Shelden v. TRUST CO. OF VIRGIN ISLANDS, LTD.

535 F. Supp. 667
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 6, 1982
DocketCiv. No. 78-1400
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 535 F. Supp. 667 (Shelden v. TRUST CO. OF VIRGIN ISLANDS, LTD.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelden v. TRUST CO. OF VIRGIN ISLANDS, LTD., 535 F. Supp. 667 (prd 1982).

Opinion

535 F.Supp. 667 (1982)

Francis D. SHELDEN, as Settlor of the Francis D. Shelden Revocable Inter-vivos Trust, and L. Bennet Young, Esq., as Protector of the Trust, Plaintiffs,
v.
The TRUST COMPANY OF the VIRGIN ISLANDS, LTD., and Adam Starchild, Individually and as Director and Trustee, Defendants.

Civ. No. 78-1400.

United States District Court, D. Puerto Rico.

April 6, 1982.

Francisco M. Troncoso, Fiddler, González & Rodríguez, San Juan, P. R., for plaintiffs.

Harvey B. Nachman, Santurce, P. R., for defendants.

*668 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

CEREZO, District Judge.

On September 28, 1976 plaintiff Francis D. Shelden, as settlor, created a trust to be governed by the law of the British Virgin Islands known as the Francis D. Shelden Revocable Inter Vivos Trust. The trust deed established that all of the income from the trust would be distributed for the benefit of the settlor during his lifetime. Upon his death, the deed provided for the payment of monies and the distribution of assets of the trust to numerous beneficiaries. The property held in trust involves personal and real property of substantial value. The Trust Company of the Virgin Islands, Ltd. of Tortola, British Virgin Islands was appointed to act as trustee.[1]

Article 4.2 of the trust deed also provided that the settlor could, by written instrument delivered to the Trustee, designate a Protector of the Trust who would have the authority to perform every act and to exercise every power vested in or reserved to the Settlor in his place and stead as fully as settlor might do, including the removal of the Trustee and the designation of a successor trustee, except that he could not revoke, amend or otherwise modify the provisions of the trust.

During his lifetime, the settlor could withdraw any amount or all of the principal of the trust from time to time and he could add any property to it. The trustee and his successors were granted unrestricted power to invest and reinvest the trust property, to hold funds uninvested, to buy, sell, mortgage, lease, pledge, assign, transfer or otherwise dispose of the real property and personal property constituting the trust estates on such terms and conditions as in his discretion he may desire, to vote stocks held in trust and to carry on any business in which the settlor could be involved or have ownership interest at the time of his death. The trustee could be removed by the settlor as sole beneficiary, by the protector of the trust or by a majority of the beneficiaries with contingent interests and replaced by a successor trustee of his or their choice.

In a written instrument signed on October 9, 1976, the settlor designated co-plaintiff L. Bennett Young as protector of the trust with the right to exercise all powers vested in him by the trust deed, as stated before. Young accepted the designation in writing and the acting trustee, The Trust Company of the Virgin Islands, represented by its director Adam Starchild, recognized the authority of the protector as set forth in the Trust.[2]

Such was the state of affairs when this diversity action was filed on July 21, 1978 by Francis D. Shelden and L. Bennett Young, as settlor and protector of the trust, respectively, against The Trust Company of the Virgin Islands, Ltd. and its director Adam Starchild. Starchild was served in Puerto Rico on August 9, 1978. An amended complaint was subsequently filed. Plaintiffs seek to obtain relief for breach of trust alleging that the trustee failed to perform the trust duties. They request an accounting in accordance with the provisions of the trust deed, full disclosure of defendants' financial activities, removal of the acting trustee and a transfer of the corpus of the trust to a successor trustee so that the same can be preserved and administered within the jurisdiction and under the laws of the United States. Defendants immediately requested quashing of the summons and complaint served upon The Trust Company of the Virgin Islands, Ltd. (The Trust Company) and sought dismissal of the action against them charging failure to state a claim and forum non conveniens as to Starchild and lack of jurisdiction as to the company. Since then the case has slowly tread a tortuous path. It constitutes a lesson in frustration for the simple reason that co-plaintiff Shelden should have recognized early on that he was neither domiciled in the State of Michigan nor an indispensable party to this action and because defendants have never seriously addressed the *669 contention that the protector can continue the action despite the settlor's absence other than continuously asserting that without the settlor this case could not go on.

In summarizing its procedural development so as not to stray from the fundamental issues pending decision, suffice it to say that the suit was initially dismissed by Chief Judge Toledo on the grounds that the Court had no jurisdiction over the trust company since it transacted no business in Puerto Rico, that Starchild's liability would be predicated on his actions as director of the Trust Company and that the balance of conveniences pointed towards Tortola as the proper forum. On reconsideration, the Court examined multiple documents submitted by plaintiffs and vacated its prior judgment of dismissal, expressly finding that the evidence submitted by plaintiffs established, among other things, that Starchild was one of the two directors of the Trust Company and one of the two stockholders, that he made representations to Shelden on the administration and day-to-day operations of the Trust Company, that all of Shelden's contacts with the Trust Company had been through Starchild, that Starchild wrote Shelden twenty-six letters and aerograms from San Juan and was sent twenty-seven letters by Shelden to his San Juan address and that he sent Shelden cables from San Juan and phoned him several times from here. The Court found that the cause of action did not arise from contacts with Puerto Rico of the Trust Company via Starchild but from the relationship between the company and Starchild with plaintiffs, that during the years 1977-78 Starchild may have conducted the bulk of the Trust Company's affairs from Puerto Rico and, as its agent, availed himself of the privilege of conducting business within the forum state. Upon reconsidering its prior ruling, it discarded as inexact its initial determination that the Trust Company appeared to have operated only in Tortola and found instead that it operated wherever Starchild happened to be, which between September 1977 and July 1978 frequently happened to be Puerto Rico. The motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction was renewed by defendants on May 2, 1979. Opposition was filed yet the matter was still pending when various other motions were filed—a Motion to Dismiss under Rule 37, a Motion to Add and Drop Parties filed by plaintiffs on November 15, 1979 and supplemented on December 12, 1979 and the latest motion of defendants of January 29, 1981 entitled Motion to Dismiss the Complaint and All Motions Except for the Motion for Attorneys' Fees for Obstinacy. After examining the various matters discussed by way of motions, in oral argument and during the evidentiary hearing, we are convinced that Shelden's claim must be dismissed not only for his refusal to be deposed[3] but because he is not domiciled in the State of Michigan, as he alleged in the complaint. However, defendant's main thrust for dismissal has been Mr. Shelden's newly-discovered status as an alien.

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Related

Young v. Pannell Fitzpatrick & Co.
641 F. Supp. 581 (D. Puerto Rico, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
535 F. Supp. 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelden-v-trust-co-of-virgin-islands-ltd-prd-1982.