IMO The Niki And Darren Irrevocable Trust and The N And D Delaware Irrevocable Trust

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 24, 2024
DocketCA No. 2019-0302-SG
StatusPublished

This text of IMO The Niki And Darren Irrevocable Trust and The N And D Delaware Irrevocable Trust (IMO The Niki And Darren Irrevocable Trust and The N And D Delaware Irrevocable Trust) 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
IMO The Niki And Darren Irrevocable Trust and The N And D Delaware Irrevocable Trust, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN THE MATTER OF THE NIKI AND ) DARREN IRREVOCABLE TRUST ) AND THE N AND D DELAWARE ) C.A. No. 2019-0302-SG IRREVOCABLE ) TRUST )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 20, 2024 Date Decided: July 24, 2024

Jon E. Abramczyk, Todd A. Flubacher, Matthew R. Clark, Courtney Kurz, and Anne Grae Martin, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Petitioner Comerica Bank & Trust, NA.

Thomas A. Uebler and Sarah P. Kaboly, MCCOLLOM D’EMILIO SMITH UEBLER LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Respondent Niki Tesak.

W. Donald Sparks, II, Chad M. Shandler, and Christine D. Haynes, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Respondent Darren Rushin.

William M. Kelleher, GORDON, FOURNARIS & MAMMARELLA, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Respondent Ildiko Juhasz de Tesak.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor Ildiko Juhasz de Tesak (“Ildiko”)1 is a wealthy and successful resident of El

Salvador. In 2012, she settled a substantial, irrevocable trust to provide for her

daughter, Claudia Elena Tesak (“Niki”), and Niki’s then-husband, Darren J. Rushin

(“Darren”), and their children. That 2012 trust2 made Ildiko the life beneficiary, able

to request the income but not to invade the principal. Upon her death, the trust

corpus would fund two successor trusts, one for benefit of Niki (funded with 55% of

the corpus) and one in favor of Darren (funded with the remainder). Upon their

deaths, the trust would be distributed in equal shares to their children in successor

trusts. The 2012 Trust was established in California. Ildiko was the Trustee. The

2012 Trust declares itself “irrevocable” at Article 1.3 but also provides a revocation

mechanism at Article 7.1, which requires the assent of Ildiko, Darren and Niki. The

settlor does not have a unilateral right of revocation. The trust is explicitly not

subject to amendment.3

By 2014, for a number of reasons, the parties wanted to amend the trust.

Darren in particular wanted an amendment that would accelerate vesting of the

successor trust in his favor upon divorce. That is, the 2012 Trust did not vest for the

1 I follow the practice of counsel here and refer to the litigants by first name or preferred name for the sake of clarity; no disrespect or familiarity is intended. 2 I refer to the trust formed under California law in 2012 as the “2012 Trust” and the 2014 Trust organized in Delaware as the “2014 Trust.” I note that the 2012 Trust was moved to Delaware, briefly, before it was (purportedly) decanted into the 2014 Trust, and presumably remains a Delaware trust. 3 JX12 at 739 § 7.2.

1 benefit of Darren until Ildiko’s death; Darren sought an amendment that would allow

his portion to vest as soon as he and Niki divorced. With the help of counsel, the

parties created a new trust. This 2014 Trust would be a Delaware trust. Defendant

Comerica Bank & Trust, NA was the named trustee. The 2014 Trust had some

substantial differences from the 2012 Trust. First, it provided for Darren’s desire to

have his interest vest upon divorce; if divorce occurred before Ildiko’s death, she

would thus be divested of the right to receive the life income from his “share” of the

trust. Next, the successor trust shares between Darren and Niki were adjusted, from

45%/55%, respectively, to 50%/50%. Finally, the 2014 Trust provided that upon

distribution of the remainder interest that the beneficiaries would include not only

the pair’s children together, but “all lineal descendants of all degrees and . . . persons

legally adopted into the class.”4 These changes were largely in favor of Darren, at

the expense of Niki and Ildiko, and the “divorce provision” created a perverse

incentive for the marriage of Darren and Niki. Ildiko and Niki, nonetheless,

consented to the changes.

Ildiko, to facilitate the funding of the 2014 Trust, first transferred the domicile

of the 2012 Trust to Delaware, and named Comerica co-Trustee. The two Trustees

then attempted to fund the 2014 Trust by purporting to “decant” the entire contents

of the 2012 Trust into the 2014 Trust, under Delaware law. Decanting—the

4 JX95 at 3404 §§ 8.5, 8.6, 8.7.

2 withdrawal of the assets from one trust and pouring them into a second trust—is

allowed under our applicable trust statute5 with respect to irrevocable trusts, but only

where and to the extent that the trustee has the power to invade the corpus (a power

absent here regarding the principal purportedly decanted). The 2014 Trust was

subsequently additionally funded with other assets, as well.

In 2017 Darren proposed a “financial divorce” from Niki, and the couple was

formally divorced in 2018. This triggered the vesting of Darren’s successor trust

under the terms of the 2014 Trust. Thereafter, Comerica, joined by Ildiko, brought

this action for instructions; Ildiko argued that the decanting was invalid as a matter

of law, and the assets in the 2012 Trust had not been effectively transferred to the

2014 Trust, and were thus not subject to the divorce provision in the latter trust. I

found this declaratory relief barred by unclean hands;6 Ildiko, as a fiduciary and

beneficiary to the trust, was seeking to benefit from her statutory malfeasance in

attempting the illegal decanting to fund the 2014 Trust. Niki, however, was not a

trustee of the 2012 (or 2014) Trust, and currently seeks a declaration that the

purported decanting was a nullity.

The matter is before me, post-trial. Darren appears to concede that the

decanting was not authorized by statute. He argues that equity should act to confirm

5 See 12 Del. C. § 3528. 6 See In the Matter of Niki and Darren Irrevocable Tr. and the N and D Del. Irrevocable Tr., 2020 WL 8421676, at *3 (Del. Ch. Feb. 4, 2020) (“Mem. Op.”).

3 the purported transfer of assets to the 2014 Trust, under a variety of theories. I find

that the attempted decanting was not permissible under the statute, and that the assets

purportedly decanted should be deemed never to have left the 2012 Trust. I do not

agree that equity is sufficiently invoked to confirm or support the transfer of assets.

A number of issues remain to this litigation, in particular tracing of assets in the 2014

Trust and Darren’s breach of duty claims against Comerica and Ildiko, but I find that

the assets reposed in the 2012 Trust at the time of the ineffective decanting remain

in the 2012 Trust. My reasoning follows.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background7

1. The Parties

Ildiko Juhasz de Tesak is a citizen of Hungary and El Salvador and a

resident of El Salvador.8 She is not a U.S. citizen.9

Claudia Elena Tesak (“Niki”) is a citizen of El Salvador and a resident of

California.10

7 This Memorandum Opinion only contains facts necessary to my analysis. Citations to the parties’ joint trial exhibits are referred to by the numbers provided by the parties and cited as “JX __”. See Parties’ Joint Trial Ex. List, Dkt. No. 275. Citations to the parties’ stipulated pre-trial order are cited as “PTO ¶ __”. Granted (Stipulation and [Proposed] Joint Pretrial Order), Dkt. No. 284. References to the trial transcripts are cited as “Tr. __:__”. 12-4-2023 Trial Tr.—Volume I, Dkt. No. 292; 12-5-2023 Trial Tr.—Volume II, Dkt. No. 293; 12-6-2023 Trial Tr.—Volume III, Dkt. No. 294. 8 PTO ¶ 9. 9 Id. 10 Id. ¶ 11.

4 Darren J.

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