William v. Ehrlich, Jr., Trustee of the William v. Ehrlich Trust U/W/D May 5, 1977, as Amended v. Jeffery Ehrlich and Vinn, LLC ( 2016 )


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  •                                COURT OF CHANCERY
    OF THE
    STATE OF DELAWARE
    KIM E. AYVAZIAN                                                        CHANCERY COURTHOUSE
    MASTER IN CHANCERY                                                           34 The Circle
    GEORGETOWN, DELAWARE 19947
    AND
    NEW CASTLE COUNTY COURTHOUSE
    500 NORTH KING STREET, SUITE 11400
    WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19980-3734
    July 25, 2016
    Matthew D’Emilio, Esquire
    Thomas Uebler, Esquire
    Mark Dalle Pazze, Esquire
    Cooch & Taylor, P.A.
    The Brandywine Building
    1000 West Street, 10th Floor
    Wilmington, DE 19801
    Stephen E. Smith, Esquire
    Baird Mandalas Brockstedt, LLC
    6 South State Street
    Dover, DE 19901
    RE:      William V. Ehrlich, Jr., Trustee of the William V. Ehrlich Trust U/W/D May
    5, 1977, as Amended v. Jeffery Ehrlich and Vinn, LLC, C.A. No. 11364-MA
    Dear Counsel:
    William V. Ehrlich, Jr. (“William, Jr.”),1 in his capacity as trustee of a
    testamentary trust (“the Trust”), has filed a petition seeking a declaratory
    judgment, indemnification, and specific performance against his younger brother
    Jeffrey Ehrlich (“Jeffrey”), who was the sole residuary beneficiary of the Trust.
    The dispute between the parties primarily involves an easement over real property
    Page 1 of 14
    once owned by the Estate of William V. Ehrlich (“the Estate”), which easement
    had been conveyed to the J. Ehrlich Realty Company (“the Realty Company”) by
    the co-executors of the Estate by deed dated September 1, 1982 (“the Easement
    Deed”).2   The real property underlying the easement was then distributed to the
    Trust under the terms of the Last Will and Testament of William V. Ehrlich,
    deceased.3 On December 5, 2013, William, Jr., as trustee, distributed the last
    remaining parcel of real property in the Trust to Jeffrey free and clear of trust.4
    1
    I use first names here to avoid repetition and confusion, and intend no disrespect
    by this practice.
    2
    The co-executors of the Estate were William, Jr. and his father’s widow, Audrey
    Ehrlich, who was Jeffrey’s mother. Shortly before William V. Ehrlich’s death, he
    granted the Realty Company an option to purchase two parcels of land and an
    easement for $25,000.         Petition for Declaratory Judgment and Specific
    Performance (“Petition”), Exhibit B. Both proposed parcels lacked street frontage
    and it appears from the rough sketch attached to the recorded option that the two
    parcels were to be carved out of the northern portion of Tax Map Lot Number 31
    behind a two-story building that housed the Rehoboth Pharmacy in 1981. The
    Realty Company exercised its option, and the deed dated September 1, 1982
    describes Parcel No. 1 as containing approximately 1,630 square feet and Parcel
    No. 2 as containing approximately 84 square feet. A 2013 survey shows Parcel
    No. 2 at the end of the alley between the former Rehoboth Pharmacy building and
    Parcel No. 1, which is improved by a small one-story masonry building. Petition,
    Exhibit J. This survey also depicts the alley as running along the side and rear of
    the former Rehoboth Pharmacy building. 
    Id. When the
    option was granted in
    1981, William, Jr. was president of the Realty Company and his father was its
    secretary. Upon the death of William V. Ehrlich, William, Jr. inherited his father’s
    shares in the Realty Company. See Respondents’ Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to
    Chancery Court Rule 12(b)(2) and (6) in lieu of an Answer (“Motion to Dismiss”),
    Exhibit A.
    3
    Motion to Dismiss, Exhibit A.
    4
    Petition, Exhibit M.
    Page 2 of 14
    According to the Petition, the Trust had been funded with two parcels of
    commercial property along Rehoboth Avenue in the Town of Rehoboth Beach,
    Delaware. These commercial properties generated revenue and Aubrey Ehrlich,
    the widow of William V. Ehrlich and a co-trustee of the Trust, was the beneficiary
    of the trust income. In 2006, Mrs. Ehrlich became incapacitated and William, Jr.
    thereafter served as the sole trustee of the Trust. In 2009, Mrs. Ehrlich’s daughter
    and court-appointed guardian filed a petition to compel William, Jr., in his capacity
    of the sole trustee, to disgorge accumulated income to the guardian of the income
    beneficiary. The litigation settled after Mrs. Ehrlich’s death in 2011, and the
    parties, including Jeffrey, executed a mutual release and settlement agreement on
    April 16, 2011.5
    Thereafter, on June 2, 2011, William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee, conveyed
    one parcel, consisting of Tax Map Lot Number 33 and part of Tax Map Lot
    Number 35, (“117 Rehoboth Avenue”) to Jeffrey free of trust.6 William, Jr., in his
    capacity as trustee, did not file a trust accounting with this Court or obtain a title
    search prior to transferring 117 Rehoboth Avenue to Jeffrey. 7 Instead, Jeffrey
    5
    Petition, Exhibits E & F. According to the Petition, Jeffrey was anxious to
    resolve the litigation because under the terms of the Trust, upon Mrs. Ehrlich’s
    death, provided Jeffrey was over 21 years of age, Jeffrey was entitled to receive the
    commercial property outright and free of trust. Motion to Dismiss, Exhibit A.
    6
    Petition, Exhibit G.
    7
    Jeffrey subsequently conveyed 117 Rehoboth Avenue to Vinn, LLC. Petition,
    Exhibit I.
    Page 3 of 14
    agreed to execute a “Waiver of Account, Receipt, Release and Indemnification
    Agreement,” in which he waived, among other rights, his right to an account, and
    agreed to refund any property erroneously distributed to him by the Trust and to
    indemnify William, Jr. for all actions taken with respect to his administration of the
    Trust.8
    On December 5, 2013, William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee, conveyed the
    remaining parcel, Tax Map Lot Number 31 (“107 Rehoboth Avenue”) to Jeffrey
    free of trust. As recited in the deed, 107 Rehoboth Avenue is subject to a perpetual
    right of way for ingress and egress over an alley adjacent to and behind the two-
    story building located on Tax Map Lot Number 31, which building formerly was
    known as the Rehoboth Pharmacy.9            Prior to making this final distribution,
    William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee, commissioned a survey of 107 Rehoboth
    8
    Petition, Exhibit H.
    9
    117 Rehoboth Avenue is improved by a large one-story building that faces
    Rehoboth Avenue. 107 Rehoboth Avenue is improved by a two-story building that
    faces Rehoboth Avenue and an alley that separates this building from the building
    located on 117 Rehoboth Avenue. The alley turns and runs behind the two-story
    building until it terminates at the side of a large one-story building owned by the
    Realty Company. This building was formerly occupied by a MacDonald’s
    restaurant. It faces Rehoboth Avenue and First Street, with an entrance on
    Rehoboth Avenue and a back door onto the alley. Behind 107 Rehoboth Avenue
    is the Realty Company’s property. It is improved by a one-story masonry building
    sandwiched between the former MacDonald’s building and the building on 117
    Rehoboth Avenue. The only vehicular access to or from this property owned by
    the Realty Company is through the alley. Petition, Exhibit J.
    Page 4 of 14
    Avenue so that a proper deed could be drafted.10 Upon reviewing the 2013 survey
    William, Jr. discovered that the boundary line between 117 Rehoboth Avenue and
    107 Rehoboth Avenue did not run along the side of the building on 117 Rehoboth,
    but actually ran through the alley. According to the 2013 survey, a portion of the
    alley (a 2.3 by 68.12 foot strip) lies on the 117 Rehoboth Avenue property.
    William, Jr. asked Jeffrey to execute a confirmatory easement in order to clarify
    the Realty Company’s easement on 117 Rehoboth Avenue and to provide notice to
    subsequent buyers.         No confirmatory easement was ever executed despite
    numerous attempts by the parties’ attorneys to address this issue. According to the
    Petition, William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee, made the final distribution of the
    Trust on December 5, 2013, conveying 107 Rehoboth Avenue to Jeffrey free and
    clear of trust with the belief and understanding that Jeffrey would address the
    easement issue after the property was distributed to him. However, Jeffrey refused
    to engage in any discussions.
    William, Jr. is now seeking: (1) a declaration that Jeffrey’s real property
    (117 Rehoboth Avenue) remains subject to the easement; (2) the return of 117
    Rehoboth Avenue to the Trust so that William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee, can
    distribute a corrected deed for that parcel reflecting the easement; (3) an order
    requiring Jeffrey to fully indemnify William, as trustee, in connection with this
    10
    
    Id. Page 5
    of 14
    action; (4) enforcement of an alleged settlement agreement between the parties
    requiring Jeffrey to execute a confirmatory easement; and (5) an award of
    attorney’s fees and costs.
    Jeffrey has moved to dismiss the petition under Court of Chancery Rules
    12(b)(2) and 12(b)(6), arguing that: (1) the trustee is bringing suit against the sole
    beneficiary of the Trust for the purpose of vindicating his own personal property
    right; (2) the Trust ceased to exist after December 5, 2013; and (3) even if the Trust
    still exists, “the idea of a trustee suing the sole beneficiary of a trust to regain trust
    property that the trustee himself distributed, is such a clear violation of the
    trustee’s fiduciary duty as to render the suit unsustainable.”11            In response,
    William, Jr. contends that the Trust continues to hold an asset, a chose in action,
    i.e., this claim against Respondents. William, Jr. also accuses Jeffrey of unclean
    hands, claiming that Jeffrey reneged upon a previously-acknowledged obligation to
    correct the deed, which should preclude dismissal of this action.
    After reviewing the record, I have concluded that the Trust lacks standing to
    enforce the claims asserted in this petition. In order to have standing, a petitioner
    must have:
    (1) suffered an injury in fact – an invasion of a legally protected interest
    which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not
    conjectural or hypothetical; (2) there must be a casual connection between
    the injury and the conduct complained of – the injury has to be fairly
    11
    Motion to Dismiss at ¶¶ 6-8.
    Page 6 of 14
    traceable to the challenged action of the [respondent] and not the result of
    the independent action of some third party not before the court; and (3) it
    must be likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be
    redressed by a favorable decision.12
    The Trust has not suffered an injury in fact. Instead, it is the Realty Company, not
    the Trust, who has suffered an injury in fact. The Realty Company has a legally
    protected interest in a recorded easement over an alley located on 107 Rehoboth
    Avenue. Although the Easement Deed provided metes and bounds descriptions
    with starting points on the tax map lot lines for the Realty Company’s two new
    parcels, it failed to provide a similar description or any dimensions for the Realty
    Company’s easement over the alley.13         According to the Petition, it was the
    understanding of William V. Ehrlich, the Estate, and the Realty Company in 1981
    and 1982 that the side of the alley ran along the boundary line between 117
    Rehoboth Avenue and 107 Rehoboth Avenue.            The 2013 survey subsequently
    revealed that that the existing building on 117 Rehoboth Avenue does not extend to
    the boundary line between 117 Rehoboth Avenue and 107 Rehoboth Avenue – the
    12
    Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V., 
    62 A.3d 26
    , 38 (Del. Ch. 2012)
    (quoting Dover Historical Soc’y v. City of Dover Planning Comm’n, 
    838 A.2d 1103
    , 1110 (Del. 2003)).
    13
    After describing the two new parcels, the Easement Deed recites the following:
    TOGETHER with a right of way in perpetuity to Buyer, its Successors and
    Assigns, for pedestrian and vehicular ingress and egress to the structure on Parcels
    1 and 2 herein from Rehoboth Avenue over, upon and across the aforesaid alley
    adjacent to the Rehoboth Pharmacy and over, upon and across the land behind the
    Rehoboth Pharmacy, but it is understood that the Fee Simple Title to the land
    Page 7 of 14
    building ends slightly more than two feet short of the boundary line. As a result, a
    strip of the alley (2.3 by 68.12 foot) between the two buildings is owned by 117
    Rehoboth Avenue. This creates a cloud on the Realty Company’s title to the
    easement.14 The Realty Company’s injury is causally related to the Respondents’
    continuing refusal to execute a confirmatory easement deed for 117 Rehoboth
    Avenue.
    The Trust is not the proper party to assert claims on behalf of the Realty
    Company. Nevertheless, Court of Chancery Rule 17 provides that no action shall
    be dismissed on the ground that it is not prosecuted in the name of the real party in
    interest until a reasonable time has been allowed for the substitution of such
    party.15 Therefore, I recommend that the Court allow Petitioner 90 days from the
    date this report becomes final within which to comply with Rule 17 as to Counts I
    (declaratory judgment) and IV (enforcement of settlement agreement), and allow
    Respondents to renew their motion to dismiss at the expiration of 90 days if there
    has been no compliance. I also recommend that the Court dismiss Counts II
    (Breach of Contract – Specific Performance) and III (Indemnification) for failure
    covered by the right of way will remain in Seller, his Heirs and Assigns, subject to
    this right of way.” Petition, Exhibit C.
    14
    A 2.3 foot wide strip of the building owned by the Realty Company on Parcel
    No. 1 also lies on 117 Rehoboth Avenue according to the 2013 survey, which
    creates a cloud on the Realty Company’s title to that parcel. Because of the way
    the Easement Deed was drafted, the potential clouds on the Realty Company’s title
    were always present, but they were only revealed in 2013 by the survey.
    Page 8 of 14
    to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6) because the Realty Company is not a party to
    the “Waiver of Account, Receipt, Release and Indemnification Agreement.”
    Both parties have filed exceptions to my draft report. After reviewing their
    respective briefs, I am dismissing the parties’ exceptions and adopting my draft
    report as my final report as modified herein.
    William, Jr., in his capacity as trustee of the Trust, has taken exception to
    my recommendation that the Court dismiss Counts II and III of the complaint for
    failure to state a claim under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) because the Realty
    Company was not a party to the Waiver of Account, Receipt, Release and
    Indemnification Agreement (“Release Agreement”). William, Jr. contends that the
    Trust has standing to pursue Counts II and III because when the Trust distributed
    117 Rehoboth Avenue to Jeffery,16 the easement over the alley should have been,
    but was not, expressly excepted from the 2011 deed conveying this real estate. As
    a result, according to William, Jr., Jeffery had received more property than he was
    entitled to. Furthermore, under the Release Agreement, Jeffery had agreed “to
    refund to [William, Jr.] any amount which may at any time be determined to have
    been an erroneous distribution to him regardless of the cause of such erroneous
    15
    See Court of Chancery Rule 17(a).
    16
    I had misspelled Jeffery’s name throughout my draft report and now am using
    the correct spelling in my final report.
    Page 9 of 14
    distribution ….”17 In addition, Jeffery had agreed to indemnify William, Jr. against
    any “causes of action, costs and expenses … which may arise from his
    administration of the Trust, including … William’s distribution of the assets to
    Jeff[ery] in accordance with this Agreement.”18
    The problem with William, Jr.’s argument is two-fold.         First, Jeffery
    received the property to which he was entitled under the Trust: 117 Rehoboth
    Avenue and 107 Rehoboth Avenue. After distributing 117 Rehoboth Avenue to
    Jeffery, William, Jr. commissioned a survey of 107 Rehoboth Avenue and
    discovered that a portion of the easement that had been granted to the Realty
    Company in 1982 was located on 117 Rehoboth Avenue, creating a cloud on the
    Realty Company’s title.        The Trust lacks standing to enforce the Release
    Agreement because the Trust was not injured by this distribution, only the Realty
    Company. The relief requested in Count II (“order Jeffery to return the 117
    Rehoboth Property to the Trust so that William, as trustee, can distribute a
    corrected deed for the property reflecting the easement”), if granted, would not
    protect or benefit the Trust; instead, it would burden Trust property with an
    easement before distributing that property free and clear of trust to Jeffery.
    Second, the requested relief would benefit the Realty Company, as the only entity
    having a legally protected interest in the recorded easement. The Realty Company
    17
    Petition for Declaratory Judgment and Specific Performance, Ex. H, at ¶ 13.
    Page 10 of 14
    was not a party to the Release Agreement. Moreover, on the limited record before
    me, William, Jr. is the president of the Realty Company.19 Under the Release
    Agreement, Jeffery agreed to indemnify William, Jr. “in his personal capacity and
    as trustee,” but not in his capacity as president of the Realty Company. Therefore,
    Counts II and III should be dismissed for failure to state a claim for relief.
    Although William, Jr. does not take exception to my draft report’s
    recommendations that (a) the Realty Company should prosecute Count I (to
    resolve the cloud on the title to the easement by declaratory judgment), and (b) the
    Realty Company should prosecute Count IV (to enforce an alleged settlement
    agreement), William, Jr. does takes exception to my conclusion that only the
    Realty Company has standing to prosecute Count IV; he argues that the Trust has a
    right to enforce the settlement agreement as well. Conversely, in their exception to
    my draft report, Respondents Jeffery and Vinn, LLC argue that if Counts II and III
    are dismissed for failure to state a claim because the Realty Company was not a
    party to the Release Agreement, then the Court also should dismiss Count IV under
    Rule 12(b)(6) because the Realty Company was not a party to the alleged
    settlement agreement.
    Count IV is based on allegations that after the 2013 survey revealed the
    property line discrepancy, William, Jr. had requested Jeffery “execute a
    18
    
    Id. at ¶
    7.
    Page 11 of 14
    confirmatory easement to make [the Realty Company’s] easement on the 117
    Rehoboth Property clear and provide notice to subsequent buyers.”20 William, Jr.
    further alleges that Jeffery, through his counsel, Neil F. Dignon, Esq., had agreed
    to “remedy the mutual mistake by executing a confirmatory easement.”21 By
    August 2013, however, Jeffery refused to honor the agreement; therefore, William,
    Jr. is seeking specific enforcement of the settlement agreement and an order
    compelling Jeffery to execute the confirmatory easement.
    Respondents argue that in March 2013, William’s attorney was representing
    the Trust, not the Realty Company. Any settlement agreement, therefore, existed
    between the Trust and Jeffery.        Respondents argue that because the Trust
    terminated after the property was distributed and because the Realty Company is
    not the appropriate entity to enforce the alleged agreement, Count IV should be
    dismissed entirely.
    In my draft report, I concluded that the Realty Company is the real party in
    interest in this case. If it can be demonstrated that the Realty Company was a
    third-party beneficiary of the alleged settlement agreement,22 then the Realty
    19
    
    Id. Ex. B.
    20
    
    Id. at ¶
    31.
    21
    
    Id. at ¶
    32 & Ex. K.
    22
    See Comrie v. Enterasys Networks, Inc., 
    2004 WL 293337
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Feb.
    17, 2004) (“To qualify as a third party beneficiary of a contract, (i) the contracting
    parties must have intended that the third party beneficiary benefit from the
    contract, (ii) the benefit must have been intended as a gift or in satisfaction of a
    Page 12 of 14
    Company would have standing to prosecute Count IV, which seeks specific
    enforcement of the alleged settlement agreement.23 If, on the other hand, the Trust
    were to prosecute Count IV, William, Jr.’s conflicting roles as trustee of the Trust
    and president of the Realty Company would raise the specter of self-dealing and
    breach of fiduciary duty.
    In my draft report, I recommended that the Court allow William, Jr. 90 days
    to comply with Rule 17, which provides that no action shall be dismissed on the
    ground that it is not prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest until a
    reasonable time has been allowed for the substitution of such party. At this stage,
    it would be premature to dismiss Count IV because the Realty Company may have
    standing to prosecute it. Furthermore, since William, Jr. has not taken exception to
    my recommendation that the Realty Company be allowed to substitute for the
    Trust in prosecuting Count I, Count IV ultimately may be rendered moot if the
    Realty Company obtains an order declaring that 117 Rehoboth Avenue remains
    subject to the easement that was established approximately 34 years ago.
    Respondents also have taken exception to my failure to award them
    attorneys’ fees. It is premature at this stage of the proceeding to consider an
    pre-existing obligation to that person, and (iii) the intent to benefit the third party
    must be a material part of the parties’ purpose in entering into the contract.”)
    (quoting Madison Realty Partners 7, LLC v. AG ISA, LLC, 
    2001 WL 406268
    , at *5
    (Del. Ch. Apr. 17, 2001)).
    23
    See Astle v. Wenke, 
    297 A.2d 45
    , 47 (Del. 1972).
    Page 13 of 14
    application for attorneys’ fees.   As a result, I am dismissing Respondents’
    exceptions to my draft report and William, Jr.’s exceptions to my draft report. The
    parties are referred to Rule 144 for the process of taking exception to a Master’s
    Final Report.
    Respectfully,
    /s/ Kim E. Ayvazian
    Kim E. Ayvazian
    Master in Chancery
    KEA/kekz
    Page 14 of 14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CA 11364-MA

Judges: Ayvazian M.

Filed Date: 7/25/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/25/2016