In re Peierls Family Inter Vivos Trusts

59 A.3d 471, 2012 WL 6138513, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 280
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 10, 2012
DocketC.M. No. 16812-N-VCL
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 A.3d 471 (In re Peierls Family Inter Vivos Trusts) 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
In re Peierls Family Inter Vivos Trusts, 59 A.3d 471, 2012 WL 6138513, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 280 (Del. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

LASTER, Vice Chancellor.

Current beneficiaries of five inter vivos trusts have petitioned for orders (i) approving the resignations of the individual trustees, (ii) confirming the appointment of Northern Trust Company of Delaware as the sole successor trustee for each trust, (iii) determining that Delaware law governs the administration of each trust, (iv) confirming Delaware as the situs of each trust, (v) reforming the trusts to modify their administrative provisions and create the positions of Investment Direction Adviser and Trust Protector, and (vi) accepting jurisdiction over the trusts. The petitions are denied. Jurisdiction over the trusts is not retained.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The petitioners are Brian E. Peierls and E. Jeffrey Peierls. The four petitions concern five inter vivos trusts. There are two [474]*474pairs of trusts that are substantively identical, with one pair benefiting Brian and the other pair benefiting Jeffrey. A fifth trust benefits Brian, Jeffrey, and Brian’s two adult sons, Stefan Peierls and Derek Peierls.

Jennie Newgass Peierls, Brian and Jeffrey’s grandmother, settled the first pair of trusts under agreements dated January 14, 1953, with Bankers Trust Company, Edgar S. Peierls, and Ethel F. Peierls as initial trustees. Edgar and Ethel, presently deceased, were Brian and Jeffrey’s parents. I will refer to this pair of trusts as the “1958 Trusts.”

Ethel settled the second pair of trusts under agreements dated August 14, 1975, with Bankers Trust Company, Philip J. Hirsch, and Jeffrey as initial trustees. I will refer to this pair of trusts as the “1975 Trusts.”

Edgar settled the final trust under agreement dated May 24,1957, with Bankers Trust Company, Newman Pearsall, and Ethel as initial trustees. I will refer to this trust as the “1957 Trust.”

Brian is the sole current beneficiary of his 1957 Trust and his 1975 Trust. Stefan and Derek are the presumptive remainder beneficiaries of both trusts.

Jeffrey is the sole current beneficiary of his 1957 Trust and his 1975 Trust. Jeffrey is not married and does not currently have children. Brian is the presumptive remainder beneficiary of Jeffrey’s trusts.

Jeffrey is the sole current beneficiary of the 1953 Trust. Brian, Stefan, and Derek are the presumptive remainder and contingent remainder beneficiaries.

The current individual trustees of each trust are Jeffrey and Malcolm A. Moore, an attorney and trusted family advisor. The current corporate trustee of each trust is Bank of America, N.A., as corporate successor to U.S. Trust Company.

The petitions aver that the parties with interests in the trusts have become generally unhappy with the level of communication and responsiveness provided by Bank of America, particularly with respect to carrying out investment decisions made by the individual trustees, who comprise a majority of the trustees of each trust. The petitions seek to remove Bank of America as the corporate trustee and appoint Northern Trust as the successor corporate trustee. By titling the trust assets in the name of Northern Trust, a trust company subsidiary domiciled in Delaware, the petitions seek to change the situs of the trust to Delaware and establish that Delaware law governs the administration of the trusts. The petitions then request that the trusts be reformed to take advantage of provisions authorized by the Delaware Code.

The proposed changes will alter the structure and administrative schemes of the trusts by converting them to directed trusts. Currently, each of the trust agreements contemplates three trustees, one institutional trustee and two individual trustees. Each trustee must exercise fiduciary judgment over the administration of the trust. The proposed changes will reform each trust to have only a single institutional trustee, who will follow directions of the Investment Direction Adviser and the Trust Protector, two newly created positions. The single institutional trustee will not have significant substantive responsibility for overseeing the trust.

Jeffrey will serve initially in the newly created position of Investment Direction Adviser. According to the proposals, “[t]he Investment Direction Adviser shall hold and exercise the full power to manage the investments of the Trust....” See e.g., 1953 Trusts Pet. Ex. G. at 3. The proposals require that “[t]he Trustee shall follow the [475]*475direction of the Investment Direction Adviser with respect to all matters relating to the management and investment of the assets of the Trust.” Id. at 4. The Investment Direction Adviser “may be entitled to reasonable compensation for its services as agreed upon by the Investment Direction Adviser and the Trust Protector,” a second new position created by the proposed amendments. Id. at 9.

Moore will serve initially as Trust Protector. For as long as either Jeffrey or Brian lives, the Trust Protector will have the power to remove any trustee or appoint any successor trustee by providing notice to the trustee, the Investment Direction Adviser, and the adult income beneficiaries of the trust. After the death of the survivor of Jeffrey or Brian, the Trust Protector only will be able to remove or appoint a trustee with the written consent of a majority of the adult income beneficiaries of the trust. The Trust Protector will have the power to remove the Investment Direction Adviser and appoint any successor Investment Direction Adviser by the same mechanism, with the caveat that Brian automatically becomes the successor Investment Direction Adviser after Jeffrey. The Trust Protector also will assume primary oversight over requests from beneficiaries for .distributions from the trust, which the Trust Protector will have the power to veto.

The proposed changes are designed to facilitate future changes in the language of the trust. The Trust Protector will be granted “the power to amend the administrative and technical provisions of the Trust at such times as the Trust Protector may deem appropriate for the proper administration of the Trust and for tax purposes.” See e.g., 1953 Trusts Pet. Ex. G. at 10. In addition, a new section will provide that “Delaware law shall govern the administration of the Trust as long as Delaware is the situs of the Trust.” Id. at 2. In light of these provisions, the application of Delaware law to the trusts and Delaware’s interest in them easily could be transitory and passing things.

The proposed changes make clear that the successor institutional trustee will not have any responsibility for or involvement in the decisions made by the Investment Direction Adviser or Trust Protector. Under the proposed changes, the trustee will have

no duty to monitor the conduct of the Investment Direction Adviser, provide advice to the Investment Direction Adviser or consult with the Investment Direction Adviser or communicate with or warn or apprise any beneficiary or third party concerning instances in which the Trustee would or might have exercised the Trustee’s own discretion in a manner different from the manner directed.

See e.g., 1953 Trusts Pet. Ex. G. at 6. The trustee “shall incur no liability for any act or failure to act by the Investment Direction Adviser, or for acting on a direction of the Investment Direction Adviser or with respect to its implementation of any such direction of the Investment Direction Adviser.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A.3d 471, 2012 WL 6138513, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peierls-family-inter-vivos-trusts-delch-2012.