In re the Estate of Linker

23 A.D.3d 186, 803 N.Y.S.2d 534
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 3, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 23 A.D.3d 186 (In re the Estate of Linker) 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 Linker, 23 A.D.3d 186, 803 N.Y.S.2d 534 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Order, Surrogate’s Court, New York County (Eve Preminger, S.), entered on or about December 14, 2004, which directed respondent, as cotrustee, to pay petitioner one half the amount of $708,590 on an account stated, plus attorneys’ fees, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, and the petition dismissed.

In August 1985, Frederick Robert Linker established an irrevocable inter vivos trust that provided for all income to be distributed to him during his lifetime, with principal and undistributed income, if any, to be divided equally upon his death between his daughters, petitioner and respondent herein. All three were to serve as cotrustees. Any two of the three trustees could make investment decisions as well as bind the trust. Payments from principal for Linker’s health and general welfare could be made “at any time or from time to time as the trustees, upon unanimous written consent, shall in their sole and absolute discretion deem necessary.”

The trust was to be funded with the proceeds from the sale of stock Linker owned in a closely held corporation. The trust received $2,002,412, consisting of checks in the amount of $80,039 and a promissory note in the principal amount of $1,991,373 with interest of 10% per year. All payments under the note were to be made to the order of Linker, petitioner and respondent, as trustees, and delivered in care of respondent’s home address.

Linker died on August 2, 1999. Petitioner filed a petition for [187]*187compulsory accounting in March 2002, alleging that respondent had refused to furnish any information as to the administration of the trust to either petitioner or the executor of the estate.

Respondent, while admitting the creation of the trust, the issuance of the promissory note, and receipt of a payment of $457,843, claimed that, notwithstanding the terms of the trust agreement, Linker maintained complete control of the money and that periodic payments she received were turned over to Linker at his insistence. Respondent also claimed that petitioner knew that the trust agreement was not being followed but took no action for over 17 years, even occasionally invading the trust herself and demanding money for her personal benefit.

The court granted the application for a compulsory accounting. Respondent filed an affidavit stating that Linker controlled all of the monies received without any objection from either daughter. She claimed that she did not take control of Linker’s finances until 1992, when he requested that she do so due to his declining health. As her records had been previously given to the executor, respondent attempted to reconstruct what she did with the final payment of $1,151,310, received in 1991, without the supporting records.

In July 2003, petitioner commenced another proceeding to take and state respondent’s account based upon allegations that respondent breached her fiduciary duty, converted the trust principal and willfully violated the order to account. Respondent once again alleged that Linker completely controlled the funds of the trust with the knowledge and consent of petitioner, thereby precluding the action.

By order dated July 31, 2003, the court directed respondent to file a formal account of her proceedings as trustee. Respondent again filed an affidavit stating that the trust was never funded since Linker took charge of the proceeds from the outset and insisted that the monies were his alone. She further stated this fact was known to petitioner who, as cotrustee and an attorney, never took any action to enforce the agreement, protect trust assets or assert her rights either individually or as cotrustee, and once again stated that all monies and records that she had were turned over to the executor upon Linker’s death.

After a second petition to take and state respondent’s account was filed in September 2003, the court granted the petition, struck respondent’s answer, and referred the matter to a Referee for an inquest.

Petitioner testified that she had no involvement with the investment decisions for the trust as respondent had invest[188]*188ment experience and Linker relied upon her. She stated that she had no concerns about this arrangement but admitted making a number of inquiries about the investments prior to Linker’s death. According to petitioner, respondent answered these periodic inquiries by stating that the trust agreement was being followed and that the trust was doing well. Petitioner also stated that she repeatedly asked for records throughout, but her requests were always refused. While she knew as an attorney that she had the right to see the records, both as a cotrustee and beneficiary, she chose not to enforce that right, since she trusted Linker and did not want to create family tensions by commencing an action. Petitioner also stated that she never consented to an invasion of the principal and denied having learned that Linker controlled the monies paid under the note. Significantly, petitioner received a check for $29,000 drawn on Linker’s personal account, not the trust account, as well as $10,000 a year for three or four years from Linker, but claimed that she did not know that these later payments were from trust funds.

Respondent’s testimony indicated that she was “sure” that petitioner knew that Linker was drawing monies out of the trust account. She had no bank records to support her claim that Linker was in control of the account since the bank only keeps records for seven years. She stated that she did not receive any mail addressed to the trustees for the benefit of the trust until 1990, and did not receive either the initial or installment payments under the note. Respondent did receive the last balloon payment under the note and paid capital gains and income taxes, as well as loans and other debts, owed by Linker. The balance was turned over to the executor.

Respondent argued that the statute of limitations and the doctrine of laches apply since, as early as 1990, petitioner knew that the trust had been repudiated, yet she waited until years later to request an accounting and damages. Respondent claimed that she suffered prejudice as a result of petitioner’s delay since documents were no longer available and Linker was dead.

The Referee found that respondent waived the defense of laches and the statute of limitations by failing to assert it at any time prior to the order granting the petition to state an account or the commencement of the inquest. The Referee also found that while respondent attempted to establish that petitioner had borrowed money from Linker and respondent in various transactions unrelated to the trust, and that both daughters received occasional $10,000 gifts from Linker, neither [189]*189of these facts demonstrated that petitioner knew that the trust had never been funded, or that any of the gifts derived from the trust account. The Referee further found that respondent did not explain the complete lack of documentation to support her claim that Linker diverted the money under the note to pay his debts and expenses. The court charged respondent with an unaccounted balance of $708,590, half of which should have been distributed to petitioner upon Linker’s death, and directed judgment against respondent individually and as cotrustee.

Petitioner’s application for damages, prejudgment interest and a surcharge were denied, the court finding that, while her lack of effort did not bar her claims, in her capacity as cotrustee she should have done more to safeguard the trust assets. Petitioner was, however, awarded attorneys’ fees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.D.3d 186, 803 N.Y.S.2d 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-linker-nyappdiv-2005.