Lindie L. Banks v. Northern Trust Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedMarch 5, 2020
Docket2:16-cv-09141
StatusUnknown

This text of Lindie L. Banks v. Northern Trust Corporation (Lindie L. Banks v. Northern Trust Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindie L. Banks v. Northern Trust Corporation, (C.D. Cal. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL MINUTES -- GENERAL Case No. CV 16-9141-JFW (JCx) Date: March 5, 2020 Title: Lindie L. Banks, et al. -v- Northern Trust Corporation

PRESENT: HONORABLE JOHN F. WALTER, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE Shannon Reilly None Present Courtroom Deputy Court Reporter ATTORNEYS PRESENT FOR PLAINTIFFS: ATTORNEYS PRESENT FOR DEFENDANTS: None None PROCEEDINGS (IN CHAMBERS): ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [filed 1/27/20; Docket No. 114] On January 27, 2020, Defendants Northern Trust Corporation (“NT Corp.”) and The Northern Trust Company (“Northern”) (collectively, “Defendants”) filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (“Motion”). On January 31, 2020, Plaintiffs Lindie L. Banks (“Banks”) and Erica LeBlanc (“LeBlanc”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed their Opposition. On February 10, 2020, Defendants filed a Reply. Pursuant to Rule 78 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Local Rule 7-15, the Court found the matter appropriate for submission on the papers without oral argument. The matter was, therefore, removed from the Court’s February 24, 2020 hearing calendar and the parties were given advance notice. After considering the moving, opposing, and reply papers, and the arguments therein, the Court rules as follows: I. Factual and Procedural Background1 A. The Parties Northern is a financial services company that was founded in 1889 and is a wholly owned subsidiary of NT Corp. Northern provides asset services, fund administration, asset management, fiduciary, and banking solutions for corporations, institutions, families, and individuals. Northern 1 To the extent any of these facts are disputed, they are not material to the disposition of this motion. In addition, to the extent that the Court has relied on evidence to which the parties have objected, the Court has considered and overruled those objections. As to the remaining objections, the Court finds that it is unnecessary to rule on those objections because the disputed evidence was not relied on by the Court. services client assets through its Wealth Management business, which provides investment management, philanthropic, and other services to individuals, families, business owners, professionals, retirees, and privately held businesses. Northern serves as trustee for nearly 30,000 unique trusts in the United States. In this role, Northern carries out varying trust terms and performs accounting, reporting, investment management, tax, and other administrative services. Banks, who is 87 years old, is a beneficiary of two trusts: (1) the irrevocable Katherine Lindstrom Trust (the “KL Trust”), created in 1961; and (2) the Ralph G. And Katherine Lindstrom Trust (the “RGKL Trust”), created in 1964 and which became irrevocable in 1975.2 LeBlanc is Banks’ daughter and a remainder beneficiary of the KL Trust and the RGKL Trust (collectively, the “Lindstrom Trusts”). Northern has served as the trustee for the Lindstrom Trusts since the early 1990s and has sole discretion on how to manage the trusts’ assets.3 B. Management of the Lindstrom Trusts by Northern 1. Investment of the Lindstrom Trusts’ Assets Grantors establish trusts, which are defined by written instruments, to serve the particular desires, needs, and circumstances of the grantors and beneficiaries. As trustee of the Lindstrom Trusts, Northern is charged with carrying out the specific terms of the Lindstrom Trusts and performing other services, such as accounting, reporting, and investment management. In accordance with its general practice, Northern assigned both a trust administrator, who is also known as a “relationship manager,” and a portfolio manager, or “PM,” to the Lindstrom Trusts. The relationship manager is responsible for general trust administration, including making distributions and communicating with beneficiaries. Working with the trust administrator, the PM sets an investment objective that defines the risk characteristics and investment goals for the Lindstrom Trusts and influences the investment strategy selected by the PM. Since at least 2011, the investment objective selected for both Lindstrom Trusts has been “Growth With Income,” which is “intended to provide long-term capital appreciation and current income” for “moderately aggressive investors with a long-term investment horizon.”4 See Account Summaries (Exhs. 8-15 to the Singer Decl.). 2 The KL Trust and the RGKL Trust are attached to the Declaration of Stacy E. Singer (“Singer Decl.”) as Exhibits 3 and 5, respectively. 3 The Lindstrom Trusts originally designated Title Insurance and Trust Company (“TI”) as trustee, which was later consolidated with Trust Services of America, Inc. (“TSA”). TSA administered the Lindstrom Trusts until Northern acquired them in the early 1990s. 4 The Lindstrom Trusts’ investment objectives and portfolios have varied over time. Since at least 2000, the trusts have been invested in at least one Northern proprietary mutual fund. In January 2000, Banks asked Northern to redirect the focus of the trusts’ portfolios in order to increase her monthly income, and Northern complied with her instructions. Banks also has requested specific investments. In 2004, the trusts’ PM rebalanced the Lindstrom Trusts’ portfolios using a model portfolio that included several proprietary index funds. The Lindstrom Trusts’ instruments specifically authorize Northern to “invest and reinvest all principal . . . in any kind of investment” using the “judgment and care, under the circumstances then prevailing, which men of prudence, discretion and intelligence exercise in the management of their own affairs.” In implementing those provisions of the Lindstrom Trusts, the PMs select from among hundreds of investment options approved by Northern’s Investment Advisory Committee (“IAC”) for trust investments, which include: (1) proprietary and non-proprietary mutual funds; (2) individual equities; (3) individual fixed-income securities; and (4) model portfolios comprised of mutual funds, ETFs, and similar vehicles, which are constructed to achieve particular investment objectives, and are reviewed and approved for use in trust accounts by the IAC.5 Since late 2008, Northern has invested the Lindstrom Trusts’s assets in a model portfolio that includes seven proprietary index funds (the “Northern Index Funds”): (1) the Northern Stock Index; (2) the Northern Small Cap Index; (3) the Northern International Equity Index; (4) the Northern Mid Cap Index; (5) the Northern Emerging Markets Equity Index; (6) the Northern Global Real Estate Index; and (7) the Northern Bond Index. The Lindstrom Trusts have held investments in all seven of the Northern Index funds continuously since 2011. The Lindstrom Trusts’ PMs regularly reviewed the performance of the investments and whether the trusts’ investment allocations conform to their assigned investment objective. The PMs conduct a formal review at least once per year to determine whether the investments remained appropriate for the trust. Northern has sent quarterly statements to Banks since at least 2000, and to LeBlanc since at least 2008. In each quarterly statement, Northern provided a complete listing of the Lindstrom Trusts’ holdings as of the end of the quarter. In fact, both Plaintiffs admitted in their depositions that they personally received the quarterly statements, which advise that “[c]laims against the trustee(s) may not be made after the expiration of three years from the date you receive an account or report disclosing facts giving rise to the claim.” Northern has also provided each proprietary fund’s annual summary prospectus to Banks, which disclosed the expense ratio of each fund.

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Bluebook (online)
Lindie L. Banks v. Northern Trust Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindie-l-banks-v-northern-trust-corporation-cacd-2020.