Mary Kirgan v. Manufacturers & Traders Trust

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 2020
Docket19-1009
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mary Kirgan v. Manufacturers & Traders Trust (Mary Kirgan v. Manufacturers & Traders Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Kirgan v. Manufacturers & Traders Trust, (4th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

UNPUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 19-1009

MARY ANNE KIRGAN, as successor trustee of the Clarence Manger and Audrey Cordero Plitt Trust; ROBERT S. KIRGAN, as successor trustee of the Clarence Manger and Audrey Cordero Plitt Trust,

Plaintiffs - Appellants,

v.

MANUFACTURERS AND TRADERS TRUST COMPANY, d/b/a M&T Bank,

Defendant - Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria. Claude M. Hilton, Senior District Judge. (1:17-cv-00327-CMH-TCB)

Submitted: March 19, 2020 Decided: April 17, 2020

Before WILKINSON, QUATTLEBAUM, and RUSHING, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Wilkinson wrote the opinion, in which Judge Rushing joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

Michael S. Nadel, MCDERMOTT WILL & EMERY LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. John C. Hayes, Jr., Brian J. Whittaker, NIXON PEABODY LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

2 WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

In this appeal, we determine whether the individual trustees of a charitable trust may

remove the corporate trustee without cause. The individual trustees argue that, while they

could remove the original corporate trustee only for cause, a merger has made this

restriction inapplicable. In contrast, the corporate trustee argues that, by virtue of a merger,

it has inherited both the rights and obligations of the original corporate trustee—including

the right to be free from removal without cause.

We agree with the corporate trustee, as did the court below. The individual trustees

here lack the power to remove the current corporate trustee without cause. Several related

issues appealed by the individual trustees are also without merit. For this reason, we affirm

the district court’s holdings in full.

I.

A.

Clarence Plitt, a Maryland resident, executed a will in 1976 and passed away later

that year. In his will, Plitt created the Clarence Manger and Audrey Cordero Plitt Trust (the

“Plitt Trust”), a charitable trust which provides educational institutions with grants to be

used for need-based loans to students. The will named Plitt’s longtime domestic partner

Mary E. McC. Kirgan (“Mary Kirgan”) as individual trustee and the First National Bank

of Maryland (“First National”) as corporate trustee. It further directed that, once Mary

Kirgan stepped down, two individual trustees would serve along with the corporate trustee.

The will spoke briefly to the individual trustees’ ability to remove the corporate

trustee:

3 The individual Trustees serving at any time hereunder may by their joint action, change any corporate Trustee serving hereunder and appoint a new successor corporate Trustee to serve in its place and stead. Such action shall be effective upon their delivery of a written instrument to the current corporate Trustee evidencing their decision to terminate its position and status as corporate Trustee and designating and appointing a new successor corporate Trustee.

J.A. 94 (emphasis added). No other references to a “successor corporate Trustee” are found

in the will. See J.A. 90-94.

Around a decade later, Mary Kirgan and First National jointly petitioned the Circuit

Court for Baltimore City to, among other things, have the will “clarified to provide that the

Corporate Trustee may only be removed ‘for cause.’” J.A. 95-96. The court agreed to this

request, issuing an order—using exact wording suggested by the petitioning parties—

declaring “that the individual Trustees acting jointly pursuant to [the will] do not have the

power to remove the originally named corporate Trustee, except for cause,” (the “1985

order”). J.A. 104; see also J.A. 100.

A detailed review of First National’s corporate history is not needed to understand

this case. Suffice it to say, for almost two decades after issuance of the 1985 order, Mary

Kirgan and a member of the First National corporate family served without issue as trustees

for the Plitt Trust. Two pieces of information are relevant for our purposes. First, in the late

1990s, First National changed its name to Allfirst Bank. Second, in 2003, Allfirst merged

with the Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company (“M&T Bank”), setting the stage for

the current dispute.

At the time of the merger, Mary Kirgan remained individual trustee for the Plitt

Trust. She was sent a notice regarding the Allfirst-M&T merger, which informed her that

4 M&T had assumed the position of “successor fiduciary” for the trust and outlined her

ability to object to its appointment. J.A. 107-108. Over a month later, Kirgan’s attorney

sent M&T a letter requesting that the bank “acknowledge and agree that [Kirgan] . . . and

thereafter the successor trustees . . . have the right to replace the corporate trustee including

M&T Bank as co-trustee with or without cause.” J.A. 109-10 (emphasis added). The letter

included specified language to this effect, and requested that M&T include that exact

language in its response. It also indicated that Kirgan would not object to M&T’s

appointment if she received a satisfactory response from the bank.

Soon after, M&T sent a letter to Mary Kirgan addressing the individual trustees’

removal power. This letter stated that, “[a]t such time as more than one individual co-

trustee is serving, the individual co-trustees, acting jointly, have the power to remove and

replace M&T (or any other successor corporate co-trustee that may be serving from time

to time).” J.A. 114. Notably, M&T’s response did not include Kirgan’s requested language

allowing M&T’s removal “without cause.” Despite this omission, Kirgan did not object to

M&T’s appointment.

Mary Kirgan passed away the following year. Her children, Mary Anne Kirgan and

Robert Kirgan (“the Kirgans”), became successor individual trustees of the Plitt Trust.

Over a decade later, in 2015 and 2016, M&T raised some concerns about the Kirgans’

management of the trust and compensation level. Soon after, in late 2016, the Kirgans sent

M&T a letter stating that they had elected to remove it as corporate trustee and to replace

it with a local bank. M&T responded that it was “unable to comply” with this request

5 because, under the 1985 order, “the individual Trustees may only remove the Corporate

Trustee for cause.” J.A. 55.

B.

The Kirgans filed suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of

Virginia. They brought five counts: (I) a request for a declaratory judgment that they had

the power to remove M&T as corporate trustee without cause, and had already done so;

(II) alternatively, a request for the court to remove M&T as corporate trustee for cause;

(III) a breach of contract claim, alleging that M&T had violated an agreement it made with

Mary Kirgan in correspondence following the Allfirst merger; (IV) a breach of fiduciary

duty claim; and (V) a fraud claim based on the same conduct underlying the breach of

contract claim. 1 The Kirgans’ complaint concluded with a demand for a jury trial “on all

issues so triable.” J.A. 46.

The district court resolved Count I in M&T’s favor, holding from the bench that

M&T could not be removed as corporate trustee without cause. The court noted that the

original corporate trustee, First National, could be removed only for cause. It held that

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