IMO Estate & Trust of James Kalil, Sr. Kalil v. Kalil ( 2018 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN THE MATTERS OF THE ESTATE AND                   )
    TRUST OF JAMES KALIL, SR., deceased,               )
    and KALIL ASSOCIATES, a Delaware general           )
    partnership.                                       )
    )
    DONALD J. KALIL, executor of the Estate of         )
    James Kalil Sr., and trustee of the James Kalil,   )
    Sr. Revocable Trust, and on behalf of Kalil        )
    Associates, a Delaware general partnership,        )
    )
    Petitioner,                                  )
    )
    v.                                    )   C.A. No. 11047-MZ
    )
    JAMES P. KALIL, JANICE KETCHAM,                    )
    LAURA BEDROSSIAN and JACQUELINE                    )
    KALIL,                                             )
    )
    Respondents.                                 )
    MASTER’S REPORT
    (Motions for Summary Judgment)
    Date Submitted: October 29, 2017
    Draft Report: November 3, 2017
    Final Report: February 7, 2018
    David J. Ferry, Jr., Esquire and Rick S. Miller, Esquire, of FERRY JOSEPH, P.A.,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Petitioner.
    James P. Kalil, pro se, Respondent.
    Neil Lapinski, Esquire, of GORDON, FOURNARIS & MAMMARELLA, P.A.,
    Wilmington Delaware; Attorneys for Janice Ketcham.
    Thomas A. Uebler, Esquire, of COOCH & TAYLOR, P.A., Wilmington,
    Delaware; Attorneys for Jacqueline Kalil.
    Laura Bedrossian Gibson, pro se, Respondent.
    ZURN, Master
    2
    In this estate matter, the decedent had a comprehensive and oft-adjusted
    estate plan. However, the decedent did not title two primary assets, specifically an
    investment account and a property with an office building on it, in a manner that
    would permit their distribution according to the more recent features of his estate
    plan. One of the decedent’s children, the executor of the decedent’s estate, seeks
    to reform a trust so that the account is held in a more recently executed trust, and to
    dissolve a general partnership so that the property is held in a more recently
    created limited partnership. Another of the decedent’s children objects and raises
    other claims regarding the estate.
    In this final report on cross-motions for summary judgment, I conclude that
    the decedent’s titling of the investment account cannot be addressed by trust
    reformation. I also conclude a general partnership holding title to the property
    should be dissolved and the property conveyed to a limited partnership that all
    believed had held the property for over a decade. I conclude that the objector’s
    claims with regard to the decedent’s estate and testamentary documents are time-
    barred. I recommend the Court grant the petitioner’s motion for summary
    judgment in part and deny it in part, and deny the objector’s motion for summary
    judgment. Finally, I recommend the Court permit some, but not all, of the
    petitioner’s attorneys’ fees to be paid from the decedent’s trusts.
    I.      Background1
    A. The Parties and Entities
    Dr. James Kalil, Sr. (“Settlor”) died testate on November 8, 2014. He was
    survived by his children, petitioner Donald J. Kalil (“Petitioner”) and respondents
    James Kalil, Jr. (“Respondent”), Laura Bedrossian Gibson (“Laura”) and Janice
    Ketcham (“Janice”).2 Settlor was also survived by Respondent’s daughter
    Jacqueline Kalil (“Jacqueline”). Settlor’s wife Claire Kalil (“Claire”) predeceased
    him.
    Settlor created two revocable trusts: one in 1989, and one in 1997 (“the
    1989 Trust” and “the 1997 Trust”). When Settlor died, the bulk of Settlor’s liquid
    wealth was in an account titled in the name of the 1989 Trust. Petitioner is
    executor of Settlor’s estate and trustee of Settlor’s 1997 Trust, as amended.3
    Petitioner, Respondent, Janice, and Laura are co-trustees of the 1989 Trust.4
    The Kalil family owned and ran an investment firm, now known as Affinity
    Wealth Management, Inc. (“AWM”), and formerly known as Compu-Val
    Investments, Inc. (“Compu-Val”). The firm has its principal place of business at
    1702 Lovering Avenue, Wilmington, Delaware 19806 (“the Property”). Settlor
    1
    The facts are drawn from the pleadings and the evidence submitted by the parties. See Ct. Ch.
    R. 56(c).
    2
    Because many relevant parties share the same last name, I use first names in pursuit of clarity.
    I intend no disrespect.
    3
    Pet’r Opening Br. App. Ex. [hereinafter Pet’r Ex.] 7A; Pet’r Ex. 5D.
    4
    Pet’r Ex. 2, Art. XV.
    2
    and Claire created Kalil Associates, a Delaware general partnership, to acquire,
    hold, and manage the Property. Kalil Associates acquired the property on
    February 1, 1985.5 Settlor and Claire were the sole partners of Kalil Associates.
    The record title of the Property is still held by Kalil Associates.
    On May 10, 2000, Settlor and Claire formed Kalil Family Limited
    Partnership, a Delaware limited partnership (“Kalil LP”).6 Kalil LP was created to
    pass the Property’s value to their children in a tax-efficient manner.7 The Property
    was never transferred from Kalil Associates to Kalil LP.
    B. Settlor’s Estate Plan
    On February 23, 1989, Settlor executed the 1989 Trust along with a
    pourover will.8 The 1989 Trust divides its property evenly among Settlor’s four
    children.9 Settlor reserved the powers of amendment and revocation.10 On
    February 23, 1993, Settlor executed a Supplemental Trust Agreement, which
    amended the 1989 Trust to give one third of the trust property to Janice, one third
    to Laura, one sixth to Respondent, and one sixth to Petitioner.11 The 1989 Trust
    5
    At the same time, Kalil Associates also acquired an adjacent parcel known as 1701 Shallcross
    Avenue. The Shallcross Avenue property was subsequently subdivided and Kalil Associates
    retained a portion of that parcel as part of the Property. The Property is comprised of tax parcels
    numbered 2601320143 and 2601340138.
    6
    Pet’r Ex. 7 (Aff. of Ernest D. Palmarella, Esq. [hereinafter “Palmarella Aff.”]) ¶ 21.
    7
    
    Id. 8 Pet’r
    Ex. 2; Ex. 3 Item 5.
    9
    Pet’r Ex. 2 ¶ I(B)(2)(b)(ii).
    10
    
    Id. ¶ VIII.
    11
    Pet’r Ex. 4 ¶ (C).
    3
    and 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement state that the shares held by Petitioner
    and Respondent shall be funded with voting or equity interest in Compu-Val or its
    successor, and the other shares shall be funded with other assets.12
    Also in 1993, Settlor opened an investment account with Butcher & Singer
    (“the Account”) and titled the Account in the name of the 1989 Trust. In 2001,
    Settlor moved the Account to TD Bank, and in 2008, he moved it to Charles
    Schwab. The Account remained titled in the name of the 1989 Trust, and remains
    so titled today.
    On July 15, 1997, Settlor executed the 1997 Trust.13 Settlor also executed a
    new pourover will giving all the residue of his estate to the 1997 Trust.14 The 1997
    Trust originally distributed its property in the same proportion as the 1993
    Supplemental Trust Agreement: one third to Janice, one third to Laura, one sixth
    to Respondent, and one sixth to Petitioner.15 The 1997 Trust does not specify how
    those shares are to be funded. The 1997 Trust does not reference or explicitly
    revoke or amend the 1989 Trust.
    12
    Id.; Pet’r Ex. 2 ¶ (B)(2)(b)(ii).
    13
    Pet’r Ex. 7A.
    14
    Pet’r Ex. 7B, Art. Fourth. Settlor also executed several codicils to his 1997 Will, the substance
    of which is not relevant here.
    15
    Pet’r Ex. 7A ¶ 5(B).
    4
    Settlor amended the 1997 Trust six times before he passed on November 8,
    2014.16 The 1997 Trust as ultimately amended distributes one-sixth of its property
    to Respondent, debited by $500,000 for lifetime advancements, with the remainder
    held in trust for Respondent’s lifetime. Respondent’s distributions thereunder are
    limited to $120 per month while he is incarcerated, and thereafter to the interest on
    the trust principal for the balance of his life with the principal left in trust for
    Jacqueline. The 1997 Trust as amended distributes one third of its property to
    Janice, debited by $790,000 for lifetime advancements as well as any additional
    sums advanced for her benefit as determined by the Trustee. Finally, the 1997
    Trust as amended distributes one third of its property to Laura and one sixth to
    Petitioner. In sum, the 1997 Trust’s distribution scheme is more beneficial to
    16
    On May 6, 2005, Settlor added Respondent as a co-trustee. Pet’r Ex. 7H. On August 7, 2007,
    Settlor placed the shares of Janice and Respondent in a continuing trust to be distributed to them
    over the course of their life expectancy. Pet’r Ex. 7I. The third amendment, dated March 5,
    2010, revoked the two earlier amendments; deleted Respondent as a one-sixth beneficiary and
    replaced him with Jacqueline; debited Janice’s one-third share by $500,000 to account for
    lifetime advancements; and debited Jacqueline’s one-sixth (1/6) share by $300,000 to account for
    lifetime advancements to Respondent. Pet’r Ex. 7J. Settlor amended the 1997 Trust a fourth
    time on May 16, 2012. Pet’r Ex. 5A. Settlor revoked the three earlier amendments; restored
    Respondent as a one-sixth residual beneficiary; debited the respective residual shares of both
    Janice and Respondent by $500,000 to account for lifetime advancements; required those shares
    be held in trust for the course of beneficiaries’ lives, but limited Respondent’s distributions to
    $120 per month for so long as he remained incarcerated, and thereafter to interest only for the
    balance of his life with the remainder left in trust for Jacqueline; and named Claire and Petitioner
    as successor co-trustees. A fifth amendment, dated April 25, 2014, eliminated the requirement
    that Janice’s residuary share be held in trust for her lifetime, but increased the amount that her
    share was to be debited to $790,000 plus any additional sums advanced for her benefit as
    determined by the Trustee. Pet’r Ex. 5C. A final amendment dated July 9, 2014, named
    Petitioner as sole successor trustee. Pet’r Ex. 5D.
    5
    Jacqueline, Petitioner, and Laura, while the 1989 Trust’s distribution scheme is
    more beneficial to Respondent and Janice.
    Pursuant to Settlor’s 1997 will, Petitioner was appointed as personal
    representative of Settlor’s estate on January 16, 2015. At the time of Settlor’s
    death, the gross value of his property was approximately six million dollars.
    Settlor’s largest assets are the Account, with an approximate date of death value of
    $4.3 million; a promissory note from Petitioner with an approximate balance of
    $1.4 million; and another promissory note from Kalil LP with an approximate
    balance of $36,331.00.
    C. Procedural History
    On May 20, 2015, Petitioner, as executor of Settlor’s estate and as trustee of
    the 1997 Trust, filed a petition naming his siblings and Jacqueline as respondents.
    Petitioner seeks to reform the 1997 Trust to replace, amend, or revoke the 1989
    Trust, so that the Account titled under the 1989 Trust can be distributed according
    to the terms of the 1997 Trust, as Petitioner asserts Settlor intended. Petitioner also
    seeks to dissolve Kalil Associates, which holds the Property, and convey the
    Property to Kalil LP. Petitioner alleges Settlor and all other relevant parties and
    entities intended and believed Kalil LP held the Property.
    On July 13, 2015, Janice answered the petition and asserted a counterclaim,
    to which Petitioner replied on July 28, 2015. On July 20, 2015, Jacqueline and
    6
    Petitioner stipulated to indefinitely extend Jacqueline’s time to respond to the
    petition, and she has not responded. Laura consents to the relief sought.17
    Respondent filed a pro se18 motion seeking relief against the 1997 Trust and
    Settlor’s estate on September 14, 2015. Respondent filed an answer to the petition
    on November 2, 2015. Respondent opposes reformation of the 1997 Trust. He
    also asserts two challenges against the 1997 Trust as amended and one claim
    against the 1989 Trust and 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement. Finally,
    Respondent claims he received insufficient consideration when he sold his share in
    Kalil LP in 2010.
    The parties engaged in discovery, and then in settlement discussions which
    proved unsuccessful. Respondent moved to amend his answer on October 31,
    2016. Over Petitioner’s objection, I recommended the Court grant Respondent’s
    motion in a final report dated January 23, 2017.19 The parties continued with
    discovery and prepared for trial.
    Due to temporarily heightened prison security, Respondent was unable to
    participate in the February 28, 2017, pretrial conference and it seemed unlikely he
    would be able to attend the scheduled trial. I therefore granted the parties leave to
    17
    Pet’r Ex. 1.
    18
    Respondent is litigating from prison where he is serving a fourteen-year sentence. See Kalil v.
    State, 
    2014 WL 2568029
    , at *1-2 (Del. June 5, 2014).
    19
    Exceptions to that report were stayed pending final adjudication of this matter on the merits.
    Any exceptions to that report should be filed within the exceptions period for this final report.
    7
    file motions for summary judgment and continued the trial. Petitioner filed his
    motion on March 28, 2017, and his opening brief on April 14, 2017. Respondent
    filed his response and request for summary judgment on May 2, 2017. Petitioner
    replied on May 22, 2017. On June 1, 2017, Respondent indicated he had received
    that reply and stood on his earlier submission. Respondent supplemented his
    submissions on July 31, 2017.
    On August 14, 2017, I asked for supplemental briefing. Petitioner filed a
    supplemental brief on August 29, 2017, and Respondent filed a letter in opposition
    on September 12, 2017. Janice filed a letter taking no position. I took the matter
    under advisement on the briefs. I issued a draft report on November 3, 2017, and
    extended the time for filing a notice of exceptions to twenty days due to
    Respondent’s reliance on the prison mail system.
    Petitioner filed a notice of exceptions on November 22, 2017, and
    “Respondent’s response to Master’s Report” dated November 21, 2017 was
    docketed November 28, 2017. Respondent supplemented his response via a letter
    dated November 25, 2017, which was docketed on November 29. Petitioner filed
    his opening brief on December 13, 2017, together with a motion for enlargement of
    time to file the opening brief, which I granted. On January 19, 2018, Petitioner
    wrote to express his view that his exceptions were ripe for review and to ask that
    Respondent’s exceptions be dismissed as untimely.
    8
    This is my final report on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment.
    Exceptions that improved the final report are incorporated herein. Exceptions that
    are dismissed are addressed in footnotes.
    II.    Analysis
    Petitioner contends that Settlor intended the Account to be distributed
    according to the terms of the 1997 Trust as amended, but mistakenly failed to
    retitle the Account under the 1997 Trust. The Account was Settlor’s most
    significant asset at the time of his death; the only other significant assets were two
    promissory notes. Without judicial intervention, the Account would be distributed
    according to the 1989 Trust as amended by the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement, and not according to Settlor’s 1997 pourover will and the 1997 Trust
    as amended. Petitioner asserts Settlor erred because he intended to distribute the
    Account pursuant to the terms of the 1997 Trust as amended.
    To remedy Settlor’s mistake, Petitioner seeks relief from among a hierarchy
    of choices. Petitioner’s preferred remedy is a declaration that the 1997 Trust meets
    the 1989 Trust’s criteria for exercising the power to amend, and acts as an
    amendment to the 1989 Trust such that it is effectively subsumed into the 1989
    Trust. In the alternative, Petitioner seeks reformation of the 1997 Trust so that it
    amends the 1989 Trust. And as least preferred alternatives, Petitioner seeks a
    declaration that the 1997 Trust revoked the 1989 Trust, or reformation of the 1997
    9
    Trust so that it revokes the 1989 Trust. Petitioner also seeks dissolution of Kalil
    Associates to permit transfer of the Property to Kalil LP, as Petitioner contends
    Settlor intended.
    Respondent opposes Petitioner’s request to cause the 1997 Trust to be
    subsumed by, to amend, or to revoke the 1989 Trust. Respondent claims the 1997
    Trust is invalid and was created under undue influence by Petitioner, and takes
    issue with certain of the deductions to his share made in 1997 Trust amendments
    and in the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement. As for the partnership issue,
    Respondent challenges the terms of the transaction in which he sold his interest in
    Kalil LP, and claims the Property should be governed by the 1989 Trust.
    “The function of summary judgment is the avoidance of a useless trial where
    there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.”20 Summary judgment is
    appropriate where the “pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.”21 “A fact is material if it might affect the outcome of the suit
    under the governing law.”22 A material issue of fact exists if “a rational trier of
    20
    Emmert v. Prade, 
    711 A.2d 1217
    , 1219 (Del. Ch. 1997).
    21
    Ct. Ch. R. 56(c).
    22
    Deloitte LLP v. Flanagan, 
    2009 WL 5200657
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2009).
    10
    fact could find any material fact that would favor the non-moving party in a
    determinative way.”23
    The movant bears the initial burden of demonstrating that there is no
    question of material fact.24 When the movant carries that burden, the burden shifts
    to the nonmoving party “to present some specific, admissible evidence that there is
    a genuine issue of fact for trial.”25 The court must view the evidence most
    favorably to the non-moving party.26 Even so, the non-moving party may not rely
    on allegations or denials in the pleadings to create a material factual dispute.27
    A. Settlor did not intend the 1997 Trust to amend or revoke the 1989
    Trust, so the 1997 Trust cannot be deemed to have done so.
    Petitioner first argues that the 1997 Trust should be considered or deemed an
    amendment and restatement of the 1989 Trust. Petitioner contends that deeming
    the 1997 Trust to be an amendment of the 1989 Trust creates “one continuous
    trust” that permits the Account to pass out of probate pursuant to the terms of the
    1997 Trust as amended.28 As a less preferable alternative, Petitioner argues the
    1997 Trust should be deemed to have revoked the 1989 Trust.29 Petitioner
    23
    
    Id. 24 Id.
    25
    
    Id. 26 Ct.
    Ch. R. 56(e); Fike v. Ruger, 
    754 A.2d 254
    , 260 (Del. Ch. 1999), aff’d, 
    752 A.2d 112
    (Del.
    2000).
    27
    
    Fike, 754 A.2d at 260
    .
    28
    Pet’r Supp. Br. at 5. I make no determination as to whether this would be the case.
    29
    In my draft report, I declined to substantively address revocation of the 1989 Trust because
    revocation would expose the Account to probate fees, contrary to Settlor’s intent. See Pet’r
    11
    contends that the 1997 Trust can be deemed an amendment or revocation without
    any reformation of the 1997 Trust.
    Petitioner asserts the 1997 Trust satisfies the 1989 Trust’s requirements for
    amendment and revocation. The 1989 Trust states:
    Settlor reserves to himself the right, at any time and from time to time,
    by instrument in writing, lodged with Trustee during Settlor’s
    lifetime, to amend or revoke this Agreement, in whole or in part.30
    Petitioner contends the 1997 Trust is an “instrument in writing” that was “lodged
    with” Settlor, who was Trustee of the 1989 Trust at the time the 1997 Trust was
    executed. Under Petitioner’s theory, the 1989 Trust’s broad language allows any
    “instrument in writing” in Settlor’s possession to amend or revoke the 1989 Trust,
    regardless of whether such instrument expresses an intention to amend, because
    expression of that intention was not required by the terms of the 1989 Trust.
    Petitioner concludes that because Settlor intended the 1997 Trust and its
    Supp. Br. at 4-5 (“This result was clearly not intended by Dr. Kalil who used the revocable trust
    format as a means of avoiding probate fees.”); In re Peierls Family Inter Vivos Trusts, 
    77 A.3d 249
    , 263 (Del. 2013) (providing the “seminal rule” of trust construction is that the settlor’s intent
    controls). On exception, Petitioner clarified his position that Settlor’s “primary intent … was to
    distribute his estate under the terms of the 1997 Trust,” and that this intent trumps Settlor’s
    secondary intent to keep his estate out of probate. Br. on Exceptions at 11-13. Petitioner asserts
    Settlor “would have taken the distributive scheme of the 1997 Trust over the avoidance of
    probate.” 
    Id. at 13.
    Because I conclude the 1997 Trust did not exercise the 1989 Trust’s power
    to amend or revoke, I need not distinguish between amendment and revocation. I note in passing
    the absence of any evidence of Settlor’s alleged nuanced intent to distribute the Account
    pursuant to the 1997 Trust, even at the cost of paying probate fees, rather than distribute the
    Account pursuant to the 1989 Trust.
    30
    Pet’r App’x Ex. 2, ¶ VIII(A).
    12
    amendments to control the Account’s disposition, the 1997 Trust should be
    deemed to have exercised Settlor’s power to amend or revoke the 1989 Trust.
    “The settlor of an inter vivos trust has power to revoke or modify the trust to
    the extent the terms of the trust … so provide.”31 If the trust reserves to the settlor
    a power to revoke or amend the trust exclusively by a particular procedure, “the
    settlor can exercise the power only by substantial compliance with the method
    prescribed.”32 The law requires a settlor to express an intent to revoke, though that
    expression need not be in formal terms.33 Intent to revoke or amend can be
    expressed implicitly, such as by referring to the property that is the subject to the
    power to revoke or amend, or where the instrument at issue would be meaningless
    unless it exercised the power to revoke or amend.34 “Any power that a settlor has
    to amend a trust dies with him or her.”35
    31
    Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 63(1) (2003).
    32
    
    Id. cmt. i;
    Ronald Chester, George Gleason Bogert & George Taylor Bogert, The Law of
    Trusts and Trustees [hereinafter “Bogert”] § 993 (3rd ed. 2005) (“If the method of exercising the
    power of modification is described in the trust instrument, such a provision will control … .”);
    Security Trust Co. v. Spruance, 
    174 A. 285
    , 288 (Del. Ch. 1934). Petitioner relies on an excerpt
    from the Restatement’s preceding comment, comment h, which addresses the “[f]orm of exercise
    when no method is specified.” Because the 1989 Trust specified an exclusive method of
    revocation and amendment, Petitioner’s cited comment is inapplicable.
    33
    
    Spruance, 174 A. at 288
    .
    34
    
    Id. (“If there
    is a reference to the property which is the subject of the power, or where the
    instrument which is questioned as an exercise of the power would be a nullity unless it were as
    claimed, it is settled that the power is as effectively exercised as though a purpose to exercise it
    had been affirmatively disclosed.”)
    35
    76 Am. Jur. 2d Trusts § 69.
    13
    Whether the 1997 Trust amended, revoked, or is subsumed within the 1989
    Trust is guided by Settlor’s intent and whether he expressed any intent to amend or
    revoke at the time he executed the 1997 Trust. This is a different, and narrower,
    intent than the intent for the 1997 Trust to govern distribution of the Account.
    It is undisputed that the 1997 Trust does not formally express any intent to amend
    or revoke.
    Nor does it express any such intent by reference to the 1989 Trust’s
    property.36 To the contrary, the 1997 Trust explicitly holds different property than
    the 1989 Trust. The 1989 Trust identifies its property as “the property set forth in
    Schedule A.” Schedule A lists shares of Compu-Val, a 50% interest in Kalil
    Associates, and a life insurance policy.37 The 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement
    defines the res of the 1989 Trust as the property held at the time Settlor executed
    the 1989 Trust “together with all other property transferred to Trustee since that
    time, and which may be transferred to Trustee in the future from time to time.” 38
    The 1997 Trust identifies as trust property a $1.00 bill, and empowers Settlor or
    36
    See 
    Spruance, 174 A. at 288
    .
    37
    Pet’r Ex. 2, Preamble, Sched. A. On exception, Petitioner points out that Kalil Associates
    became defunct, and states that the shares of Compu-Val were “eventually sold to the petitioner
    outside of any trust.” Br. on Exceptions at 4-5. But Kalil LP did not take over Kalil Associates’
    duties until on or around 2000. See infra, notes 75, 76, 96, and accompanying text. When
    Settlor executed the 1997 Trust, the 1989 Trust still held Compu-Val shares and an interest in
    Kalil Associates as valuable property, and the 1997 Trust did not refer to that property. This
    exception is dismissed.
    38
    Pet’r Ex. 4, ¶ A.
    14
    any other person to add property to the trust res with Settlor’s consent.39 The 1997
    pourover will places the residue of Settlor’s estate in the 1997 Trust.40 The 1997
    Trust does not express any intent to amend by referring to the 1989 Trust’s
    separate property.
    Finally, the 1997 Trust does not express an intent to amend or revoke the
    1989 Trust by being meaningless unless it does so.41 The 1997 Trust holds the
    residue of Settlor’s estate, estimated at $1.5 million.42 While that may not fund
    shares for each beneficiary once the enumerated deductions are taken, the Trust has
    a corpus and is not a nullity.
    In fact, the evidence supports the conclusion that Settlor did not intend the
    1997 Trust to be an amendment or revocation of the 1989 Trust when he executed
    it. Settlor created the 1997 Trust as a standalone trust. Settlor executed the 1997
    Trust only four years after signing the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement, which
    demonstrates his awareness of the 1989 Trust and an effective means of amending
    it. Settlor again demonstrated his knowledge of a way to clearly express his intent
    to amend a trust beginning in 2005, when he made his first of many amendments to
    39
    Pet’r Ex. 7A, ¶¶ 1-2, Sched. A.
    40
    Pet’r Ex. 7B, Art. Fourth.
    41
    See 
    Spruance, 174 A. at 288
    (“If there is a reference to the property which is the subject of the
    power, or where the instrument which is questioned as an exercise of the power would be a
    nullity unless it were as claimed, it is settled that the power is as effectively exercised as though
    a purpose to exercise it had been affirmatively disclosed.”).
    42
    Pet’r Ex. 5, Aff. of Daniel R. Losco, Esq. [hereinafter “Losco Aff.”] Ex. E.
    15
    the 1997 Trust.43 Assuming arguendo that the 1997 Trust is an “instrument in
    writing” “lodged with Trustee during Settlor’s lifetime,” at the time Settlor lodged
    it he did not intend it to amend or revoke the 1989 Trust.
    By contrast, the successive trusts at issue in Security Trust Co. v. Spruance,
    cited by Petitioner,44 expressed an intent to revoke and addressed the same
    property, and the later trust would be a nullity if not reformed. In Spruance, the
    settlor executed three trusts: a first revocable trust in 1923, instructing a trustee to
    hold and distribute certain insurance policies; a second trust in 1926, which
    explicitly revoked the 1923 trust and instructed the trustee to distribute those same
    policies in a different manner; and a third trust in 1931, which explicitly revoked
    the 1923 trust (not the 1926 trust) and again changed the manner of disposition of
    the same policies. The Court concluded that the settlor intended the 1931 trust to
    43
    See supra, note 16.
    44
    
    174 A. 285
    (Del. Ch. 1934). On exception, Petitioner noted that my draft report did not
    analyze two cases from other jurisdictions that Petitioner cited. See Estate of Davis, 
    775 A.2d 1127
    (Me. 2001); Rosenblum v. Gibbons, 
    685 S.W.2d 924
    (Mo. App. 1984). These cases, “of
    course, are not binding on this Court.” Tolou v. Anderson, 
    1994 WL 374311
    , at *2 (Del. Ch.
    June 20, 1994). They are also distinguishable. Both Davis and Rosenblum addressed a series of
    trusts like that in Spruance and unlike the one at issue here: successive trusts that held the same
    corpus but directed different dispositions, and that therefore could not stand independently. See
    
    Davis, 775 A.2d at 1129
    , 1132 (noting the two trusts both held shares of the testator’s company
    and had identical language with the exception of distribution provisions); 
    Rosenblum, 685 S.W.2d at 930
    (“Except for differences in the dispositive provisions, the two instruments are
    virtually identical. … [M]ost importantly, the corpus is the same. … The utter impossibility of
    applying different dispositive provisions to a single corpus compels the conclusion that the
    grantor’s intent was the later instrument replace and supplant the former, even though revocation
    of the former is not specifically expressed.”). This case does not present the same impossibility,
    and therefore does not warrant the same conclusion.
    16
    revoke the 1926 trust because it expressed an intent to revoke and because both
    trusts expressly dealt with the identical res or corpus identified in the earlier trust.45
    The Court reasoned, “If the earlier one stands, the later one must fall. They are
    irreconcilable.”46
    This case is distinguishable for several reasons. First, the Spruance trust
    contained specific (but flawed) revocation language, whereas Settlor’s 1997 Trust
    contains no language of amendment or revocation. Second, Settlor’s two Trusts
    hold different property and can coexist and function in parallel without conflict.
    The 1997 Trust did not implicitly or expressly show the intent to amend or revoke
    the 1989 Trust, as was the case in Spruance. To the contrary, as explained above,
    the circumstances surrounding the execution of the 1997 Trust indicates Settlor
    intentionally used language creating a standalone trust instead of language of
    amendment or revocation.
    The 1997 Trust was created by Settlor as an independent second trust, and is
    not an amendment to the 1989 Trust. It may be that Settlor intended the 1997
    Trust to guide distribution of the Account. But the evidence supports the
    conclusion that Settlor also intended the 1997 Trust to be an independent,
    standalone trust when he executed it. I conclude this intent may not be violated or
    45
    
    Id. at 287-88.
    46
    
    Id. at 288.
                                                 17
    displaced to fix deficiencies in other aspects of Settlor’s portfolio management. I
    recommend the Court deny Petitioner’s request for a summary judgment declaring
    the 1997 Trust to have exercised the 1989 Trust’s reserved power to amend or
    revoke.
    B. Reformation may not remedy Settlor’s mistake in failing to retitle
    the Account because that mistake did not affect specific terms in the
    1997 Trust.
    As an alternative to deeming the 1997 Trust to be an amendment to or
    revocation of the 1989 Trust, Petitioner asks the Court to reform the 1997 Trust to
    include language of amendment or revocation of the 1989 Trust, based on
    unilateral mistake by Settlor. I conclude that Settlor’s mistake was in titling the
    Account, and that because that mistake did not affect the expression, inclusion or
    omission of specific terms in the 1997 Trust – but rather, affects only the title of
    the Account – reformation is not appropriate.47
    Generally, courts cannot consider extrinsic evidence relating to the meaning
    of specific terms in a written trust to interpret those terms.48 Where a provision of
    the trust agreement is clear and unambiguous, the court will not consider extrinsic
    47
    Because reformation is not appropriate to fix Settlor’s mistake in mistitling the Account,
    regardless of whether that reformation adds language of amendment or revocation, this final
    report does not distinguish between amendment and revocation. See supra, note 29.
    
    48 U.S. v
    . Gore, 
    45 A.3d 120
    , 131 (Del. 2012) (en banc); Benz v. Wilmington Trust Co., 
    333 A.2d 169
    , 170 (Del. 1975); DiSabatino v. Diferdinando, 
    2002 WL 2005743
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 13,
    2002).
    18
    evidence to vary or contradict the ordinary meaning of the provision.49 This rule is
    particularly significant in the context of testamentary documents, where the author
    is deceased and cannot provide further insight into his intention.50 Even in the
    context of a mistake, this Court has refrained from reforming an otherwise proper
    and unambiguous will.51
    But a trust may be rescinded or reformed upon the same grounds as those
    upon which a transfer of property not in trust may be rescinded or reformed,
    including mistake.52 Because a settlor usually receives no consideration for the
    creation of a trust, a settlor’s unilateral mistake may warrant trust reformation.53
    The mistake must be proven by clear and convincing evidence.54 This high burden
    49
    
    Otto, 45 A.3d at 136
    .
    50
    Miller v. Equitable Trust Co., 
    32 A.2d 431
    , 434 (Del. 1943) (“A person’s will, to him at least,
    is in the category of a sacred instrument. It speaks after death the wish, the desire, the intent of
    the deceased. If the intent therein be clearly expressed, it will not be disturbed, and the testator’s
    discretion as evidenced by his intention will be upheld.”).
    51
    
    Id. at 435-36
    (“If a mistake was made in the writing of the codicil in this case, it is, to say the
    least, unfortunate … . However, this court has no power to correct a mistake, and it cannot, by
    the introduction of parol evidence, rewrite the codicil.”); Bird v. Wilmington Soc. of Fine Arts, 
    43 A.2d 476
    , 482 (Del. 1945) (“Subsequent events or circumstances not clearly shown to have been
    definitely anticipated by the testator, and happening after the execution of a will, can form no
    part in the intent of that will, or enter into the construction of its terms.”); In re Last Will and
    Testament of Daland, 
    2010 WL 716160
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Feb. 15, 2010) (where a will was
    properly executed, finding “it is not within the court’s power to insert additional language in the
    will to correct an alleged mistake of omission”); see In re Trust Under Will of Flint for the
    Benefit of Shadek [hereinafter Flint], 
    118 A.3d 182
    , 198 n.12 (Del. Ch. 2015).
    52
    
    Flint, 118 A.3d at 195
    (citing Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 62).
    53
    Id.; Roos v. Roos, 
    203 A.2d 140
    , 142 (Del. Ch. 1964).
    54
    
    Flint, 118 A.3d at 195
    ; 
    Roos, 203 A.2d at 142
    .
    19
    of proof is appropriate because the party seeking reformation is seeking to
    establish that a donative document does not reflect the donor’s intention.55
    Reformation requires the petitioner to establish by clear and convincing
    evidence: (1) that a mistake of fact or law, whether in expression or inducement,
    affected the specific terms of the document; and (2) the settlor’s intention.56 A
    mistake in expression occurs when the writing does not express the settlor’s intent,
    as is often seen in a scrivener’s error.57 A mistake in the inducement arises when a
    trust includes a term that was intended to be included, or fails to include a term that
    was not intended to be included, but the intention regarding the term was the
    product of a mistake of fact or law.58 Extrinsic evidence must establish, by clear
    and convincing evidence and with particularity, that a mistake “affected the
    expression, inclusion, or omission of specific terms in the document.”59
    I assume for the sake of this analysis that Settlor intended to distribute the
    Account according to the 1997 Trust. If that is assumed, I must conclude that
    Settlor made a mistake. But Settlor’s mistake was not a mistake in expression in
    the language of the 1997 Trust. Settlor made a mistake in failing to retitle the
    55
    Restatement (Third) of Prop.: Wills & Donative Transfers [hereinafter “Property
    Restatement”] § 12.1 cmt. e (2003); see Bogert, supra, § 991 at 133-34 (“[T]he traditional
    presumption against reforming mistakes in wills may present an additional challenge for a
    petitioner who seeks the reformation of a testamentary trust.”).
    56
    Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 62 (2003).
    57
    Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmt. i; Bogert, supra, § 991 at 132-33.
    58
    Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmt. i; Bogert, supra, § 991 at 132.
    59
    Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmts. g, j.
    20
    Account in the name of the 1997 Trust.60 That act is wholly separate from the
    terms of the 1997 and 1989 Trusts. Had Settlor simply retitled the Account, his
    trusts would express his intention. There is no error in the language of the 1997
    Trust; the error was in Settlor’s failure to retitle the Account.61
    Settlor’s estate planning attorneys also source Settlor’s mistake in the
    Account’s titling rather than the Trust’s terms. The attorney who prepared the
    1997 Trust affirmed:
    Had I been aware that the investment account was titled in the name
    of the 1989 trust I would have certainly counseled Dr. Kalil to re-title
    it in the name of the 1997 trust since that was the vehicle that Dr.
    Kalil intended to use to transfer his wealth.62
    And Settlor’s subsequent estate planning attorney who prepared several
    amendments to the 1997 Trust affirmed similarly:
    60
    Pet’r Supp. Br. at 5.
    61
    On exception, Petitioner asserts it was erroneous to confine Settlor’s mistake to the Account
    title. Petitioner argues that doing so disregards Settlor’s “unquestionable belief that the 1997
    Trust had legally taken the place of the 1989 Trust” and that “it is completely reasonable to
    assume that [Settlor] did not change the ownership of the … Account because he believed the
    1997 Trust already had legally supplanted the 1989 Trust.” Br. on Exceptions at 14 (emphasis
    added). Petitioner reasons that Settlor set up and titled the Account, and received statements
    indicating its title, but still believed the 1997 Trust controlled the Account since its assets are
    necessary to fund its distribution scheme. Petitioner concludes, “It is logical then to assume that
    [Settlor] was mistaken as to the legal effect of the 1997 Trust vis a vis the 1989 Trust.” 
    Id. at 14-
    15 (emphasis added).
    Reformation may not be based on assumptions. It must be based on clear and convincing
    evidence that establishes with particularity that a mistake affected the expression, inclusion, or
    omission of specific terms in the document. Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmts. g, j.
    Petitioner’s circular argument as to why Settlor did not fix his mistake does not change the fact
    that the 1997 Trust’s distributive scheme is frustrated by Settlor’s failure to retitle the Account,
    not by any mistake in the 1997 Trust’s language. Petitioner’s exception is dismissed.
    62
    Palmarella Aff. ¶ 11.
    21
    Had I known that the investment account was titled in the name of the
    1989 trust I would have advised Dr. Kalil to change the title of the
    account to the 1997 trust to make sure his estate plan was properly
    funded and implemented.63
    If Settlor’s attorneys had known about the titling of the Account, they would have
    remedied that error by retitling the Account, not by redrafting the 1997 Trust to be
    an amendment of the 1989 Trust. There was no scrivener’s error — the Trusts’
    language expresses the Settlor’s intent. Settlor’s failure to retitle the Account is
    not a mistake in expression for which reformation is available.
    Whether Settlor’s failure to retitle the Account is a mistake in inducement is
    a closer call. Assuming that Settlor intended to distribute the Account according to
    the 1997 Trust, it would follow that Settlor was mistaken in believing the Account
    was titled to permit such distribution at the time Settlor executed the 1997 Trust.
    But Petitioner has failed to meet his burden of proving by clear and convincing
    evidence, and with particularity, that the titling mistake affected the expression,
    inclusion, or omission of specific terms in the 1997 Trust.64 There is no evidence
    that Settlor’s mistake of fact regarding the Account’s title caused the 1997 Trust to
    include or omit any specific term. To the contrary, the evidence (in the form of
    Settlor’s attorneys’ affidavits) indicates the only product of the mistake was the
    Account’s title.
    63
    Losco Aff. ¶¶ 7, 8.
    64
    See Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmts. i, g, j; Bogert, supra, § 991 at 132.
    22
    Petitioner suggests that Settlor’s mistake can be fixed by adding a term to
    the 1997 Trust to make it an amendment of the 1989 Trust. As a practical matter,
    this may be true. But Petitioner puts the cart before the horse. The inquiry is not
    whether changing trust language can fix a mistake: it is whether the mistake
    affected specific trust language at the time that language was drafted. The law
    requires clear and convincing evidence that the absence of specific amendment
    language in the 1997 Trust is a product of Settlor’s mistake.65 Petitioner fails to
    prove the requisite causation. To the contrary, the evidence suggests that if Settlor
    or his attorneys had recognized his mistake, he would not have added the
    amendment language Petitioner suggests, but instead would have retitled the
    Account. Because Settlor’s titling mistake did not affect specific terms in the 1997
    Trust, reformation is not an available remedy.
    I contrast Settlor’s mistake with the illustrated mistakes in inducement in the
    Property 
    Restatement, supra
    .
    7. G created an inter vivos trust. The trust document did not contain
    a clause reserving to G a power to revoke the trust. Controlling law
    provides that a trust is irrevocable in the absence of an expressly
    retained power to revoke. After G signed the document, G’s financial
    condition changed and G sought to revoke the trust.
    Extrinsic evidence shows that G intended to create a revocable trust
    and did not understand the need for a revocation clause.
    65
    See supra, notes 56-59.
    23
    If this evidence satisfies the clear-and-convincing-evidence standard
    of proof, the trust document is reformed to insert a power to revoke.
    8. G created an inter vivos trust of the bulk of his assets. The trust
    document did not contain a clause reserving to G a power to revoke
    the trust. Controlling law provides that a trust is irrevocable in the
    absence of an expressly retained power to revoke. After G signed the
    document, G sought to revoke the trust.
    Extrinsic evidence shows that G established the trust when he was in
    line for a high-level position in the federal government. From the
    press reports he had read, he mistakenly believed that he had to place
    all of his assets into an irrevocable trust in order to comply with
    federal policies on public-service conflicts of interest. G liquidated
    much of his property, and placed the bulk of his assets into the
    irrevocable trust. Subsequently, G learned that federal policies did not
    require him to transfer his assets to an irrevocable trust.
    If this evidence satisfies the clear-and-convincing-evidence standard
    of proof, the trust document is reformed to insert a power to revoke.66
    In each of these illustrations, the absence of the power to revoke was the specific
    product of the settlor’s mistake. In Illustration 7, the settlor thought he had created
    a revocable trust even without a term reserving the power to revoke. In Illustration
    8, the settlor thought he had to create an irrevocable trust when he did not. In each
    illustration, the settlor did not include a term granting a power to revoke because
    he did not intend to include such a term, but that intention was the product of the
    settlor’s mistake.
    66
    Property 
    Restatement, supra
    , § 12.1 cmt. i.
    24
    By contrast, Settlor’s intention for the 1997 Trust to be a standalone trust
    instead of an amendment to the 1989 Trust was not the product of his mistake in
    titling the Account.67 Settlor’s mistake in titling the Account caused erroneous
    language in the Account’s title, not in the 1997 Trust. There is no evidence that
    Settlor’s mistake caused the absence of revocation or amendment language in the
    1997 Trust. The Third Restatement of Property does not support reforming the
    1997 Trust.
    Petitioner also relies on Roos v. Roos.68 In Roos, a trust with language that
    clearly did not conform to the settlor’s stated intent was reformed. The preamble
    of the subject trust stated the settlor intended “to create a trust fund for myself and
    my wife for our respective lives and for our children upon our decease.”69 But the
    clause directing income payments to the settlor’s children only directed those
    payments if the settlor’s wife predeceased the settlor.70 If the settlor died first –
    67
    On exception, Petitioner claims this case resembles Illustration 7, arguing that Settlor believed
    the 1997 Trust had supplanted the 1989 Trust and “must have assumed the 1997 Trust contained
    the words necessary to have that legal effect.” Br. on Exceptions at 15. Petitioner’s daisy chain
    of assumptions fails to support reformation. First, as explained in Section 
    A, supra
    , there is no
    basis to conclude that Settlor intended the 1997 Trust to supplant the 1989 Trust. And second,
    there is no evidence that Settlor believed or “assumed” the 1997 Trust contained language
    necessary to do so. There is evidence showing that Settlor believed the 1997 Trust would govern
    distribution of the Account, but not that Settlor thought this would be accomplished by language
    relating the 1997 Trust to the 1989 Trust. By contrast, Illustration 7 specifies clear and
    convincing evidence showing the settlor intended to create a revocable trust, and the particular
    disconnect between the settlor’s intent and specific trust terms. Petitioner’s exception regarding
    the applicability of Illustration 7 is dismissed.
    68
    
    203 A.2d 140
    (Del. Ch. 1964).
    69
    
    Id. at 141.
    70
    
    Id. 25 which
    he did – the trust did not specify his intention as to the income upon his
    wife’s death, and made no provision for the settlor’s children as the preamble
    stated the settlor intended. Thus, the trustees were faced with an internally
    inconsistent trust and circumstances under which trust terms would not permit the
    trustee to carry out the settlor’s explicitly stated intent.
    Reformation was warranted in Roos because the settlor made a mistake that
    was clearly and specifically linked to specific trust language. Here, Settlor’s
    mistake does not affect trust language. Neither the Trusts themselves, nor the
    extrinsic evidence, indicate any mistake that is clearly and specifically linked to
    specific trust language. Roos does not compel reformation of the 1997 Trust.
    In conclusion, I recommend the Court deny Petitioner’s request to reform
    the 1997 Trust to compensate for Settlor’s mistake in titling the Account. The
    evidence that Settlor intended for the Account to be distributed according to the
    1997 Trust as amended is compelling. Settlor’s estate planning attorneys affirmed
    Settlor intended the 1997 Trust to be the primary vehicle for handling his estate,
    and neither attorney knew about the 1989 Trust or the titling of the Account.71
    Settlor’s many amendments to the 1997 Trust, including sizeable deductions from
    beneficiaries’ shares, indicate he believed the 1997 Trust would be funded in
    71
    Losco Aff. ¶¶ 7, 8, 12; Palmarella Aff. ¶¶ 9, 10, 11.
    26
    excess of those deductions, requiring funds from the Account.72 But Settlor’s
    mistake in titling the Account did not cause the omission or inclusion of any
    specific language in the 1997 Trust. His unilateral mistake affected language in
    the Account’s title, not the 1997 Trust. The high and specific evidentiary burden
    for reforming a deceased settlor’s donative instrument has not been met. I
    recommend the Court deny Petitioner’s motion for summary judgment on
    Petitioner’s Count I for reformation.
    C. Judicial dissolution of Kalil Associates is equitable and appropriate.
    Settlor formed two entities to hold the Property. The first, Kalil Associates,
    was formed on November 29, 1984, pursuant to the Uniform Partnership Act of the
    State of Delaware, to own, hold, and manage the Property.73 The Property was
    deeded to Kalil Associates on February 1, 1985. The Property was Kalil
    Associates’ only asset. Settlor transferred his economic interest in Kalil Associates
    to the 1989 Trust, and Claire transferred hers to her own trust executed in 1989.74
    In 2000, Ernest D. Palmarella, Esquire, created Kalil LP as an “integral part”
    of Settlor and Claire’s estate plan.75 Settlor and Claire intended to use Kalil LP to
    72
    Losco Aff. ¶ 13; Palmarella Aff. ¶ 19. On exception, Petitioner argues that accepting the
    premise that Settlor intended the 1997 Trust to control the Account requires accepting the
    premise that Settlor was “mistaken as to the legal effect of the 1997 Trust in relation to the 1989
    Trust.” Br. on Exceptions at 17. I reject the latter premise. Settlor was mistaken as to the legal
    effect of the 1997 Trust in relation to the Account, not the 1989 Trust.
    73
    Pet’r Ex. 6 Preamble, ¶¶ 1, 3.
    74
    Pet. ¶ 41; Pet’r Ex. 2 Sched. A.
    75
    Palmarella Aff. ¶ 21.
    27
    pass the Property to their children in a tax-efficient manner.76 When forming Kalil
    LP, Palmarella told Settlor, “The property located at 1702 [Lovering Avenue] will
    be transferred to [Kalil LP].”77 Palmarella also created an option agreement for
    Kalil LP, granting Petitioner the option to purchase the Property upon the deaths of
    Settlor and Claire, which represented that Kalil LP owned the Property.78
    Palmarella affirmed, “It was always my belief in dealing with Kalil, LP that the
    [P]roperty had in fact been deeded to the LP. It was only after Dr. Kalil’s death
    that I learned that he never actually took the step of executing and recording a deed
    from the general partnership to Kalil LP.”79
    As originally established, Settlor and Claire maintained a 95% limited
    partnership interest in Kalil LP, and each of their four children received a 1%
    limited partnership interest.80 In 2006, Settlor and Claire transferred their interests
    in Kalil LP to their children, such that Petitioner, Respondent, Janice, and Laura
    each owned an equal share in Kalil LP.81
    Settlor, Claire, and their children proceeded from the point of Kalil LP’s
    creation as if Kalil LP owned the Property. Kalil LP rented the Property to
    76
    
    Id. 77 Pet’r
    Ex. 7L; accord, Palmarella Aff. ¶ 22.
    78
    
    Id. ¶ 23;
    Pet’r Ex. 7M.
    79
    Palmarella Aff. ¶ 23.
    80
    
    Id. ¶ 23.
    81
    
    Id. ¶ 24.
                                                     28
    Compu-Val, generating an income stream.82 Kalil LP reported that rent as income
    to taxing authorities, representing that Kalil LP owned the Property. 83 Each partner
    signed the option agreement stating Kalil LP owned the Property.84 In 2010, Kalil
    LP bought out Respondent’s interest in Kalil LP, financed by a loan from Settlor.85
    Respondent’s interest in Kalil LP was priced according to the value of Kalil LP’s
    asset: the Property.86
    Petitioner requests that the Court enter a decree of dissolution for Kalil
    Associates, and direct Petitioner, as executor of the estate of Kalil Associates’
    surviving general partner, to execute and record a deed for the Property to Kalil
    LP. Petitioner cites only the maxim that “[e]quity regards that as done which in
    good conscience ought to be done” as legal support for this remedy. 87 Respondent
    asserts that since Kalil Associates was never dissolved, Kalil Associates still owns
    the Property, and the Property should be allocated among the Settlor’s children
    according to the 1989 Trust.88
    Delaware general partnerships are governed by their partnership agreements,
    except in limited circumstances not applicable here.89 To the extent the partnership
    82
    
    Id. ¶ 21;
    Losco Aff. ¶ 14.
    83
    Palmarella Aff. ¶¶ 21, 25; Losco Aff. ¶ 14.
    84
    Pet’r Ex. 7M.
    85
    Palmarella Aff. ¶¶ 26-27; Pet’r Ex. 7O.
    86
    Palmarella Aff. ¶ 26. The Property was valued at $1 million. 
    Id. 87 Pet’r
    Op. Br. at 27 (quoting Thompson v. Lynch, 
    990 A.2d 432
    , 435 (Del. 2010)).
    88
    Resp’t Ans. ¶ 27.
    89
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 15-103(a).
    29
    agreement does not otherwise provide, the Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership
    Act governs relations among the partners and between the partners and the
    partnership.90 Kalil Associates’ partnership agreement states that the partnership
    “shall be dissolved only by (i) The disposition of all properties and assets of the
    partnership; (ii) The vote of the partners owning a majority of the capital accounts
    of the partnership.”91 The problem presented is that Kalil Associates has not
    actually disposed of its properties and assets, namely the Property. Further, Kalil
    Associates’ partnership agreement specifies that death of a partner does not
    dissolve the partnership.92
    Judicial dissolution of a general partnership is governed by 
    6 Del. C
    .
    § 15-801, which states a partnership is dissolved on application by a transferee of a
    partner’s economic interest to the Court of Chancery, upon a determination by the
    Court of Chancery that it is “equitable to wind up the partnership business or
    affairs … [a]fter the … completion of the undertaking, if the partnership was for a
    … particular undertaking at the time of the transfer.”93 Pursuant to Section
    15-103(b)(6), a partnership agreement may not vary this standard for dissolution.
    90
    Id.; 
    12 Del. C
    . § 15-1206(b) (“On and after January 1, 2002, this chapter governs all
    partnerships.”); Total Holdings USA, Inc. v. Curran Composits, Inc., 
    999 A.2d 873
    , 877-79 (Del.
    Ch. Oct. 9, 2009). Kalil Associates did not elect to be governed by the preceding version of the
    Uniform Partnership Act.
    91
    Pet’r Ex. 6 ¶ 17(a).
    92
    
    Id. ¶ 15(a).
    93
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 15-801(6)(i).
    30
    I conclude judicial dissolution is appropriate under Section 15-801(6).
    Petitioner, as executor of Settlor’s estate, is a transferee entitled to request judicial
    dissolution.94 Kalil Associates existed for the following undertakings:
    (a) To buy, own, build upon (or contract to be built upon), alter,
    mortgage, repair, operate, manage, rent, lease, sell and otherwise
    deal with real property and its appurtenances and fixtures, of any
    kind or description, as the partnership may determine, but
    particularly a tract of land and premises situated in the City of
    Wilmington, New Castle County, Delaware, at 1702 Lovering
    Avenue and 1701 Shallcross Avenue. It is the intention of the
    parties hereto, as their initial project, to purchase and rehabilitate
    the structures at that location and to lease units within that
    structure as commercial or office space.
    (b) To do, in accordance with decision made pursuant to this
    Agreement, all things necessary or desirable in connection with the
    foregoing or otherwise contemplated by this Agreement.
    (c) To engage in any other business or activity as the partners shall
    determine. 95
    The record indicates Kalil Associates substantially completed its
    undertakings in or around 2000, when Kalil LP took over all of Kalil Associates’
    responsibilities regarding the Property other than holding title.96 The timing and
    completeness of this transfer is supported by Palmarella’s affidavit, his
    correspondence with Settlor, the option agreement, and actions by Kalil LP
    94
    Allan G. Donn, Robert W. Hillman & Donald J. Weidner, The Revised Uniform Partnership
    Act § 503 cmt. 9 (Oct. 2017); 
    6 Del. C
    . § 15-503(b)(3).
    95
    Pet’r Ex. 6, Kalil Associates Partnership Agreement, § 3. 1701 Shallcross Avenue was later
    subdivided, and Kalil Associates retained a portion of that parcel as part of the Property. See
    supra, note 5.
    96
    Kalil LP’s partnership agreement states its purpose is to “acquire, hold, sell, invest, and
    otherwise deal with various investments in real estate,” and that its principal office was at the
    Property. Pet’r Ex. 7K, ¶¶ 3, 4.
    31
    (including receiving rental income, paying taxes, and paying an amount for
    Respondent’s share based on the Property’s value). Kalil Associates still owned
    the Property after Kalil LP assumed all other undertakings, but it is undisputed that
    this was a mistake and that neither Settlor’s counsel nor Kalil LP’s partners knew
    about that mistake. The Property’s rent has been paid to Kalil LP, leaving no
    resources for Kalil Associates. There is no evidence in the record that Kalil
    Associates took any action with regard to the Property after Kalil LP was created.
    I therefore conclude that it is equitable to wind up Kalil Associates.
    Respondent fails to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact with regard
    to whether Kalil Associates should continue to formally own the Property.
    Respondent fails to refute record evidence of his own past and current belief and
    acceptance that Kalil LP owned the Property. Respondent treated Kalil LP as the
    Property’s owner when he signed the 2001 option agreement stating Kalil LP
    owned the Property.97 Respondent also treated Kalil LP as the owner of the
    Property in 2010, when Respondent sold his interest in Kalil LP for an agreed-
    upon price explicitly derived from the Property’s value at the time of the
    transaction.98 Palmarella’s affidavit describing Respondent’s buyout is
    corroborated by a promissory note from Settlor to Kalil LP for the amount of
    97
    Pet’r Ex. 7M.
    98
    Palmarella Aff. ¶ 26.
    32
    Respondent’s buyout, and a trust agreement for Jacqueline’s benefit signed by
    Respondent, which Palmarella affirmed was supposed to be funded from the
    buyout.99 Finally, in this very action, Respondent claims his share of Kalil LP was
    undervalued, referencing the value of the Property and the building thereon.100
    Respondent’s simultaneous argument that Kalil LP does not own the property is
    undermined by his previous actions and litigation positions, and fails to
    demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact that would preclude judicial
    dissolution on Petitioner’s motion for summary judgment.
    Petitioner seeks permission to wind up Kalil Associates and convey the
    Property to Kalil LP. Based on the record before me, I cannot provide any more
    specific instructions at this time on winding up Kalil Associates’ affairs. “The
    legal representative of the last surviving partner may wind up a partnership’s
    business or affairs.”101 And “[t]he persons winding up the partnership’s business
    or affairs may, in the name of, and for and on behalf of, the partnership … dispose
    of and convey the partnership’s property.”102 If Settlor was the last surviving
    partner, Petitioner, as executor of Settlor’s estate, would have statutory authority to
    wind up Kalil Associates and convey the Property to Kalil LP.
    99
    Pet’r Exs. 7O, 7P.
    100
    Resp’t. Response at 9-10.
    101
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 15-803(b).
    102
    
    Id. § 15-803(c).
                                              33
    But the record does not prove Settlor was the last surviving partner. Kalil
    Associates’ partnership agreement states that a partner’s death creates an
    obligation by that partner’s executor to give written notice to the living partner,
    which in turn vests in the living partner a right to purchase the deceased partner’s
    interest.103 If any portion of the deceased partner’s interest is not purchased, “the
    holder or successor to such unpurchased interest shall remain a partner” subject to
    requirements that the living partner consent and the successor execute an
    instrument adopting the partnership agreement.104
    The record contains no allegation or evidence as to whether this procedure
    was followed when Claire predeceased Settlor. Claire assigned the economic
    rights of her general partnership interest to her own trust.105 The trustee(s) and
    beneficiary(ies) of her trust are not identified in the record. I cannot discern
    whether Settlor assumed Claire’s interest in Kalil Associates (by the above
    procedure or by some other means) and became the sole surviving partner, or
    whether Claire’s interest went to some other “holder or successor” who then
    became a partner. I cannot state with certainty that Settlor was the sole surviving
    partner and that Petitioner therefore has authority to wind up Kalil Associates. I
    therefore request a status update from the parties within thirty (30) days of the date
    103
    Pet’r Ex. 6 ¶¶ 15(b), (c).
    104
    
    Id. ¶¶ 15(c),
    16.
    105
    Pet. ¶ 41.
    34
    of this report being adopted by the Court as to whether additional Court
    instructions are necessary regarding the winding up of Kalil Associates. If they
    are, I request briefing on that issue on a stipulated schedule.
    For the foregoing reasons, I recommend the Court grant Petitioner’s motion
    for summary judgment on Count II, seeking dissolution of Kalil Associates, but
    reserve decision on instructions for winding up Kalil Associates.
    D. Respondent’s claims are untimely.
    Respondent asserts several claims regarding Settlor’s testamentary
    documents and the administration of Settlor’s estate. Petitioner asserts that
    Respondent’s claims are statutorily time-barred. Respondent replied that he
    requested discovery and challenged Settlor’s estate documents to Petitioner’s
    attorneys, and that he complained to the Court that his entreaties were being
    ignored.106 These alleged difficulties do not excuse Respondent’s failures to assert
    his claims to this Court before the non-claim statutes and statutes of limitation
    expired.
    106
    On exception, Respondent repeated that his claims were late because Petitioner withheld
    discovery. Respondent did not make any filing in this case – including any request for discovery
    – until July 20, 2015, after the expiration of the periods for bringing his claims. It was
    incumbent upon Respondent to file his claims first, then seek discovery within the parameters set
    by his claims and any asserted defenses thereto. Any alleged failure to receive discovery was not
    contested before the applicable periods ran, and would have been relevant and justiciable only
    after Respondent asserted his claims. Respondent’s exceptions are dismissed. Petitioner’s
    complaint that Respondent’s exceptions were untimely is dismissed as moot.
    35
    1. Respondent’s claims against the 1997 Trust and its amendments are
    untimely.
    Respondent asserts two claims against the 1997 Trust as amended.
    Respondent seeks $200,000, which Respondent argues was incorrectly debited
    from his share under the 1997 Trust as amended because Settlor and Claire forgave
    a promissory note in that amount.107 Respondent also proposes distributing
    Petitioner’s promissory note to Settlor, which is part of Settlor’s residuary estate
    which Settlor’s will states should be distributed according to the 1997 Trust,
    equally among Respondent, Janice, and Laura, regardless of the terms of the 1997
    Trust as amended.
    Pursuant to 
    12 Del. C
    . § 3546, a challenge to the 1997 Trust as amended,
    which was specifically referred to in Settlor’s will, must have been brought “in the
    time in which a petition for review of a will could be filed.” Section 1309 provides
    this period is six months from the entry of the order of probate.108 This limitation
    period is strictly applied to “effectuate the public policy favoring the prompt and
    orderly settlement of estates.”109
    The Register of Wills admitted Settlor’s will to probate on January 16, 2015,
    so the six-month period for challenging the will and 1997 Trust ended on July 15,
    107
    Resp’t Response at 5-6.
    108
    
    12 Del. C
    . § 1309.
    109
    Disabatino v. Diferdinando, 
    2001 WL 812014
    , at *2 (Del Ch. July 9, 2001) (citing Criscoe v.
    Derooy, 
    384 A.2d 627
    , 629 (Del. Ch. 1978)).
    36
    2015.110 Respondent did not seek review of any of Settlor’s testamentary
    documents in this Court during that time. Petitioner filed the petition in this action
    on May 20, 2015. On July 15, 2015, having not received any challenges to the will
    or any response to the petition from Respondent, Petitioner filed a motion for
    default judgment against Respondent. Upon receiving the motion for default
    judgment, Respondent wrote Petitioner and copied the Court on July 20, 2015,
    expressing discontent with the April 25, 2014, Fifth Amendment to the 1997
    Trust.111 Petitioner stipulated to an extension of time for Respondent to answer the
    Petition, which then-Master LeGrow granted, giving Respondent an extra sixty
    days to respond.112 On September 14, 2015, Respondent filed a “motion” seeking
    to invalidate the 1997 Trust’s Fifth Amendment and seeking $56,000 from the
    estate he claimed he should have received in connection with the Kalil LP
    buyout.113 Then-Master LeGrow granted Respondent an additional extension to
    formally answer the petition.114 Respondent answered and counterclaimed on
    November 2, 2015, asking the Court to reverse the deduction in the 1997 Trust’s
    Fifth Amendment, equally distribute Respondent and Janice’s “debt among all
    110
    Pet’r Reply Br. Ex. A.
    111
    Docket Item (“D.I.”) 12.
    112
    D.I. 13, 15.
    113
    D.I. 24.
    114
    D.I. 30.
    37
    siblings,” and pay Respondent $51,250.00 he allegedly did not receive in
    connection with the Kalil LP buyout.115
    Respondent first sought judicial relief for his concerns about the 1997 Trust
    and its amendments in September 2015, more than six months after Settlor’s
    pourover will was admitted to probate (and four months after receiving detailed
    notice of the 1997 Trust and Petitioner’s interpretation of it via the petition). An
    interested person’s right to ask the Court to review a will, and any trust referred to
    therein, is open for six months upon admission to probate, but at the close of that
    period, the right ceases to exist.116 Then-Master LeGrow’s extension of time to
    answer the petition did not and could not extend the statutory period for
    Respondent to raise his own claims against Settlor’s 1997 Trust. I recommend the
    Court deny Respondent’s motion for summary judgment and grant Petitioner’s
    motion on the basis that Respondent’s claims against the 1997 Trust and its
    amendments are untimely.
    2. Respondent may not amend his pleadings to assert Settlor breached a
    contract to make a legacy by amending the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement; and, any such claim would be untimely.
    Respondent also takes issue with the 1989 Trust and the 1993 Supplemental
    Trust Agreement. Respondent asserts the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement
    115
    D.I. 37. Respondent did not contest the handling of Settlor’s estate before the Register of
    Wills until September 14, 2016. Pet’r Reply Br. Ex. A.
    116
    Moore v. Graybeal, 
    1989 WL 17430
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Feb. 24, 1989).
    38
    should be disregarded as it pertains to Respondent. Respondent alleges the 1993
    Supplemental Trust Agreement decreased Respondent’s share under the 1989 Trust
    because Settlor gave Respondent a 24% stock ownership gift in Compu-Val, the
    family business, as part of an advanced inheritance.117 Respondent asserts he and
    Settlor later agreed Respondent would return his gifted shares in Compu-Val in
    exchange for his full inheritance.118 Respondent concludes that in distributing the
    1989 Trust’s property, the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement should be
    disregarded as to Respondent.
    Petitioner argues this claim is also statutorily time-barred. Petitioner cites
    
    12 Del. C
    . § 2102(a), which imposes an eight-month statute of limitations period
    for any claim against an estate that arose before the death of the decedent.119 The
    eight-month limitation period applies to claims against a revocable trust arising
    prior to the death of the trustor.120
    Respondent raised his claim regarding the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement for the first time in the February 2017 pretrial stipulation.121
    Respondent’s Answer and motion to amend (which I accepted as part of his
    Answer in lieu of requiring an amended Answer) did not claim that the 1993
    117
    Pet’r Ex. 4 ¶ (C).
    118
    See Resp’t Ans. Br. Tab 1 (Transfer Certificate from James P. Kalil to James Kalil Revocable
    Trust, dated June 9, 1996, for 24 shares).
    119
    
    12 Del. C
    . § 2102.
    120
    
    12 Del. C
    . § 3337.
    121
    D.I. 71, ¶ 4(b); D.I. 70, ¶ (b).
    39
    Supplemental Trust Agreement should be set aside.122 Petitioner objected in the
    pretrial stipulation: “Petitioner does not believe this request for relief has been
    properly pleaded and therefor[e] is not properly before the Court.”123 Respondent
    did not seek leave to amend his pleadings, but rather, on March 3, 2017, argued
    that Petitioner was aware of the circumstances underlying Respondent’s claim.124
    Because the pretrial conference was cancelled, Petitioner’s objection to
    Respondent’s claim for relief regarding the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement
    was never heard by the Court. I address it now.
    Generally, a party must plead a short and plain statement of a claim for relief
    showing that the pleader is entitled to relief, and a demand for judgment for the
    relief to which the party deems itself entitled.125 Court of Chancery Rule 15
    permits adjudication of issues not raised by the pleadings by express or implied
    consent of the parties. If evidence is objected to on the ground that it is not within
    the issues made by the pleadings, “the court may allow the pleadings to be
    amended and shall do so freely when the presentation of the merits of the action
    will be subserved thereby and the objecting party fails to satisfy the court that the
    122
    Ans. ¶¶ 12-13 (answering Petitioner’s allegation about the execution of the 1993
    Supplemental Trust Agreement by stating, “Unknown”, and answering Petitioner’s allegation
    that the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement “changed the dispositive scheme of the 1989 Trust
    to divide the residue 1/3 to Janice, 1/3 to Laura, 1/6 to James, Jr. and 1/6 to Donald” by stating,
    “Agreed”); Mot. to Amend (D.I. 54).
    123
    D.I. 71, ¶ 4(b).
    124
    D.I. 76 at 1-2.
    125
    Ct. Ch. R. 8(a).
    40
    admission of such evidence would prejudice him in maintaining his action or
    defense upon the merits.”126 While Rule 15 provides in effect that amendments of
    the pleadings are to be freely granted, it remains a discretionary matter for the
    judge.127
    Respondent asserted his claim to void the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement after discovery was complete, on the eve of the scheduled trial. Under
    the scheduling order, Petitioner had no opportunity to take discovery into
    Respondent’s claim. Respondent had already been permitted to amend his
    complaint once, over Petitioner’s objection. None of those allegations concerned
    the effect of the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement.
    Respondent’s argument that Petitioner was aware of Settlor’s alleged
    contract to modify the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement fails to indicate
    Petitioner had notice that Respondent was going to challenge that Agreement in
    this case. To the contrary, Respondent’s pleadings indicated some degree of
    acquiescence to the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement until just days before
    trial. Respondent’s Answer “agreed” that the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement
    “changed the dispositive scheme of the 1989 Trust” and did not allege any reason
    to disturb the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement. I conclude Respondent may
    126
    Ct. Ch. R. 15(b); see Norberg v. Security Storage Co. of Washington, 
    2000 WL 1375868
    , at
    *4-5 (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 2000) (applying Rule 15(b) in the summary judgment context).
    127
    Laird v. Buckley, 
    539 A.2d 1076
    , 1079 (Del. 1988).
    41
    not amend his pleadings to add a claim to void the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement.
    Even if Respondent’s claim to set aside the 1993 Supplemental Trust
    Agreement were considered, it would be untimely. As I read it, Respondent’s
    claim is based on an alleged contract to make a testamentary disposition.128
    Respondent asserts that the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement’s diminishment
    of Respondent’s share of the 1989 Trust was based on Settlor having given
    Respondent 24% ownership in Compu-Val. Respondent further asserts that in or
    around 1996, he and Settlor agreed that Respondent would return his share of
    Compu-Val in exchange for his full inheritance. Settlor did not amend the 1989
    Trust or 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement in accordance with any such
    contract.
    A claim for breach of a contract to make a legacy arises at the death of the
    party offering to make the will.129 Section 2102(b) states that all claims that arise
    at the death of the decedent are barred against the estate within six months after
    128
    See 
    6 Del. C
    . § 2715 (“No action shall be brought to charge the personal representatives or
    heirs of any deceased person upon any agreement to make a will of real or personal property, or
    to give a legacy or make a devise, unless such agreement is reduced to writing, or some
    memorandum or note thereof is signed by the person whose personal representatives or heirs are
    sought to be charged, or some other person lawfully authorized in writing, by the decedent, to
    sign for in the decedent's absence.”). Settlor’s disposition to Respondent under the 1989 Trust
    was testamentary. See Pet’r Ex. 2, ¶ (I)(B)(2)(b) (distributing trust property to Respondent and
    his siblings only upon the death of both Settlor and his wife).
    129
    Eaton v. Eaton, 
    2005 WL 3529110
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Dec. 19, 2005).
    42
    they arise.130 Section 2102 is a “non-claim” statute that fixes a specific time within
    which claims against a decedent’s estate must be brought, otherwise the claim is
    forfeited.131 The intent and purpose of “non-claim” statutes is to compel claimants
    to bring their claims in a timely manner so the estate can be settled in a reasonable
    time.132 Settlor died on November 8, 2014, so the time for Respondent to claim
    Settlor breached an agreement to make a legacy expired May 8, 2015. Respondent
    did not assert his claim that Settlor breached a contract to make a legacy until
    February 2017. Even if Respondent were permitted to amend his pleadings to
    assert this claim, the claim would be barred as untimely.133 I recommend the Court
    grant Petitioner’s motion for summary judgment, and deny Respondent’s, with
    regard to Respondent’s claim to set aside the 1993 Supplemental Trust Agreement.
    3. Respondent’s claim that he received insufficient consideration for his
    share in Kalil LP is untimely.
    Lastly, Respondent claims that the $166,250 he received as consideration for
    his interest in Kalil LP was insufficient and that Kalil LP was undervalued at the
    time of the transaction. Respondent appears to assert that when he contractually
    tendered his interest in Kalil LP to the remaining partners, the consideration he
    130
    See 
    id. (noting the
    “general rule” that a cause of action for breach of a contract to make a will
    arises at the death of the decedent and is governed by 
    12 Del. C
    . § 2102(b)).
    131
    Estate of Holton, 
    1976 WL 5206
    , at *1-2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 17, 1976).
    132
    
    Id. 133 This
    claim would be untimely even if such amendment related back to Respondent’s
    September 14, 2015, “motion” in which he first sought relief from this Court. See Ct. Ch. R.
    15(c).
    43
    received was insufficient given the actual value of Kalil LP’s assets (i.e., the
    Property) at the time. Respondent seeks monetary damages in the amount of the
    alleged difference between what he received and what he should have received.134
    Petitioner claims Respondent agreed to the Kalil LP buyout and therefore is barred
    from challenging it. In addition, Petitioner argues the claim (whether equitable or
    legal) is untimely, either pursuant to the statute of limitations at 
    10 Del. C
    . § 8106,
    or pursuant to a laches analysis.
    Respondent’s theory underlying this claim is unclear, so it is difficult to
    categorize the claim as legal or equitable. Respondent seeks legal relief in the
    form of monetary damages. I therefore evaluate the timeliness of Respondent’s
    claim pursuant to 
    10 Del. C
    . § 8106, which establishes a three-year statute of
    limitations period for contract claims, negligent misrepresentation, and equitable
    fraud.135 The transaction that tendered Respondent’s interest in Kalil LP to the
    remaining partners closed on or around March 21, 2010, so the limitations period
    ended on or around March 21, 2013.136 Respondent first asserted a claim regarding
    134
    Resp’t Response at 9-10.
    135
    See Kraft v. WisdomTree Inv. Inc., 
    145 A.3d 969
    , 977-78, 981, 983 (Del. Ch. 2016)
    (recommending application of statutes of limitations to legal and equitable claims seeking legal
    relief); Krahmer v. Christies Inc., 
    903 A.2d 773
    , 778 (Del. Ch. 2006) (noting Section 8106
    imposes a three-year limitations period for claims of negligent misrepresentation and equitable
    fraud).
    136
    Pet’r Op. Br. at 33. The promissory note financing the buyout is dated April 13, 2010. Pet’r
    Ex. 7O.
    44
    the Kalil LP transaction in September 2015.137 Absent tolling, unusual conditions,
    or extraordinary circumstances,138 which Respondent has not pled and for which I
    see no basis, Respondent’s claim regarding insufficient consideration for his
    interest in Kalil LP is time-barred. I therefore need not address whether
    Respondent acquiesced to the consideration he received.
    E. Fees generated in seeking reformation and defending against
    Respondent’s claims against Settlor’s Trusts may be paid out of
    Settlor’s trusts, but fees generated in seeking dissolution of Kalil
    Associates and defending against Respondent’s claim against Kalil
    LP may not.
    Petitioner asks for payment of his attorneys’ fees from Settlor’s trust.
    Respondent opposes that request, asserting Petitioner has brought this action in
    Petitioner’s own interest.
    Delaware common law permits payment of attorneys’ fees out of a trust
    (i) where the attorney’s services are necessary for the proper
    administration of the trust, or (ii) where the services otherwise result
    in a benefit to the trust. In either circumstance the trustee may charge
    the trust estate with the expenses of litigation, even if the litigation is
    unsuccessful.139
    Title 12, Section 3584 of the Delaware Code states:
    In a judicial proceeding involving a trust, the court, as justice and
    equity may require, may award costs and expenses, including
    137
    D.I. 24 (alleging the $166,000 transaction was never complete: “Though $110,000 was paid
    to my daughter’s educational fund the remaining $56,000 was to go to me and I am therefore
    owed those funds by the estate.”)
    138
    See 
    Kraft, 145 A.3d at 977-78
    , 981-93.
    139
    Merrill Lynch Trust Co., FSB v. Campbell, 
    2009 WL 2913893
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Sept. 2, 2009)
    (internal citation omitted).
    45
    reasonable attorneys’ fees, to any party, to be paid by another party or
    from the trust that is the subject of the controversy.
    The decision whether or not to award fees is discretionary.140
    I see no evidence that Petitioner brought this action in his own interest.
    Settlor named Petitioner as sole trustee of the 1997 Trust and as executor of
    Settlor’s estate. Petitioner therefore has a duty to administer Settlor’s estate plan
    as Settlor intended. Based on the record presented on summary judgment,
    Petitioner had a colorable basis to file this action to remedy mistakes by Settlor
    that frustrated Settlor’s testamentary intent.141 While I do not grant the reformation
    Petitioner sought, I believe the petition for reformation sought a benefit for the
    1997 Trust, namely, funding it so that it comported with Settlor’s intent. While
    reformation would have benefitted Petitioner, it also would have benefitted Laura
    and Jacqueline. Petitioner and his siblings also engaged in extensive settlement
    negotiations, indicating Petitioner attempted to be conciliatory and limit exposure
    to attorneys’ fees. I conclude Petitioner’s reasonable fees and costs for services
    provided in seeking reformation of the 1997 Trust, and in countering Respondent’s
    claims against the 1997 and 1989 Trusts as amended, may be paid out of those
    trusts. Because my report leaves the Account titled under the 1989 Trust, I
    140
    Paradee v. Paradee, 
    2010 WL 3959604
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Oct. 5, 2010).
    141
    See Matter of The Hawk Mountain Trust Dated Dec. 12, 2002, 
    2015 WL 5243328
    , at *5 (Del.
    Ch. Sept. 8, 2015) (awarding fees out of a trust for an action that was dismissed, where the
    petitioner had “at least a colorable basis” for bringing that action).
    46
    conclude that the 1989 Trust was also “involved” in this proceeding, and that
    justice and equity require payment of those fees and costs out of the 1989 Trust if
    necessary due to lack of funds in the 1997 Trust.142
    Both the common law and statutory grounds for paying fees out of a trust
    require a trust to be the subject of the controversy. Petitioner’s request for judicial
    dissolution of Kalil Associates and transfer of the Property does not place any trust
    as the subject of the controversy. Neither does Respondent’s claim regarding the
    Kalil LP buyout. While Kalil LP and Kalil Associates were significant
    components of Settlor’s estate plan, they operated in parallel to Settlor’s trusts and
    are neither beneficial nor necessary to the proper administration of those trusts.
    Instead, Petitioner’s requested remedy benefits Kalil LP. Fees and costs for
    services provided in connection with the dissolution of Kalil Associates and the
    Kalil LP buyout may not be paid out of either of Settlor’s trusts.
    Upon this report being adopted by the Court, Petitioner’s counsel shall
    distribute a demand for attorneys’ fees and costs with supporting documentation.
    If the parties cannot reach agreement on the amount of attorneys’ fees and costs to
    be awarded, then Petitioner’s counsel shall make a prompt application.
    142
    See 
    12 Del. C
    . § 3584.
    47
    III.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, I recommend the Court deny Petitioner’s motion
    for summary judgment on Petitioner’s request for reformation (Count I), grant
    Petitioner’s motion on Petitioner’s request for dissolution of Kalil Associates
    (Count II), and grant Petitioner’s motion on Respondent’s untimely claims against
    Settlor’s trusts and estate. I recommend the Court deny Respondent’s motion for
    summary judgment. I recommend the Court grant Petitioner’s request for fees
    incurred in connection with the 1989 and 1997 Trusts, but deny it for fees incurred
    in connection with Kalil Associates and Kalil LP.
    Janice’s counterclaim regarding the 1989 Trust was not reviewed on
    summary judgment. If and when this report is adopted by the Court, the parties
    shall submit a status update and scheduling order for proceeding on Janice’s
    counterclaim.
    This is a final report pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 144. Due to
    Respondent’s reliance on the prison mail system, the period for filing a notice of
    exceptions is extended to twenty (20) days.
    Respectfully,
    /s/ Morgan T. Zurn
    Master in Chancery
    48