Kelley v. Lee

91 A.2d 39, 33 Del. Ch. 126, 1952 Del. Ch. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 8, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 A.2d 39 (Kelley v. Lee) 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
Kelley v. Lee, 91 A.2d 39, 33 Del. Ch. 126, 1952 Del. Ch. LEXIS 80 (Del. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

The question presented is whether plaintiffs’ complaint states a cause of action.

[127]*127This is a complaint by two plaintiffs, mother and daughter, against an individual defendant charging that he holds certain property in trust for their benefit. Defendant has moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

In order to decide this matter it is necessary to set forth with particularity the more pertinent factual allegations of the complaint, here taken to be true.

Plaintiffs are Estelle Kelley and her daughter, Patricia Kelley Niedland. The daughter, now married, was born October 23, 1920.

About February 22, 1937 defendant created a revocable living trust in which plaintiffs had beneficial interests and of which Equitable Trust Company was trustee. “Plaintiff” will hereafter refer only to Estelle Kelley unless otherwise indicated. Plaintiff knew about February, 1937 that defendant had created a trust although she did not know its terms and conditions except that about February 23,1937 defendant sent plaintiff a copy of its distribution provisions. They provided that the income was to accumulate during defendant’s lifetime and that plaintiff and her daughter were then to be consecutive life income beneficiaries and thereafter the corpus went to defendant’s estate.

The creation of the trust mentioned was part of a plan declared by defendant to plaintiff to create a fund from which plaintiff would receive an income of at least $20,000 a year for life followed by a life income to the daughter of at least $15,000 annually.

Plaintiff had no knowledge of the corpus of the trust except that she was informed by the defendant that he withdrew 500 shares of duPont common stock therefrom about June 1937, and except that the defendant repeatedly declared and stated that the trust was to be maintained at all times with a corpus consisting of securities with a value of at least $100,000.

With the withdrawal of the duPont common stock in June 1937, plaintiff became aware that the trust could be altered, amended, or revoked at the will of the defendant.

[128]*128In furtherance of defendant’s declared plan as aforesaid, he advised her in writing in 1937 that he was creating such a trust by codicil to his will but plaintiffs have no knowledge as to whether it was ever executed.

After withdrawing the duPont common stock defendant, in June and early July, 1937, made further declarations and representations to plaintiff in the following chronological order:

(1) He declared and made known to plaintiff that he owned more than 500 shares of duPont common stock and would forthwith replace in the corpus of the trust the shares so withdrawn.

(2) He declared that he would not thereafter exercise his right of amendment or revocation of the revocable trust or withdraw any securities until after consultation with plaintiff and her consent thereto.

(3) He declared that the trust both with respect to the remaining securities therein and with respect to the 500 shares of duPont common stock to be restored should be irrevocable.

About July 10, 1937 as evidence of his intent and purpose that there should be an irrevocable trust with reference to the 500 shares of duPont common stock, defendant gave to plaintiff a further holographic memorandum which reads as follows:

“7/10/37
“I have today written the Equitable Tr. Co. to set up an irrevocable Trust in favor of Estelle and Patricia Kelley with 500 duP Com & $6000 in Bonds
“M. duPont Lee”

Plaintiffs allege that such instructions were given in writing to the Equitable but that on about July 23, 1937 they were revoked without such an irrevocable trust ever having been created.

About August 2, 1937 defendant gave plaintiff a draft of the distribution provisions of a proposed irrevocable living trust and declared and made known to plaintiff that these were the distribution provisions of the irrevocable trust intended by his declaration set forth above and referred to in his holographic memorandum of July 10, 1937.

[129]*129Between July 1937 and April 1938 defendant gave plaintiff repeated assurances with respect to the creation by him of an irrevocable trust with distribution provisions substantially like those supplied plaintiff and with a corpus consisting of securities having a then value of at least $100,000 and specifically including 500 shares of duPont common, according to the then capitalization of that company. By reason of the aforementioned distribution provisions of the irrevocable trust plaintiff expected to receive payments of income directly rather than that the income should accumulate during defendant’s lifetime, as provided by the earlier revocable trust. Therefore, when no income was forthcoming plaintiff made further inquiries of the defendant as to this matter. Defendant thereupon on April 6, 1938 gave plaintiff a further holographic memorandum reading as follows:

“4/6/38
“I am setting up an irrevocable trust in favor of Estelle & Patricia Kelley to the amount of one hundred thousand Dollars including those securities already set up at the value as of the date of said trust any addition sum needed to make full amount to be at todays market
“M. duPont Lee
“This is done as a token of friendship for her years of loyalty.”

It is then alleged that

“On this occasion the defendant definitely, explicitly and unequivocally declared and made known to the plaintiff, Estelle Kelley, both by the holographic declaration aforesaid and by his contemporaneous verbal declarations to her, that he was then, there and thereby making a present and irrevocable gift of equitable estates to the plaintiffs in those securities then constituting the portfolio of securities of the revocable trust of February 22, 1937 (Exhibit ‘A’), plus a sufficient amount of securities then owned by him to bring the then value of the corpus thereof up to $100,060. and specifically including as a part of such additional securities 500 shares of duPont common stock, according to the then existing capitalization of that company, the equitable estates and interests of the plaintiffs, respectively, in said trust or trusts being as set forth in the draft distribution provisions of August 2, 1937 (Exhibit ‘D’).”

About May 1, 1938 the defendant further declared to the plaintiff that he was the owner of 300 shares of the capital stock of Visking Corporation (according to its then existing capitalization) which he then and there held subject to and for the account of [130]*130the. irrevocable trust in favor of plaintiffs declared by his holographic memorandum and contemporaneous verbal declarations of April 6, 1938.

Plaintiff from 1938 till 1950 received periodic sums of money both from the Equitable Trust Company and from the defendant. These sums except for gifts were considered by plaintiff to be income from the irrevocable trust or trusts alleged aforesaid.

Upon a sharp decline in her income plaintiff made inquiries of the Equitable Trust Company and of defendant and thereafter obtained counsel. Plaintiff’s inquiries revealed the following:

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Related

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99 A.2d 393 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1953)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A.2d 39, 33 Del. Ch. 126, 1952 Del. Ch. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-lee-delch-1952.