MCDONALD, IDALYNN LUPPINO, MTR. OF ( 2012 )


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  •         SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
    Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department
    940
    CA 11-01676
    PRESENT: CENTRA, J.P., PERADOTTO, CARNI, LINDLEY, AND SCONIERS, JJ.
    IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUSTS FOR STEPHANIE
    MCDONALD AND KELLY MCDONALD CREATED IN THE
    WILL OF IGNATIUS S. LUPPINO, DECEASED.
    ------------------------------------------         MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
    STEPHANIE MCDONALD AND KELLY MCDONALD,
    PETITIONERS-RESPONDENTS;
    IDALYNN LUPPINO MCDONALD, TRUSTEE,
    RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
    (APPEAL NO. 1.)
    BARRY J. DONOHUE, TONAWANDA, FOR RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
    KEVIN T. STOCKER, TONAWANDA, FOR PETITIONERS-RESPONDENTS.
    Appeal from an order of the Surrogate’s Court, Erie County
    (Barbara Howe, S.), entered December 20, 2010. The order found that
    Idalynn Luppino McDonald had abused her fiduciary responsibilities as
    trustee.
    It is hereby ORDERED that the order so appealed from is
    unanimously reversed on the law without costs and the petition is
    dismissed.
    Memorandum: In appeal No. 1, respondent (hereafter, trustee)
    appeals from an order determining that she failed to observe the terms
    of two testamentary trusts and abused her fiduciary responsibilities
    with respect to each trust and setting forth a date upon which the
    matter would be deemed finally submitted, whereupon Surrogate’s Court
    would determine the affirmative relief to be granted. In appeal No.
    2, the trustee appeals from an order that denied her motion for leave
    to renew or reargue the “conclusion [of the Surrogate] that [she]
    ‘abused her fiduciary responsibilities.’ ” In appeal No. 3, she
    appeals from an order that, following an evidentiary hearing, removed
    her as trustee, bypassed the alternate trustee named in the subject
    last will and testament and appointed a successor trustee. In appeal
    No. 4, she appeals from an order that, inter alia, awarded attorney
    fees to petitioners in the amount of $14,600.
    Petitioners, who are twin   sisters, commenced this proceeding
    seeking, inter alia, to remove   their mother as the trustee of each
    testamentary trust created for   them by the last will and testament of
    their grandfather, who was the   trustee’s father. Petitioners were 19
    years of age when the petition   was filed. Petitioners’ central claim
    is that the trustee refused to   make discretionary distributions from
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    CA 11-01676
    the trusts for payment of their college expenses and for the purchase
    of an automobile for each of them.
    Insofar as relevant to these appeals, the trusts provide that
    “[t]he Trustee shall pay or apply to or for the use of each such
    living grandchild of mine so much of the income, accumulated income
    and principal of such share at any time and from time to time as the
    Trustee deems advisable in [the Trustee’s] sole discretion not subject
    to judicial review, to provide for such grandchild’s maintenance,
    support, education, health and welfare, even to the point of
    exhausting the same.” The trusts also provide for periodic fractional
    distributions of principal and accumulated income when the
    beneficiaries reach the ages of 30, 32 and 35, at which time the
    trusts terminate. On the return date of the order to show cause that
    initiated the proceeding, the trustee appeared with counsel who served
    a letter response to the petition and made a representation in court
    that it was to be considered as the trustee’s answer. No objection
    was raised by petitioners thereto, and we thus conclude that they
    “proceeded on the theory that [they] had to prove [their] claim as if
    it stood controverted. [They] did not seek to proceed as if upon a
    default” (Matter of Bemis v Larkin, 249 App Div 762, 763).
    Petitioners further waived any objection to the lack of verification
    by failing to reject the trustee’s pleading pursuant to CPLR 3022 in a
    timely manner (see Matter of Rouson, 32 AD3d 956, 959). Thus, we
    conclude that the Surrogate erred in sua sponte determining that the
    trustee was in default in pleading and in proceeding to decide the
    merits of the petition as if it was uncontroverted (see generally
    DiPietro v Seth Rotter, P.C., 267 AD2d 1, 2).
    Turning to the merits of the orders in appeal Nos. 1 and 3, we
    conclude on this record that the Surrogate erred in determining in
    appeal No. 1 that the trustee had failed to observe the terms of the
    trusts and had abused her fiduciary responsibilities with respect to
    each trust. The Surrogate further erred in appeal No. 3 in granting
    affirmative relief, i.e., ultimately removing the trustee and
    summarily bypassing the alternate trustee named by the testator,
    petitioners’ grandfather, in order to appoint a successor trustee not
    named in the will. We therefore reverse the order in appeal No. 1 and
    dismiss the petition, and we vacate the order in appeal No. 3 inasmuch
    as the petition has been dismissed. “As a general rule the courts of
    this State will respect and not interfere with a trustee’s decision
    unless it can be shown that the decision constituted an abuse of the
    discretion given the trustee by the testator” (Matter of Hoelzer v
    Blum, 93 AD2d 605, 612). The judicial deference afforded trustees
    under this rule is particularly broad where the testator has
    manifested an intention to grant the trustee greater than ordinary
    latitude in exercising discretionary judgment (see Restatement [Third]
    of Trusts § 50, Comment c on Subsection [1]). Here, the testator
    manifested a clear intention to grant the trustee the greatest
    latitude permitted by law in exercising discretionary judgment. While
    the phrase used by the testator, “as the Trustee deems advisable in
    [the Trustee’s] sole discretion not subject to judicial review,” does
    not relieve the trustee of all accountability, it manifests the
    testator’s clear intent to grant the trustee the broadest extended
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    discretion in making discretionary distributions of income and/or
    principal (see Matter of Maul v Fitzgerald, 78 AD2d 706, 707-708;
    Matter of Damon, 71 AD2d 916, 916-917; Matter of Moloshok v Blum, 
    109 Misc 2d 660
    , 661; Restatement [Third] of Trusts § 50).
    Notwithstanding the extended discretion granted to the trustee by
    the testator, the exercise of the trustee’s judgment in making
    discretionary distributions should be evaluated in light of the
    availability of other resources, including public benefits and the
    parental duty of support (see Restatement [Third] of Trusts § 50,
    Comment e on Subsection [2]; Matter of Roberts [New York City Health &
    Hosps. Corp.], 61 NY2d 782, 783-784; Matter of Escher, 52 NY2d 1006,
    1008). Here, the record establishes that the trustee, in her capacity
    as petitioners’ parent, was the custodian of a New York 529 College
    Savings account for each petitioner and that the account balances were
    more than adequate to provide for petitioners’ college expenses. We
    also note that the college costs of petitioner Kelly McDonald for the
    2010-2011 academic year were fully paid by public benefits and that,
    notably, Stephanie McDonald failed to complete the necessary
    applications for public college benefits and tuition assistance for
    that academic year. We thus conclude that the trustee did not abuse
    the extended discretion granted to her by the testator by declining to
    make distributions from the trust for college costs payable through
    other sources or in furtherance of the desires of petitioners to
    purchase automobiles. While we are mindful of the friction between
    the teenaged petitioners and their mother, we nonetheless adhere to
    the sound rule that mere friction or disharmony between a trustee and
    one or more beneficiaries is not a sufficient ground to justify the
    removal of the trustee (see Burke v Baudouine, 190 App Div 186, 187,
    affd 232 NY 532; Matter of Edwards, 274 App Div 244, 247-248; Matter
    of Graves, 
    110 NYS2d 763
    , 767 [Sur Ct]). “If it were, an obstreperous
    malintentioned beneficiary could cause the removal of a competent
    trustee through no fault on the latter’s part” (Graves, 110 NYS2d at
    767).
    Finally, we dismiss the appeal from the order in appeal No. 2,
    and we reverse the order in appeal No. 4. Insofar as the order in
    appeal No. 2 denied that part of the motion for leave to reargue, no
    appeal lies from the order (see Empire Ins. Co. v Food City, 167 AD2d
    983, 984) and, insofar as the order in appeal No. 2 denied that part
    of the motion for leave to renew, the appeal is moot in view of our
    determination in appeal No. 1 (see McCabe v CSX Transp., Inc., 27 AD3d
    1150, 1151). With respect to the award of, inter alia, attorney fees
    to petitioners in appeal No. 4, we note that “it is well settled that
    a Surrogate has the discretion to order a fiduciary to pay [attorney]
    fees” (Matter of Manufacturers & Traders Trust Co. [Adams], 72 AD3d
    1573, 1574; see generally Matter of Garvin, 256 NY 518, 521-522), but
    such fees are not awarded “where there is no agreement, statute or
    rule providing for such fees and where the losing party has not acted
    maliciously or in bad faith” (Matter of Saxton, 274 AD2d 110, 121).
    In light of our determination in appeal Nos. 1 and 3, we conclude that
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    CA 11-01676
    petitioners are not entitled to an award of attorney fees.
    Entered:   November 9, 2012                     Frances E. Cafarell
    Clerk of the Court
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CA 11-01676

Filed Date: 11/9/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/8/2016