In re the Accounting of JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.

38 Misc. 3d 363
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 31, 2012
StatusPublished

This text of 38 Misc. 3d 363 (In re the Accounting of JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's 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 JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 38 Misc. 3d 363 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kristin Booth Glen, S.

This case raises important questions about the obligations of fiduciaries, including institutional trustees, to beneficiaries, with disabilities, of trusts that seek to provide for the welfare of those beneficiaries. A review of the history of this trust and related proceedings places the issue in sharp perspective.

This history reveals a severely disabled, vulnerable, institutionalized young man, wholly dependent on Medicaid, unvisited and virtually abandoned, despite a multimillion dollar trust left for his care by his deceased mother. It reveals two cotrustees, one who was personally involved with the deceased and who holds himself out as an expert in planning for children with intellectual disabilities, and one which is a major banking institution, neither visiting or inquiring after the beneficiary’s needs nor spending a single penny on him.

The history turns brighter after a serendipitous SCPA article 17-A proceeding, where the cotrustees were called to task, educated about available services, and hired a certified care manager to attend to the beneficiary’s needs. That intervention, now after almost four years, has dramatically improved the beneficiary’s quality of life and his functional capacity to enjoy what is now a near “normal” existence in the community.

This history, and the legal consequences that flow from it, discussed below, should provide a clarion call for all fiduciaries of trusts whose beneficiaries are known to have disabilities to fulfill their “unwavering duty of complete loyalty to the beneficiary” (106 NY Jur 2d, Trusts § 247) or be subject to the remedies available for breach of their fiduciary obligation.

History

Will and Trusts

Marie H. died on March 20, 2005 at the age of 85, survived by two adopted children, Charles A.H., and Mark C.H., then 16 years old. Prior to her death, upon learning of her terminal cancer, Marie searched for an appropriate residential setting for Mark, and ultimately placed him in the Anderson School in [365]*365Straatsburg, New York.1 Mark’s disabilities are described more fully below.

In her will, Marie left her entire estate to the Marie H. Revocable Trust of 1995, created by trust agreement dated March 23, 1995 (the Revocable Trust).2 The Revocable Trust provided that, upon Marie’s death, after dividing her tangible property between her two children, the balance was to be divided into two equal shares, one for Mark’s trust, and one for Charles’s trust. The will, also dated March 23, 1995, named her sister Betty as executor and guardian of the person and property of her minor children. Marie’s attorney, H.J.E, was named the successor executor.

The will was admitted to probate on July 5, 2005. Because Betty predeceased Marie, letters testamentary issued to H.J.E3 The federal estate tax return (the 706) indicated a gross estate of approximately $12 million, of which $2,575,000 was the date of death valuation of Marie’s co-op apartment, and $8,973,653.79 was the date of death value of her stocks and bonds. Other miscellaneous property was valued at $471,439,77. According to the 706, the only assets that were transferred to the Revocable Trust during Marie’s lifetime were two Citibank accounts totaling $1,390.41.

The 706 estimated the executor’s commission at $133,000 and attorney fees at $300,000,4 with other administration expenses5 shown as $462,717.45. Federal estate taxes were shown as $3,479,561.55.6

[366]*366On the same day that she executed her will and the Revocable Trust, March 23, 1995, Marie entered into two irrevocable trust agreements, one for Charles and one for Mark, the Mark C.H. Discretionary Trust of 1995 (the Mark Trust), with herself and Betty as trustees. H.J.R was named successor trustee if either of the two named trustees should cease to serve, and, upon Marie’s death, the Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. (Chase) was designated as additional trustee “to serve with the other Trustees in office.” The Mark Trust was funded with an initial contribution of $18.

It is clear that the Mark Trust is for the benefit of a person with disabilities.7 Article 2.1 provides for distributions of income and principal to Mark for his “care, comfort, support and maintenance,” in the trustees’ discretion, and further provides:

“(ii) In the event such net income shall in any year be insufficient to provide for the support, maintenance, care and comfort of the beneficiary or for necessary medical expenses as determined by the Trustees, in their sole and absolute discretion, the said trustees shall expend out of the principal of said fund such sums as they deem necessary for any such purposes. Before expending any amounts from the net income and/or principal of this trust, the Trustees may wish to consider the availability of any benefits from government or private assistance programs for which the Grantor [sic] may be eligible and that where appropriate and to the extent possible, the Trustees may endeavor to maximize the collection of such benefits and to facilitate the distribution of such benefits for the benefit of the beneficiary.”

In article 2.1, section (iii) continues, authorizing the trustees “to pay or apply ... to any facility [the beneficiary] may be [367]*367residing in and/or to any organization where he may be a client or a participant in any program (s) sponsored by them, as the Trustees shall determine, for the general uses of such facility and/or organization.”8

Article 2.1, § (v) gives the trustees the right to terminate the trust “as if the beneficiary were deceased” if the existence of the trust causes the beneficiary to be excluded from government benefits.

The Account

After probate of Marie’s will, in the SCPA article 17-A proceeding, described below, this court, sua sponte, ordered H.J.P and Chase to account as trustees of the Mark Trust,9 noting, “questions having arisen as to whether the funds intended by Marie H. to benefit Mark . . . had been duly applied by [sic] for such purposes by her chosen fiduciaries.” The court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL) for Mark in this accounting proceeding (SCPA 403 [2]).

On December 7, 2010, the trustees filed an amended accounting covering the period of March 23, 1995 through March 31, 2010. Schedule A of that accounting showed the total amount of principal received as $1,420,343.28. In objections filed by the GAL, he noted his belief that, with a net estate of approximately $10 million, the Mark Trust should have been funded with $5 million. After meeting with Chase’s attorney, he concluded, based on her statements to him, that estate taxes of $3,479,561.55 accounted for the diminution of the amount with which the Tmst was funded. This, of course, was clearly not the case, as the estate tax would have been paid before distribution of the residuary estate, first to the Revocable Tmst, and from there, in equal shares to the Mark Trust and the trust for Charles. If, in fact, all the estate taxes were somehow allocated to Mark’s share, a major error would have occurred.

Schedule G, “the Statement of Principal Assets on Hand,” as of March 31, 2010, showed a market value of $2,733,094.49.

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Related

Meinhard v. Salmon
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In re McVicar
231 A.D. 381 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1931)
In re Gross
420 N.E.2d 91 (New York Court of Appeals, 1981)
In re a Trust Created by Malasky
290 A.D.2d 631 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2002)
In re Kornrich
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In re the Guardianship of Mark C.H.
28 Misc. 3d 765 (New York Surrogate's Court, 2010)
In re the Estate of Escher
94 Misc. 2d 952 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
38 Misc. 3d 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-jp-morgan-chase-bank-na-nysurct-2012.