]ne serving in a fiduciary capacity has standing to appeal from any decree which adversely affects the interests of those for whom he is acting, if it is a part of his duty to protect those interests.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Stanley v. Stanley, supra, 175 Conn. 202-203. Moreover, with regard to the nature of the interest implicated, we also have concluded that “[a]s long as there is some direct injury for which the plaintiff seeks redress, the injury that is alleged need not be great.” Maloney v. Pac, 183 Conn. 313, 321, 439 A.2d 349 (1981). Accordingly, aparty sufficiently has demonstrated classical aggrievement upon a showing of direct injury to a legally protected interest, either in the sense of personal harm or harm to the interests of one for whom the party stands in a representative capacity, regardless of the extent of the harm.
Turning to the plaintiff’s asserted interest in this matter, we conclude that the plaintiff has not established a protected interest, either in a representative or personal capacity, such that it has been aggrieved by the order of the Probate Court removing it as fiduciary. In the representative sense, the order of the Probate Court, terminating the plaintiffs tenure as fiduciary, was an adjudication that the plaintiff was no longer to represent the interests of the defendants with regard to the trust. Therefore, following removal as fiduciary, the plaintiff [254]*254may no longer seek to assert claims on behalf of the defendants. Rather, the interests of the defendants are now represented by their current fiduciary, Putnam, and standing to appeal decrees impacting those interests is now vested solely in Putnam.
With no aggrievement in a representative capacity, the only means by which the plaintiff may be determined to have been aggrieved by the order of the Probate Court is by direct injury to a personal interest. We conclude that a fiduciary removed from its position pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4) has no such direct harm to a personal and legally protected interest.20 Unlike removals pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (1), (2) and (3), no harm to a fiduciary’s reputation or standing in the community has been visited upon the fiduciary as a result of its removal pursuant to § 45a-242 (a) (4). The interest asserted by the plaintiff in a personal capacity is, in essence, nothing more than a claim that, in the absence of inadequate administration of a trust committed to its charge, the plaintiff is entitled to the continuation of its tenure as fiduciary ad infinitum.21 In the absence of inadequate performance, the plaintiff claims that it may not be removed from its position regardless of whether there exists another fiduciary who could better administer the trust.
In the context of zoning and licensing appeals, we have concluded that “[o]rdinarily, an allegation that a governmental action will result in competition harmful to the complainant’s business would not be sufficient [255]*255to qualify the complainant as an aggrieved person.” State Medical Society v. Board of Examiners in Podiatry, 203 Conn. 295, 301, 524 A.2d 636 (1987). We see no functional difference in the plaintiffs implicit claim in this appeal that, if it is performing adequately as a fiduciary, it should be left free from the rigors of competition in the marketplace. The plaintiffs asserted personal interest is simply an insufficient basis upon which classical aggrievement may be claimed. Accordingly, the plaintiff has not been classically aggrieved by its removal as fiduciary and may not maintain an appeal pursuant to § 45a-186.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.