In re the Accounting of Irving Trust Company

129 Misc. 2d 639, 493 N.Y.S.2d 924, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3309
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 Misc. 2d 639 (In re the Accounting of Irving Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Irving Trust Company, 129 Misc. 2d 639, 493 N.Y.S.2d 924, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3309 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Irving Kirschenbaum, J.

In conjunction with this application for judicial settlement of its account as trustee of the subject trust covering the period commencing June 14, 1928 and ending April 30, 1983, petitioner seeks a determination by this court as to whether a certain testamentary power of appointment conferred by the instrument creating said trust upon the daughter of the grantors has been validly exercised by her last will and testament.

[640]*640The trust was created on June 14, 1928 by the grantors’ execution of a trust indenture transferring to petitioner’s corporate predecessor certain securities described in a schedule annexed thereto. Although the grantors were then residents of the State of Connecticut, both petitioner and its predecessor have, at all relevant times, been New York corporations having their principal offices in the City of New York.

A preliminary question which must first be resolved before the determination sought by petitioner herein can properly be made is the question of the appropriate law to be applied in reaching such determination. The relevant statutory provisions (EPTL 3-5.1 [g] [2] [B]), which are a codification of prior law (see, Rohan, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 17B, EPTL 3-5.1, pp 609-610), state, in pertinent part, that the:

"intrinsic validity * * * of a testamentary disposition by which a power of appointment over personal property is exercised * * * [is] determined by * * *
"(2) In the case of a general power of appointment exercisable by will alone or a special power of appointment * * *
"(B) If such power was created by inter vivos disposition, the law of the jurisdiction which the donor of the power intended to govern such disposition.”

Although the subject trust indenture conferred upon the grantors’ daughter a general power to appoint the trust principal, exercisable by will alone, in an apparent endeavor to avoid inclusion of such assets in her gross taxable estate for Federal estate tax purposes, such power was thereafter partially released by said donee by an instrument executed in this State on October 27, 1951 and delivered to petitioner at its offices here. The effect of such partial release was to limit the permissible appointees under her testamentary power to her husband and to the members of classes described in said release as her "children” and her "lineal descendants”, thus transforming such power from a general to a special testamentary power of appointment (see, EPTL 10-3.2 [a] [1]; [b], [c]; 10-3.3 [a], [c]).

Since the primary question raised by petitioner clearly relates to the "intrinsic validity” of the exercise by the grantors’ daughter of her aforementioned special testamentary power of appointment, it must be concluded, based upon the above-quoted provisions of EPTL 3-5.1 (g) (2) (B), that the law to be applied in determining such question is the law of that [641]*641jurisdiction which the donors of such power (i.e., the grantors of the subject trust) intended to govern all questions relating to the intrinsic validity of their own inter vivos trust disposition. Unfortunately, however, the terms of their trust indenture contain no express indication of their intent in the latter regard and, in such circumstance, the applicable law is said to be the law of the jurisdiction having the most significant contacts with the trust (Matter of McCampbell, 36 Misc 2d 108). As heretofore indicated, the grantors were residents of Connecticut at the time they created their trust. Their daughter, the sole income beneficiary, was, at least for some period of time, including the time she executed the partial release of her power of appointment, a resident of this State, although at the time of her death she appears to have been a domiciliary of the State of Connecticut. Most significantly, however, as heretofore noted, at the time the subject trust was created, the assets comprising its corpus were transferred to a corporate trustee domiciled in this State; the signatures of all parties to the trust indenture were acknowledged here; and, since the trust’s inception, its assets have been continuously located and administered here by a trust company domiciled here. In addition, the only express reference contained in the indenture to the law of any particular State is the provision in article 6 thereof allowing the trustee to receive as its compensation "the Commissions on principal and income allowed by the laws of the State of New York to testamentary trustees.” Based upon this court’s review of the most relevant authorities, it must be concluded that the aforementioned contacts of the trust with this jurisdiction are more significant than, and substantially outweigh, its contacts with the State of Connecticut and that, in consequence, questions as to its intrinsic validity (as well as the intrinsic validity of the exercise by the donee — beneficiary of her testamentary power of appointment) should properly be determined by the laws of this State (see, Hutchison v Ross, 262 NY 381, 394-395; Chase Natl. Bank v Frazier, 243 App Div 623, affd 269 NY 541; Matter of McCampbell, supra; Matter of Devine, 34 Misc 2d 817; In re Jarvie’s Trust, 73 NYS2d 246; Shipman v Title Guar. & Trust Co., 20 NYS2d 508; Land, Trusts in the Conflict of Laws § 21.1).

No genuine issue exists here as to whether the grantors’ daughter effectively exercised her testamentary power. In article fifíh of her will (which has been admitted to probate in the State of Connecticut) she made express reference to the [642]*642power granted her by the subject indenture (as well as to the instrument partially releasing same) and expressly indicated that she was exercising such power by appointing the principal of the subject trust in accordance with the provisions of article eleventh of said will.

By the last-mentioned testamentary provisions, the grantors’ daughter directed, in substance and effect, that the principal of the subject trust be divided into three equal shares, one such share to be held in further separate trust for the benefit of her daughter, Barbara, another to be similarly held in trust for the benefit of her daughter, Joyce, and the remaining share to be divided into sufficient parts so as to provide one equal part for each child of her predeceased daughter, Margaret, who should survive her (i.e., the donee-testatrix); each such part to be held in further trust for the benefit of the surviving child of Margaret for whom it was thus set apart. Each such daughter-beneficiary and grandchild-beneficiary is to receive the income from his or her share for his or her lifetime and has been granted a testamentary power to appoint the principal thereof to any persons other than himself (or herself), his (or her) estate, his (or her) creditors, or the creditors of his (or her) estate. To the extent that any such power is not effectively exercised, the appointive property js to be distributed outright to the issue of the beneficiary so failing to exercise it or, in default of such issue, to the issue of the grantors’ daughter, subject to the proviso that any property which would thus pass to a member of the latter class who is then a recipient of income of any other trust established by article eleventh should be added to the principal of such other trust.

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Bluebook (online)
129 Misc. 2d 639, 493 N.Y.S.2d 924, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-irving-trust-company-nysupct-1985.