In re Peierls Charitable Lead Unitrust

77 A.3d 232, 2013 WL 5526243, 2013 Del. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 4, 2013
DocketNo. 12, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A.3d 232 (In re Peierls Charitable Lead Unitrust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Peierls Charitable Lead Unitrust, 77 A.3d 232, 2013 WL 5526243, 2013 Del. LEXIS 511 (Del. 2013).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice:

This Opinion is one of a trilogy of opinions, issued concurrently, addressing issues arising out of Petitions, filed by members of the Peierls family, requesting the Court of Chancery to accept jurisdiction over, and then modify, thirteen (13) trusts created during the period 1953 through 2005. None of these trusts were created or settled under Delaware law, and none were ever administered in Delaware. The Petitioners sought relief under recently-adopted Court of Chancery Rules 100-103, inclusive, which were designed to create an orderly procedure for entertaining petitions to modify a trust. No respondent was named in the Petitions, which the Court of Chancery denied on various [234]*234grounds, including lack of jurisdiction. The Petitioners appealed to this Court, which appointed Collins J. Seitz, as amicus curiae to brief and argue in opposition to the Petitions.1

This Opinion, in No. 12, 2013, addresses the issues arising out of the Ethel F. Peierls Charitable Lead Unitrust. Our opinions in the companion cases, Nos. 11 and 13, 2013, respectively, address the seven (7) Peierls testamentary trusts and the five (5) Peierls inter vivos trusts. For the reasons next discussed, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Chancery.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Appellants, Brian E. Peierls and E. Jeffrey Peierls are the current trustees of the Ethel F. Peierls Charitable Lead Unitrust. The facts, which are set forth in the Vice Chancellor’s opinion, are adopted in large part in this Opinion as well.

A. The Charitable Trust

On September 12, 1994, Ethel F. Peierls settled a charitable trust and named her sons, Brian and Jeffrey, as initial trustees (the “Trust”). The Trust Agreement provides that each taxable year the Trust will pay an amount equal to six percent of the net fair market value of the Trust estate to the Peierls Foundation (the “Foundation”). The Foundation is a charitable organization qualified under Section 170(c) of the Internal Revenue Code. Should the Foundation fail to qualify as a Section 107(c) charitable organization, the Trust Agreement authorizes the trustees to designate alternative Section 170(c) organizations to receive all or part of the Trust’s disbursements.

The Trust Term is 35 years and will expire on September 12, 2029. Upon the term’s expiration, the Trust Agreement grants Brian a limited testamentary power of appointment to direct the Trust’s remaining funds to either his children, to one or more qualifying organizations, or to Brian’s father’s issue. The Trust Agreement further outlines a distribution plan in the event that Brian fails to exercise his power of appointment.

At this time, the Foundation is the Trust’s sole beneficiary, though the trustees are empowered to select additional qualifying organizations as beneficiaries. Brian and Jeffrey currently serve as trustees, and the Trust Agreement provides a specific succession plan should either of them cease to serve as trustee. The Trust Agreement also grants the trustees the power to appoint a successor or a co-trustee.

B. The Trust Petition

As is the case with the other Petitions in this Peierls trust trilogy, the Petitioners request that the Court of Chancery: (1) approve the resignation of the current trustees; (2) confirm the appointment of Northern Trust Company as the sole trustee; (3) determine that Delaware law governs the administration of the Trust; (4) confirm Delaware as the situs for the Trust; (5) reform the Trust’s administrative scheme; and (6) accept jurisdiction over the Trust.2 The resignations of the Trust’s current trustees accompany the Petition and are expressly conditioned on the Court of Chancery’s approval. Northern Trust’s acceptance of its appointment as the new corporate trustee is also expressly conditioned on the Court of Chancery’s approval.

[235]*235II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

The Court of Chancery recently adopted Rules 100-103 to provide a new avenue for Petitioners to utilize that court’s equitable powers to reform a trust instrument.3 We review cases involving the Court of Chancery’s exercise of its equitable powers for abuse of discretion.4 In doing so, we review its legal conclusions de novo.5

III. ANALYSIS

A. The Vice Chancellor Properly Concluded That No Actual Controversy Exists Related to the Approval of Trustee Resignations, the Appointment of a New Corporate Trustee, the Confirmation of Delaware as the Situs, or the Declaration that Delaware Law Governs the Administration of the Trust, And That Any Such Judicial Decision Would Constitute an Advisory Opinion.

The Petition requests that the Court of Chancery (i) approve the resignations of Brian and Jeffrey as trustees; (ii) confirm Northern Trust as the newly appointed trustee; (iii) declare that Delaware is the situs of the Trust; and (iv) declare that Delaware law governs the Trust.

As we have earlier stated, in the inter vivos context “a case must present an actual controversy in order to obtain a declaratory judgment.”6 The Vice Chancellor noted the risk of addressing issues in the absence of an actual controversy: “It constitutes reversible error for a trial court to have ‘addressed issues as to which there was no actual controversy.’ ”7 We consider the Petitioners’ requests with that precept in mind.

The Vice Chancellor properly concluded that no actual controversy exists with respect to the requested approval of the trustees’ resignations and the confirmation of Northern Trust as the successor trustee. Section 6.3.2 of the Trust Agreement provides: “Any individual co-Trustee may, by written instrument delivered to all other then acting co-Trustees, relinquish his or her powers, rights or duties, to any [236]*236extent and upon any terms.” As common sense dictates, and the Vice Chancellor found, a “complete relinquishment of powers rights, and duties is synonymous with resignation.”8 Nowhere does the Trust Agreement expressly or implicitly require judicial approval for the resignations to become effective. The trustees here have essentially attempted to create their own controversy by conditioning their resignations on the express approval of the Court of Chancery — an approval that the Trust Agreement does not require.

Similarly, Section 6.1 of the Trust Agreement provides an express authorization for the current trustees to appoint a successor. That provision states that “Jeffrey ... and Brian [may] jointly designate! ]) by an instrument in writing filed with the trust records, one or more, persons and/or a corporation to do a trust business to serve as successor to [Jeffrey] as trustee....” Again, nowhere in the Trust language can a requirement that the appointment be conditioned on judicial approval be found.

The Petition also requests that the Court of Chancery declare Delaware the situs of the Trust. Section 7.1 of the Trust Agreement governs the Trust’s situs:

The situs and place of administration (“situs”) of the trust created under this Trust Agreement shall, as to real property held in trust, be the jurisdiction where such property is located.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A.3d 232, 2013 WL 5526243, 2013 Del. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peierls-charitable-lead-unitrust-del-2013.