In Re: Chen, A., Trust No. 1, Appeal of: Chen, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 2018
Docket1950 WDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Chen, A., Trust No. 1, Appeal of: Chen, A. (In Re: Chen, A., Trust No. 1, Appeal of: Chen, A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Chen, A., Trust No. 1, Appeal of: Chen, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A30006-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

IN RE: ADRIAN CHEN TRUST NO. 1 : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF & ADRIAN CHEN TRUST NO. 2 : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: ADRIAN CHEN : : : : : No. 1950 WDA 2016

Appeal from the Order Entered December 2, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Orphans' Court at No(s): Case No. 02911840

BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED APRIL 12, 2018

Adrian Chen appeals from the order of the orphans’ court refusing to

surcharge the trustees of the Adrian Chen Trust No. 1 (“Chen Trust 1”) and

the Adrian Chen Trust No. 2 (“Chen Trust 2”), and approving fees charged in

connection with the administration of the trusts. We affirm.

On July 8, 2013, Mr. Chen, a resident and citizen of Hong Kong,1

instituted this action by filing a petition for citation to show cause 1) why a

surcharge should not be imposed on Appellees, Dominic C. Abbott, Joseph A.

DeMartino, and Rudolf Bischof (collectively “trustees”), who are the trustees

____________________________________________

1 Hong Kong is a semi-autonomous region of the People’s Republic of China. J-A30006-17

of the Chen Trust 1 and the Chen Trust 2; and 2) why the terms of the

Chen Trust 2 should not be amended.2

The following background facts aid in an understanding of the issues

presented on appeal. At all relevant times herein, William Robinson,

Esquire, was a prominent estates and trusts attorney in the Pittsburgh area

who practiced initially at Reed Smith LLC, and later at Lovett Bookman

Harmon Marks, LLP. Both firms were highly-regarded law firms with access

to tax professionals. The latter firm was formed in 2003 by estate and trust

specialists from Reed Smith LLC and was devoted to practicing in the area of

estates and trusts. Mr. Robinson received an undergraduate degree from

Princeton University, earned his law degree in 1966 from the University of

Pennsylvania Law School, started to practice at Reed Smith in 1968, and

became an equity partner in that firm.

In 1987, Mr. Robinson drafted a trust for Mr. Chen’s mother, Stella

Lam Chen, who was a resident of Hong Kong.3 On December 15, 1987, Mrs. ____________________________________________

2 The July 8, 2013 petition also included a request that the trustees be removed. On August 23, 2016, the trial court entered a consent order outlining the terms of an agreement reached among Mr. Chen and the three trustees whereby the latter three agreed to resign. However, the resignations were not effective until a successor corporate trustee agreed to accept appointment as trustee of the trusts in question, which did not occur. Thus, the trustees, contrary to Mr. Chen’s representation on appeal, continue to serve since the triggering event for their resignation has not yet occurred. See Appellant’s brief at 5.

3 Since Hong Kong was a British colony in 1987, Mrs. Chen’s citizenship status is unclear.

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Chen executed that document, which named as trustees Mr. Abbott, Mr.

Bischof, Harold Goldman, and Mrs. Chen’s husband Godfrey, who was Mr.

Chen’s father. Mrs. Chen died on June 18, 1988, and pursuant to the terms

of her December 18, 1987 trust, its assets were divided into three parts and

placed in three successor trusts.

One of the three trusts created upon Mrs. Chen’s death benefitted Mr.

Chen and his issue and became the Chen Trust 1. The other two trusts

benefited Godfrey and Mrs. Chen’s daughter, Cynthia, respectively. The

Chen Trust 1 was a domestic non-grantor trust, a complex trust for United

States federal income tax purposes. This trust minimized tax by not

subjecting to federal income tax any distributions of capital gains in a

taxable year to a foreign person or foreign trust, and by imposing federal

income tax only on dividend income from a United States source. Mr. Chen’s

father Godfrey died in 1989, when Mr. Chen was sixteen years old, and Mr.

DeMartino was appointed to replace him as trustee of the Chen Trust 1.

In 1994, Mr. Chen received a substantial inheritance from his father’s

estate. Mr. DeMartino and Mr. Robinson suggested that he place those

funds in a trust, which Mr. Robinson drafted and Mr. Chen signed. When

Cynthia told her brother that it was ill advised to place that money in a trust,

Mr. Chen conveyed to Mr. Robinson that he no longer wanted the trust. The

attorney voided the 1994 instrument.

From June 18, 1988, until 1995, gains from the Chen Trust 1 were

distributed to a foundation that had been created by Godfrey. In 1995, the

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trustees became dissatisfied with the performance of their investment

managers, liquidated the investments of the Chen Trust 1, and chose a new

investment manager. That liquidation resulted in realized capital gains of

approximately $2 million. Mr. Robinson advised Mr. Chen to create a foreign

grantor trust to receive the $2 million dollar gain as well as all future gains

generated by the Chen Trust 1. Mr. DeMartino concurred with the advice

offered by Mr. Robinson.

On February 27, 1996, just months before he graduated from Carnegie

Mellon University with a degree in industrial management and economics,

Mr. Chen executed the Chen Trust 2. This was the foreign grantor trust that

was created at Mr. Robinson’s recommendation. At that time, Mr. Chen was

married but had no children. The Chen Trust 2 was an irrevocable trust that

benefited Mr. Chen and his issue, and qualified as a foreign grantor trust

under the federal tax law in existence on February 27, 1996. It was funded

with distributions from the Chen Trust 1.

On February 27, 1996, Mr. Chen designated Mr. Abbott, Mr. Bischof,

Mr. Goldman, and Mr. DeMartino, as the trustees of the Chen Trust 2. Under

the terms of the February 27, 1996 trust instrument, the trustees were

permitted to distribute the whole or any part of the income and principal of

the Chen Trust 2 to Mr. Chen, Mr. Chen’s wife, or Mr. Chen’s issue. The

intent of the Chen Trust 2 was to reduce Mr. Chen’s United States income

tax liability. Specifically, due to its status as a foreign grantor trust, the

Chen Trust 2 minimized the tax liability of both the Chen Trust 1 and the

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Chen Trust 2 under the Internal Revenue Code because Mr. Chen diverted all

his disbursements from the Chen Trust 1 to the Chen Trust 2. In turn, all of

the Chen Trust 2’s income was taxed as if received by Mr. Chen, who is not

a United States citizen, and was thereby subjected to a reduced amount of

federal income tax liability. While Mr. Chen was not permitted to amend or

revoke the aforementioned trust, the trust instrument provided that the

trustees could, with court approval, reform the trust to eliminate or minimize

any burdensome tax consequences to the trust so long as the change was

consistent with the purpose of the trust.

On August 20, 1996, the United States income tax law was amended,

the effect of which was to disqualify the Chen Trust 2 as a foreign grantor

trust solely because its income and principal could be distributed to the issue

of Mr. Chen. There is no proof that the trustees ever knew about this

change in the tax law. When Mr. Goldman died in 1997, he was not

replaced. Thus, Appellees were the trustees of both of the Chen trusts when

the present lawsuit was filed.

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In Re: Chen, A., Trust No. 1, Appeal of: Chen, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chen-a-trust-no-1-appeal-of-chen-a-pasuperct-2018.