In re the Estate of Brandt

81 A.D.2d 268, 440 N.Y.S.2d 189, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10526
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 16, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 81 A.D.2d 268 (In re the Estate of Brandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Brandt, 81 A.D.2d 268, 440 N.Y.S.2d 189, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10526 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, J. P.

Petitioners, Jody Brandt Grotzinger and Geoffrey Brandt, partial remaindermen of two trusts under their grandfather’s will, commenced this proceeding in the Surrogate’s Court to remove the three surviving trustees for violations of fiduciary duty and for an assessment of damages against Martin Levine and Richard Brandt, the general partners of a limited partnership in which the trusts have a 50% limited partnership interest.

One trust is a marital trust (Share 1 Trust) under which the life beneficiary, the testator’s widow, has a general power of appointment; the other (Share 2 Trust) is a non-marital trust without a power of appointment. The income from both trusts is payable to the widow. The other trust remaindermen are the testator’s three surviving children, who are also the trustees and who together have a 75% beneficial interest, and petitioners’ mother (the widow of the predeceased child of the testator), who has a 12%% beneficial interest. Petitioners’ combined interest in the Share 1 Trust (assuming the power to appoint is not exercised) and in the Share 2 Trust is 12% %. Their beneficial interest in the principal of the partnership is either 6%% or 3% %, depending on the widow’s exercise of the power of appointment.

[270]*270At his death in 1965 the testator, William Brandt, owned a 50% interest as a general partner in Forty-Second Street Company, a limited partnership, which, under long-term leases, rented a number of valuable motion picture theaters on 42nd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, in New York City. After his death, each trust received one half of the testator’s 50% interest in the partnership, i.e., a 25% interest. The trustees thereafter entered into an agreement with the testator’s brother, Harry, the surviving general partner of the partnership, and the limited partners, to convert the testator’s 50% general partnership interest into a 50% limited partnership interest. Under the agreement Harry was to continue as general partner and, upon his death, Martin and Richard, Harry’s sons, were to become the general partners. Harry died in 1972.

This proceeding was precipitated by a trustees’ intermediate account filed in the Surrogate’s Court in 1978, after the death of the testator’s attorney, one of the original trustees. In that proceeding petitioners alleged, inter alia, that the trustees, anticipating that the widow would exercise the power of appointment so as to divest petitioners of their interest as beneficiaries of the assets of the Share 1 Trust, conspired with Martin and Richard to divert the assets of the Share 2 Trust to the Share 1 Trust and filed a fraudulent account grossly understating the assets distributed to the Share 1 Trust. That charge is repeated in the instant proceeding.

In seeking their removal petitioners allege that the trustees together with Martin and Richard, conspired to loot the assets of the two trusts. They further allege that Richard and Martin, with the imprimatur of the trustees, systematically diverted funds from the partnership and several related corporate entities and other partnerships in which the trusts own an interest for the collective benefit of themselves, the trustees and their relatives, thereby diminishing the value of these entities and, by necessary implication, the interest of the trust beneficiaries therein.

In addition to seeking the trustees’ removal, petitioners ask that Martin and Richard account for and restore the sums which they have diverted “to such parties including [271]*271the [t] rusts” as the court directs. Thus, the petition attempts to stitch together two distinct claims—one against the trustees for self-dealing and violation of fiduciary duty, the other against Martin and Richard for the waste and diversion of partnership assets which are owned beneficially, in substantial part, by the trust remaindermen. While neither of the general partners is a trustee, Martin is married to one of the trustees, and Richard is a cousin of all three.

By separate motions, Martin and Richard moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds, inter alia, that the Surrogate’s Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the claims relating to their conduct as general partners of a partnership and for failure to state a cause of action because the petition is asserted in petitioners’ own, and not the partnership’s behalf. The trustees moved also to strike all allegations relating to income since petitioners have no interest in income and the widow, the only person with standing to complain of those acts charged which relate to income, has declined to do so. The Surrogate denied the motions, from which denial this appeal is taken. The order should be affirmed.

Petitioners contend that as part of the alleged conspiracy between the trustees and Martin and Richard, the trustees, inter alia, surrendered control of the partnership by converting the trusts’ interest therein from a general partnership interest to a limited partnership. The petition alleges that the trustees, after having turned effective control of the partnership over to Martin, without apparent benefit to the trusts for consideration of any alternatives that would have allowed them to retain control of a valuable trust asset while insulating the trusts from personal liability, also relinquished to him the administration of trust property. It is alleged, for instance, that the trustees abdicated trust investment policy to Martin, who pursued a course of investing which favored the income beneficiary over the principal beneficiaries. Martin, who, from the date of the testator’s death, managed the family business, the Forty-Second Street Company, first as general manager and after Harry’s death, as the dominant general partner, is alleged [272]*272to have utilized control over the partnership for the diversion of trust assets.

While the trustees deny the allegations they do not challenge petitioners’ right to seek their removal for self-dealing, and for the mismanagement, waste and diversion of trust assets. Rather, they argue that, even assuming the truthfulness of the allegations, in large part, the wrongful acts with which the general partners and they are charged would affect only trust income, - and. that, thus, petitioners, possessing only an interest in the trust corpus, have not been damaged and lack standing to complain. They ask, therefore, that all references to misconduct relating to income be stricken.

The claim that in furtherance of the conspiracy the trustees converted the testator’s interest in the partnership from a general partnership interest to a limited partnership interest appears to be of dubious validity. Indeed, article XV of the original 1961 limited partnership agreement provided for continuation of the partnership upon the death of a general partner, with the deceased partner’s participation being converted to a limited partner’s interest should his estate agree to continue in the partnership. The trustees apparently pursued the prudent course by foregoing whatever leverage they had to insist upon a general partnership, and therby expose the trusts to unlimited liability, and accepting, instead, a limited liability position as a limited partner. But petitioners argue that as part of the agreement, the trustees consented to a continuation of the partnership after Harry’s death with Martin and Richard as the general partners, instead of insisting upon its liquidation, and that a substantial offer, which was rejected, was made for the purchase of the partnership.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A.D.2d 268, 440 N.Y.S.2d 189, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-brandt-nyappdiv-1981.