Henderson v. The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 14, 2018
Docket1:15-cv-10599
StatusUnknown

This text of Henderson v. The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation (Henderson v. The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation, (D. Mass. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS ___________________________________ ) ASHBY HENDERSON and THOMAS ) HERSHENSON, Individually and on ) Behalf of All Others Similarly ) Situated, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) Civil Action ) No. 15-10599-PBS v. ) ) THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, N.A., ) ) Defendant. ) ___________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

September 14, 2018

Saris, C.J. INTRODUCTION This proposed class action claims that Bank of New York Mellon, N.A. (“BNY Mellon”), breached its fiduciary duty to its trust beneficiaries by charging excessive and undisclosed fees for the preparation of the trusts’ tax returns. The plaintiffs have moved for certification of a class, and both parties have moved for summary judgment. After a hearing, the Court ALLOWS IN PART and DENIES IN PART the motion for class certification (Dkt. No. 285). BNY Mellon’s motion for summary judgment (Dkt. No. 315) is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, as detailed below. The plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment (Dkt. No. 365) is DENIED. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The following facts are drawn from the class-certification and summary judgment record. They are undisputed except where

stated. I. The Parties Plaintiffs Ashby Henderson and Thomas Hershenson both seek to represent the proposed class. Henderson is a beneficiary of the Walter H. Wesson Trust (“Wesson Trust”), a trust created under Massachusetts law. Hershenson is a beneficiary of T/D of Morris A. Hershenson Trust f/b/o Lee M. Hershenson (“Hershenson Trust”), a trust created under Pennsylvania law.1 Both trusts are irrevocable trusts. The trustee of both trusts is BNY Mellon.2 BNY Mellon administers thousands of trusts, with tens of thousands of trust beneficiaries. II. BNY Mellon’s Tax-Preparation Services

Since 2007, BNY Mellon has contracted with PricewaterhouseCoopers (“PwC”) to prepare and file tax returns

1 The Hershenson Trust is now in its winding-up phase, having terminated with the death of Dr. Lee Hershenson in November 2015. The winding-up is subsumed in a legal proceeding in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.

2 The Second Amended Complaint also named BNY Mellon Corp. (the parent company of BNY Mellon, N.A.) as a defendant, but the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their claims against that entity. for most, if not all, BNY Mellon trusts. Since 2008, PwC has prepared the tax returns for both of the trusts at issue here. Prior to the arrangement with PwC, BNY Mellon prepared fiduciary tax returns through its in-house tax department. Two aspects of the PwC arrangement are hotly contested.

First, the parties dispute the scope of PwC’s work. The plaintiffs assert that BNY Mellon “completely” outsourced tax- preparation services to PwC. BNY Mellon asserts that it retained responsibility for performing a variety of ancillary functions necessary to the actual filing of the tax returns -- such as setting internal tax policy, reviewing PwC’s work, and reconciling accounting systems with PwC’s records. Second, the parties dispute whether PwC was paid on a per- trust or aggregate basis. The plaintiffs point to language in the relevant BNY Mellon-PwC contracts that appears to break out tax-preparation fees on a “per account” basis. BNY Mellon points to deposition testimony from its own personnel and PwC officials

indicating that the parties negotiated a total aggregate fee based on anticipated volume, and that the per-account figures indicated in the contract documents were calculated after the fact to facilitate a true-up between the parties. III. BNY Mellon’s Evolving Fee Structures Until 2012, BNY Mellon used approximately 1,500 different fee schedules for its trust customers; that number has been pared to around 100 in more recent years. At least three pertinent to this case were in effect at different time periods: (1) a discrete line-item fee for tax-preparation services; (2) a bundled “fiduciary fee” covering tax preparation and other services; and (3) a bundled “advisory fee” covering numerous

services, including tax-preparation work. From 2008 to 2012, BNY Mellon used the line-item tax- preparation fee. During this era, the bank generally charged tax-preparation fees of $400 for grantor trusts, $750 for revocable trusts, and between $750 and $950 for irrevocable trusts, depending on complexity. “Simple” irrevocable trusts paid an annual line-item fee of $750. The Wesson Trust was one such trust. “Complex” irrevocable trusts paid a line-item fee of $950. The Hershenson Trust was in this category. Notwithstanding these general categories, what a particular trust paid for tax-preparation services could vary from trust to trust and from year to year. For instance, some trusts paid tax-

preparation fees as low as $25 per year or had the fees waived. Others paid more than $1,000 per year for tax-preparation services. In 2010, Dr. Lee Hershenson (the plaintiff Hershenson’s father) raised questions about his tax fee, along with other fees, to his wealth manager at BNY Mellon. As a result, the Hershenson Trust was converted to a “service fee” of 2 percent of market value per year on its first $500,000, and 1.75 percent on the next $500,000 -- with no line-item fee for taxes. It is not clear on this record whether other trusts had similar arrangements, or whether this agreement was unique to the Hershenson Trust. In any event, since 2010, the Hershenson Trust

has not been charged a line-item tax-preparation fee. Starting in 2012, BNY Mellon changed its fee structure with respect to tax-preparation fees for most trusts. In 2012, the bank shifted those trusts that were still charged a line-item tax-preparation fee to a structure that imposed a bundled “fiduciary fee” and no tax-preparation line-item fee. This shift applied to the Wesson Trust, but not the Hershenson Trust, which remained on the “service fee” schedule described above. Since 2012, the Wesson Trust has not paid a line-item tax-preparation fee. The parties point to nothing in the record indicating how much the “fiduciary fee” was or what it included. In late 2013 and into 2014, BNY Mellon changed its fee

structures again, moving trusts, on a rolling basis, to a schedule based on “advisory fees.” It is not clear on this record whether or to what extent the “advisory fees” resembled the “fiduciary fees” just discussed. In any event, in 2014, the bank moved both the Wesson and Hershenson Trusts to the AD-75 fee schedule, which is an “advisory fee” schedule. Under this structure, the “advisory fee” covers numerous “front- and back- office services,” including asset allocation, account administration, portfolio monitoring, performance reporting -- and, of course, tax preparation. The “advisory fee” typically ranges from 0.75 percent per year on a trust’s first $3 million down to 0.20 percent on anything over $25 million.

IV. Fee Disclosure In 2007, shortly after BNY Mellon hired PwC, the bank crafted a letter to alert customers to the change. It stated: “Reflective of the service, the tax preparation fee will be $400 for grantor trusts, $750 for revocable trusts, and between $750 and $950 for irrevocable trusts, depending on complexity.” The parties dispute to whom, if anyone, this letter was sent. In 2012, when the bank shifted to a “fiduciary fee,” many customers received a letter stating that the new fee “replaces” the former “base fee” and “tax preparation fee.” However, the parties point to nothing in the record explaining in more detail what the “fiduciary fee” covered or how much it cost for

customers. Starting in 2013 and into 2014, BNY Mellon began alerting customers to its new “advisory fee” system via another letter. This letter described the new system as “a new, more straightforward way of determining fees,” but the letter did not include any detail on what specific services the fee covered.

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