Sankel v. Spector

8 Misc. 3d 670
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Misc. 3d 670 (Sankel v. Spector) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sankel v. Spector, 8 Misc. 3d 670 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold B. Beeler, J.

[671]*671This is a special proceeding brought pursuant to article 77 of the CPLR to determine the status of a cotrustee under an inter vivos trust, the Eleanor Spector Trust, created by the settlor Eleanor Spector on November 24, 2003. Petitioner Joel S. Sankel claims that upon the death of Eleanor Spector on January 29, 2004 he became her successor cotrustee of the trust, but that the trust’s other cotrustee, respondent Linda J. Spector, Eleanor Spector’s daughter, has refused to acknowledge his status as such.

Mr. Sankel has moved by order to show cause to compel Ms. Spector to turn over the books and records of the trust and to otherwise cooperate with him in connection with the management and administration of the trust. Ms. Spector opposes the application and cross-moves to dismiss the petition contending that Mr. Sankel unequivocally declined to accept the trusteeship at a social dinner party held approximately 10 days after her mother’s death, that Mr. Sankel did not have the power to revoke his disclaimer once exercised, and that, upon Mr. Sankel’s declination, Ms. Spector named her fiancé, A1 Jacobs, to serve as her cotrustee. Nominal respondent Barbara Berlin, a cobeneficiary under the trust with Ms. Spector, her sister, supports Mr. Sankel’s application.

Relevant Provisions of the Eleanor Spector Trust

The corpus of the trust consists of a 25% tenancy-in-common interest in two commercial real estate properties in Kings County. The remaining 75% interest in the two properties is owned by other members of Eleanor Spector’s family.

The trust instrument named Eleanor Spector and Ms. Spec-tor as the initial trustees. The designation of successor trustees is governed by paragraph 5.1 of the trust which provides as follows:

“Each acting Trustee and her or his respective successors may designate her or his successor by an acknowledged writing (either before or after the Trustee making the appointment ceases to act as Trustee) delivered to the other Trustee (s), if any, and the designation may be revoked in the same manner by the person making the designation, at any time before the successor qualifies. If Eleanor Spector or Linda J. Spector shall cease serving as Trustee without having appointed a successor, Joel Sankel shall act as co-Trustee in her place instead.” (Emphasis added.)

[672]*672Paragraph 5.2 of the trust authorizes the designation by an existing trustee of a successor trustee after all those previously designated have failed to qualify or ceased to act. It also provides for the appointment of an additional trustee. Paragraph 5.3 of the trust requires that all such trustee designations be by an acknowledged writing.

Resignation of an existing trustee is provided for in paragraph 5.5 of the trust, under which any trustee may resign by means of a written instrument duly acknowledged and delivered to the remaining trustees, if any.

Under paragraph 2.1 of the trust, the income from the trust’s interest in the two Kings County properties is distributed to the two designated beneficiaries, Ms. Spector and Ms. Berlin, equally during their joint lifetime and thereafter to the survivor of them. The trust also allows in paragraph 2.2 for any trustee, other than either of the settlor’s daughters, to distribute principal to either or both of the daughters in equal or unequal amounts.

Finally, paragraph 2.3 provides that, upon the death of the surviving respondent, the trust terminates and the remaining accrued interest and principal of the trust is to be distributed to Mark Pariser, the settlor’s grandson and son of Ms. Berlin.

Respective Contentions of the Parties

Mr. Sankel contends that pursuant to paragraph 5.1 of the trust he automatically became a cotrustee upon the death of Eleanor Spector inasmuch as she had not appointed a successor cotrustee before her demise, and that he remains cotrustee to this day because he never formally resigned the office by means of a written instrument duly acknowledged and delivered to the remaining trustee as required by paragraph 5.5 of the trust.

Ms. Spector argues that Eleanor Spector’s designation of Mr. Sankel as successor cotrustee in the absence of her having appointed a successor before her death as provided in paragraph 5.1 does not in and of itself confer successor cotrustee status on him and that a named cotrustee must first accept the office before being legally authorized to undertake its duties. Ms. Spector contends that Mr. Sankel orally refused to accept the trusteeship at a dinner on February 9, 2004 and that he lacks the legal authority to go back on his word and assume the co-trustee position. She claims further that upon Mr. Sankel’s disclaimer of the trusteeship, she designated Mr. Jacobs as her cotrustee pursuant to paragraphs 5.2 and 5.3 of the trust.

[673]*673Mr. Sankel responds that he never unequivocally told Ms. Spector and Mr. Jacobs at the February 9, 2004 dinner that he was declining to serve as cotrustee and that his actions subsequent to the dinner in undertaking the duties of a trustee confirm this. Therefore, even assuming a person designated as a trustee in a trust instrument cannot lawfully act as such unless he first accepts the appointment and that such person can orally renounce or decline his trusteeship, contentions with which Mr. Sankel vehemently disagrees, Mr. Sankel argues that he did, in fact, accept the trusteeship and that he has never disclaimed the office, orally or otherwise.

In order to resolve the conflicting factual contentions of the parties, the court ordered a hearing, held over two days, at which testimony was elicited from Mr. Sankel, Ms. Spector and Ms. Berlin, Mr. Jacobs and James Ledley, the attorney who drafted the trust.

Hearing Testimony

Designation of Mr, Sankel as Successor Trustee

The circumstances surrounding the creation of the trust as well as the events leading up to the February 9, 2004 dinner are largely not in dispute. The testimony at the hearing revealed that the settlor Eleanor Spector designated Mr. Sankel as successor cotrustee in the trust instrument at the suggestion of her daughter Ms. Spector because of the professional relationship and friendship between them. Mr. Sankel had served as Ms. Spector’s divorce attorney and, after the divorce, had helped her gain the skills necessary to reenter the work force. Mr. Sankel had also represented Eleanor Spector in litigation over the management of the Kings County properties which ultimately became the corpus of the trust.

After the trust instrument was created by Mr. Ledley, an attorney who specializes in trusts and estates for whom Ms. Spec-tor had worked as a paralegal, Mr. Sankel was asked to prepare the deeds to effectuate the transfer of legal title of Eleanor Spector’s 25% interest in the properties to the trust.

February 9, 2004 Dinner

Sometime shortly after Eleanor Spector’s death on January 29, 2004, Ms. Spector invited Mr. Sankel to have dinner with her and Mr. Jacobs. She wanted Mr. Sankel to meet Mr. Jacobs and to make some minor revisions in her will. A few days before the scheduled dinner, Ms. Spector decided to ask Mr. Sankel to decline the position of successor cotrustee in favor of Mr. Jacobs [674]*674who had agreed to serve in the event Mr. Sankel stepped aside. On the day of the dinner, Ms. Spector asked Mr.

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Related

Sankel v. Spector
33 A.D.3d 167 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Misc. 3d 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sankel-v-spector-nysupct-2005.