Ralph Paul Deputy v. Jay Christian Deputy

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    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE RALPH PAUL DEPUTY, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 10874-VCZ ) JAY CHRISTIAN DEPUTY, ) individually and as Trustee of the ) Revocable Trust of Lillian K. Deputy ) under Agreement dated 01/21/03; and as ) Trustee of the Revocable Trust of Lillian ) K. Deputy under Agreement dated ) 03/10/05; and as Trustee of the Amended ) and Restated Lillian K. Deputy ) Revocable Charitable Trust under ) Agreement dated 02/21/08; and as ) Trustee of the One Flintlock Trust ) Irrevocable Trust under Agreement dated ) 09/15/03; and as Trustee of Unknown ) Trust, ) ) Respondent. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: November 18, 2019 Date Decided: March 2, 2020 Sharon Oras Morgan, Beth B. Miller, and E. Chaney Hall, FOX ROTHSCHILD LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Petitioner Ralph Paul Deputy. Christopher M. Coggins, COGGINS LAW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Respondent Jay Christian Deputy. ZURN, Vice Chancellor. Strife between brothers, particularly over the apportionment of resources like money or affection, is a familiar aspect of the human condition. According to the Bible, the first set of brothers on the earth suffered such conflict. In the book of Genesis, Cain was jealous of his brother Abel’s relationship with the Lord. Then the Lord said to Cain, “Why are you angry? Why is your face downcast? If you do what is right, will you not be accepted? But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it.1 So cautioned, Cain took Abel out to a field and killed him. When the Lord asked Cain where Abel was, Cain replied, “I don’t know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” 2 As punishment for his crime, the Lord made Cain a restless wanderer of the earth. This case follows the same narrative arc. Paul and Jay Deputy are brothers; strife has existed between them for decades, in part due to the fact that Paul is adopted, and in part due to Jay’s difficulty in doing what is right. 3 Jay is, in fact, his brother’s keeper: he is the trustee of two family trusts, of which both Jay and Paul are beneficiaries. Paul placed his full confidence in Jay and relied on him to keep what was Paul’s and act in Paul’s best interest. But sin crouched at Jay’s door, and he failed to rule over it. 1 Genesis 4:6–7. 2 Genesis 4:9. 3 In this family dispute, I use the parties’ preferred first names in pursuit of clarity. I intend no familiarity or disrespect. Paul’s full name is Ralph Paul Deputy; he prefers to be called Paul. 1 Jay’s actions with respect to each trust followed the same pattern: charm a vulnerable settlor, persuade the settlor to adopt Jay’s suggested estate plan for his benefit and ease of manipulation, and ultimately disenfranchise Paul and take the whole for himself, all the while creating a paper trail to justify and obscure his fiduciary misdeeds. Originally, both trusts named Jay as successor trustee after the original trustee. Integral to Jay’s scheme, both settlors executed a durable power of attorney naming Jay as attorney-in-fact. Purportedly acting under the authority of that durable power of attorney, Jay drafted and executed an amendment to each trust that included a no- contest provision. Both amendments granted Jay, as trustee, the authority to revoke the beneficiary status of any trust beneficiary when Jay concluded the beneficiary had contested the trust or related documents. Jay never provided Paul with a copy of either amendment, failed to promptly inform Paul that he had amended the trusts, and did not explain the amendments’ material effects on Paul’s interests. Neither of the “amendments” are valid. And both amendments were executed under suspicious circumstances. Little suggests that either settlor was aware that Jay executed the amendments, or authorized him to do so. Each amendment was a departure from each settlor’s estate plan. Jay executed these amendments in the shadows while each settlor’s well-being hung in the balance. Knowing that each 2 settlor would have likely protested his efforts, Jay did so in order to take control of the trusts and secure their benefits for himself. Satisfied he had laid sufficient groundwork, Jay confidently proceeded as though both amendments were legally operative. Much suggests that Jay keenly awaited the moment at which he could exercise his revocation powers to excise Paul from both trusts. Eventually, Paul asked enough questions that Jay pounced and told Paul that his interests were revoked under the amendments. Jay’s “revocations,” if valid, would have the effect of transferring 100% of the interest in each trust to Jay. But Jay did not clearly inform Paul of the supposed revocations. Rather, Jay sent his brother mixed messages about his beneficial interest, allowing Paul to proceed under the assumption that Jay’s revocations were merely empty threats and that Jay was maintaining Paul’s interests. Paul operated under this assumption for a number of years, despite a number of red flags to the contrary, such as not receiving distributions or information about the trusts. At different junctures, Paul even sought the advice of counsel, but with his focus elsewhere, Paul did not act to protect himself against Jay. Now, over ten years after this saga began, Paul contends that Jay, as trustee, breached his fiduciary duties to inform, of loyalty, and of care, and was unjustly enriched by those alleged breaches. Paul seeks inventories and accountings for the trusts, damages, removal of Jay as trustee of the trusts, and attorneys’ fees. In his 3 defense, Jay contends that Paul’s claims are barred by the equitable doctrine of laches. Based on the preponderance of the evidence presented at trial, Paul must prevail in this action. My findings of fact—of biblical proportions due to the complexity and extent of Jay’s sins—and reasoning follow. And based on those findings, Paul is entitled to relief. Cain’s misdeeds led the Lord to sentence him to be a restless wanderer of the earth: “Now you are under a curse and driven from the ground, which opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand. When you work the ground, it will no longer yield its crops for you.”4 The trusts at issue will no longer yield their assets to Jay. Jay is removed as trustee of both trusts and replaced by Paul. Jay must give Paul and this Court an inventory and accounting of both trusts. And Jay must disgorge his ill-gotten gains, and pay Paul’s attorneys’ fees. I. BACKGROUND5 In this breach of trust action, Petitioner Ralph Paul Deputy claims that Respondent Jay Christian Deputy, as trustee of certain trusts, breached his fiduciary duties to inform, of loyalty, and of care, and was unjustly enriched by those alleged fiduciary duty breaches. In particular, Paul contends that his brother Jay has 4 Genesis 4:11–12. 5 Citations in the form of “[Name] Tr. ––” refer to witness testimony from the trial transcripts. Citations in the form of “[Name] Dep. ––” refer to deposition transcripts in the record. Citations in the form of “PTO ¶ ––” refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order. See Docket Item (“D.I.”) 118. Citations in the form of “JX –– at ––” refer to a trial exhibit. 4 attempted to divest Paul of his interests in two trusts: (1) the One Flintlock Trust by Agreement dated September 15, 2003, as amended, established by the parties’ aunt, Georgene Castor (the “One Flintlock Trust”); and (2) the Amended and Restated Lillian K. Deputy Revocable Charitable Remainder Trust under Agreement dated February 21, 2008, as amended, established by the parties’ mother, Lillian K. Deputy (the “Deputy Trust” and with the One Flintlock Trust, the “Trusts”). Paul now seeks inventories and accountings for the trusts, damages, removal of Jay as trustee of the trusts, and attorney’s fees.6 Jay maintains that the doctrine of laches bars Paul’s claims.7 Paul initiated this action in 2015, 8 and the case proceeded through discovery. Paul filed his Amended Petition in January 2018.9 Count I asserts a claim for breach of Jay’s duty to inform. Count II asserts a claim for breach of Jay’s duties of loyalty and care. Count III asserts a claim for unjust enrichment. In December 2018, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment.10 I denied the motions for reasons 6 D.I. 51 at 7–8 (“prayer for relief”). 7 See generally D.I. 132. 8 D.I. 1; JX 125. 9 D.I. 51. 10 D.I. 73, 74. 5 associated with the laches analysis, concluding outstanding issues of fact remained as to when Paul was on inquiry notice of his claims.11 The case proceeded to trial on June 19 and 20, 2019. 12 At trial, the parties presented three witnesses: Paul Deputy, Jay Deputy, and Thomas Fairchild. In addition, the parties submitted 174 exhibits. These are my findings of fact based on the preponderance of the evidence. A. The Deputy Family History And The Court’s Credibility Determinations Paul lives and works in Hagerstown, Maryland. 13 He has very little accounting experience, no background in investment management, and no training in estate administration.14 As such, he has relied on Jay’s advice regarding investments and family assets.15 Paul attended college for three years, and eventually opened his own restaurant in Hagerstown. 16 He has operated that restaurant for nearly nineteen years. 17 Paul suffered a stroke in 2014 and has been 11 Deputy v. Deputy, 2019 WL 2452550, at *4 (Del. Ch. June 10, 2019) (ORDER). In July 2019, Respondent requested the Court refer the action to mandatory mediation. D.I. 123. I ultimately denied the request. D.I. 129. 12 D.I. 126 (Trial Transcript Vol. I); D.I. 127 (Trial Transcript Vol. II). 13 Paul Tr. 5:20–21. 14 Paul Tr. 5:6–16. 15 See, e.g., Paul Tr. 19:3–20:12, 22:12–16. 16 Paul Tr. 4:18–5:5. 17 Paul Tr. 6:20–24; see also Paul Tr. 5:1–2; Paul Dep. 25:12–18 (Paul stating at his deposition that he did not file suit in 2008 because he “ha[d] a restaurant . . . , so [he] 6 cognitively impaired since.18 As a result, Paul has “problems speaking every once in awhile,” and “every once in awhile [his] numbers don’t come out right, but [he] knows them in [his] brain.”19 Despite this setback, he remains devoted to his restaurant.20 Jay is a resident of Wilmington, Delaware, but sometimes stays at the home that belonged to his mother, located at 6744 North Circle, Seaford, Delaware (the “North Circle House”). 21 Prior to settling in Delaware around 2008, Jay split his time between Delaware and New York, New York, where his spouse, John Walton, owned a loft.22 Jay is very educated, has substantial market experience, and touts his education and experience to others.23 Jay has a bachelor’s degree from Salisbury couldn’t give [his] time to this [dispute] until [he] finally got [himself] together with the restaurant”); JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000007 (“[T]he restaurant is taking a lot of time these days.”). 18 Paul Tr. 5:17–22. 19 Paul Tr. 5:23–6:2. 20 See Paul Tr. 5:1–2. 21 Jay Tr. 335:17–18, 336:1–9, 344:15–345:20. 22 Jay Tr. 335:19–24, 396:13–15. 23 See, e.g., JX 78 at JDEPUTY_00791 (“Prior to returning to Delaware, I was a real estate broker and investor in the Twin Cities for 15 years. As well, I was real estate developer of historic properties. At present, I am writing a doctoral dissertation from Columbia University in real estate development and local economic development involving university communities. I am, therefore, very familiar with both a seller’s and buyer’s perspective in real estate transactions . . . .”); JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000024 (Jay writing: “Things are certainly tough . . . . It really seems to be part of the capital markets correction(s) that is taking place. Almost a survival of the fittest . . . so to speak.”), REPDUTY_000021 (Jay writing: “The trust is in bonds, which when the stock market goes down, bonds go up (an inverse relationship). Again, it is my understanding we’re 7 University; a master’s degree in urban planning and real estate from the University of Michigan; and additional postgraduate degrees in landscape architecture, horticulture, interior design, and American art history from the University of Minnesota.24 He earned his doctorate from Columbia University in 2008, 25 and is currently pursuing an MFA in painting at the University of Delaware.26 For the past ten years, Jay has been “just a house husband.” 27 Jay and Paul are brothers.28 Lillian K. Deputy and her late husband, A. John Deputy, were Jay’s biological parents. 29 They adopted Paul when he was a young boy.30 Paul’s adoption has been a source of animosity between the brothers for some somewhat sheltered by the recent turn of events in the stock market, but until there is confidence in the market, who knows what will happen.”); JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00792–94 (Jay writing: “The purchase of real property is predicated on present facts and rationale of both the national residential real estate market’s collapse as well as other financial markets’ collapse at the beginning of the Great Recession in mid-2008. . . . It is the Trustee’s opinion, and based on his professional experience, this was not a time to sell the house at a greatly reduced price in order to simply place monies in trust. . . . Therefore, it is my educated and informed opinion as a former real estate broker and developer as well as an urban real estate market academic that the real estate market will continue to be non- performing for the next five to eight years . . . . The financial and lending markets full recovery remains uncertain.” (emphases added)). 24 Jay Tr. 334:17–335:10. 25 Jay Tr. 335:11–12. 26 Jay Tr. 533:2–3. 27 Jay Tr. 335:13–16. 28 PTO ¶ 14. 29 PTO ¶ 16. 30 PTO ¶ 15; Paul Tr. 6:6–10. 8 time.31 Lillian and John treated Paul as their biological son, and Lillian resolved to have her assets distributed to her sons equally after her death. 32 Throughout adulthood, Paul and Jay maintained close relationships with their mother, as well as her sister and their aunt, Georgene Castor. 33 As Lillian and Georgene grew older, the brothers visited and helped care for them. 34 Memorializing the importance of these relationships, both Lillian and Georgene adopted estate plans favoring Jay and Paul through trusts for the settlors’ benefit during their lifetimes and for the benefit of Jay and Paul after the settlors’ deaths. 35 These trusts, as well as their amendments and restatements, are the foundation of this case. Each trust named Jay as trustee. But as I expressed at trial, Jay used his trustee positions to misappropriate his brother’s interests in both Georgene’s 31 See Jay Tr. 429:2–430:5. 32 See JX 58 at 8–9 (noting that Lillian was “becoming convinced that ‘outright, equally’ [was] the best method of disposition” and that “she agree[d]” that “[o]utright to each leaves Jay the option of reserving principal, but trust for total removes flexibility from [Paul]”). 33 PTO ¶ 20; see Paul Tr. 6:22–7:4 (“My aunt was my favorite aunt of all, and we had a good relationship. We – we’d go to her house, help her out, and things like that.”); Jay Tr. 361:5–362:1 (Jay describing his frequent visits to his aunt’s house in New Jersey while he lived in New York). 34 Jay Tr. 362:9–368:17. 35 See generally JX 1, JX 7. As discussed below, Georgene’s original trust document has not been provided. The first of Georgene’s trust documents names both Jay and Paul as beneficiaries. See JX 7. 9 estate and Lillian’s estate.36 Before explaining my findings of fact that led to this conclusion, I will first explain my underlying credibility determinations. While much of the dispute between Jay and Paul requires my evaluation of their conflicting testimony, this endeavor is aided by the credible testimony of Lillian’s financial advisor, Thomas Fairchild. 37 Fairchild owns an Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. (“Ameriprise”) branch that provides private wealth services to retired individuals, and has been a financial advisor with Ameriprise for twenty- six years.38 Through Ameriprise, Fairchild served as Lillian’s financial advisor from 1996 until her death in 2008; until her death, he met with her in person at least two times per year and communicated with her frequently.39 He advised her on account management, general planning regarding required retirement plan distributions, and general estate planning.40 Fairchild also served as Jay’s financial advisor from 2001 to 2007.41 He began acting as Paul’s financial advisor in 1998, and still acts in that 36 Tr. 539:22–540:2. 37 Fairchild earned his B.A. from University of Delaware in 1981. Fairchild Tr. 200:21– 24. He has also earned four certifications: Certified Financial Planner, Certified Investment Management Analyst, Certified Private Wealth Advisor, and Certified Trust Financial Advisor. Id. 201:2–6. 38 Fairchild Tr. 201:13–16. 39 Fairchild Tr. 205:2–18. 40 Fairchild Tr. 205:23–206:4. 41 Fairchild Tr. 204:1–5. 10 capacity today.42 By virtue of these roles, Fairchild has developed an intimate knowledge of the Deputy family’s assets and Lillian’s intended estate plan, as well as the events that occurred with respect to Georgene’s estate. At trial, I found Fairchild to be objective and fair, with a strong fiduciary aptitude. He cared deeply for his long-time client, Lillian. 43 According to Fairchild, Lillian “was a dear. She was lovely, and she traveled and was very good at shorthand. And so . . . I always thought about what I said, because I knew she would know after the fact.” 44 As a fiduciary, he always had Lillian’s wishes and intent in mind.45 Even if he was unhappy with the means of distributing Lillian’s assets, he was satisfied if the ultimate end was consistent with her wishes. 46 Fairchild contemporaneously recorded his dealings with the Deputy family, and cataloged his reactions to events as they unfolded in real time. 47 His testimony was entirely 42 Fairchild Tr. 203:17–21. 43 Paul Tr. 52:3–9 (noting Fairchild visited Lillian in the hospital); Fairchild 266:2–7 (noting Fairchild attended Lillian’s funeral). 44 Fairchild Tr. 205:19–22. 45 See, e.g., Fairchild Tr. 206:20–24, 208:24–210:24, 212:16–23, 223:16–21, 234:11– 235:1, 237:14–24, 259:5–15, 276:23–277:14. 46 See, e.g., Fairchild Tr. 259:7–15 (expressing displeasure over how Ameriprise corporate handled forgery claims, but noting he was happy the ultimate outcome accorded Lillian’s wishes); JX 58 at 1 (Fairchild noting in April 2008 his displeasure with the estate plan’s tax structure but his belief that he could “restore most of the tax-deferred value while keeping much of the intended control”). 47 Fairchild Tr. 208:17–23 (“Q. Is it your regular practice to keep notes of your meetings with clients? A. Yes, of course. Q. How do you record those notes? A. During meetings, 11 consistent with the documentary record and corroborated by it. Therefore, much of his testimony serves as the objective touchpoint for my findings of fact. Fairchild testified, “I think Jay is dishonest, and I think Jay is vindictive.” 48 He explained: From a dishonesty standpoint, from my perspective, things like asking a member of my staff to notarize a document after the fact is dishonest. Forging signatures is dishonest. Creating documents after the fact, post-hoc documents, to create a story is dishonest. Not reporting his mother’s death on a retirement account, and accepting four or five years worth of required distributions payable to his mother, I think is dishonest.49 Fairchild’s impressions of Jay are consistent with my impressions at trial. I did not find Jay’s testimony credible or sincere. To effectuate his misappropriations, Jay has created an extensive fraudulent paper trail, which I will describe in detail below. Jay regularly doctors stories and documents for his own benefit. At trial, Jay evaded direct answers and had difficulty explaining discrepancies in his story. His explanations were predominantly consistent only with the inauthentic paper record that Jay himself manufactured. In contrast, I found Paul’s testimony to be sincere and credible. He answered questions directly and truthfully. His testimony was consistent with reliable, with handwritten notes on a meeting page. During telephone calls, on a computer log.”); see generally JX 58; JX 102. 48 Fairchild Tr. 204:7–8. 49 Fairchild Tr. 204:10–18. 12 authentic exhibits. Communications between Paul and Jay corroborate Paul’s understanding of the facts as they unfolded. Further, Paul’s story is consistent with Fairchild’s contemporaneous business records. To the extent that Paul could not accurately recall events from many years ago, the documentary record neatly fills the gaps. He only relies on one self-drafted document to support his timeline of events: one handwritten list, which he prepared on Fairchild’s advice in March 2008.50 Even Paul’s handwritten list bears many indicia of reliability, including Fairchild’s corroborative testimony and business records. With these credibility determinations, I make the following factual findings. B. The 2003 Agnes Pfeiffer Estate Jay’s misdealings with family assets began as early as 2003, when Lillian and Georgene’s aunt, Agnes Pfeiffer, passed away.51 Agnes’s trust was the first trust Jay “had any relationship with.”52 Jay, acting as agent of Agnes’s estate, took everything from Agnes’ estate; Lillian received nothing.53 Lillian told Fairchild she was suspicious of Jay’s intentions at that time.54 Lillian “felt that Jay had insinuated 50 JX 52; see Paul Tr. 61:23–62:10. 51 Fairchild Tr. 216:2–4. 52 Jay Tr. 369:20–21. 53 Fairchild Tr. 216:10–17. 54 See JX 58 at 4–5 (entries dated 2/22/2005 at 2:21 PM, 2/22/2005 at 2:30 PM, and 3/7/2005 at 10:07 AM). 13 himself into her estate and inherited against Agnes’s original wishes,”55 and “felt that Jay inherited away from her.” 56 Lillian considered contacting an attorney in hopes of reopening Agnes’s estate, and she made an appointment with the Pennsylvania Bar Association to discuss the “Agnes situation.”57 Paul remained unaware of Jay’s actions with respect to Agnes’s estate for many years.58 Once he learned of Jay’s actions, he was “angry” and “behind the effort to re-open the estate.”59 Lillian ultimately decided not to pursue that course. Instead, in July 2005, Jay visited Lillian, and they resolved the issue by agreeing Jay would pay Lillian $500 per month toward her share of Agnes’s estate.60 While that resolved Jay’s dispute with Lillian over Agnes’s estate, Paul was “not convinced yet that Jay is genuine.”61 Indeed, Jay continued to try to manipulate Agnes’s estate. In August 2005, Jay contacted Fairchild and informed him that “[h]e wanted[ed] to give his mother a copy of the Agnes trust to demonstrate that she was not included in the estate,” and 55 Fairchild Tr. 215:20–23. 56 Fairchild Tr. 216:2–4. 57 JX 58 at 4–5 (entries dated 3/7/2005 at 10:07 AM and 3/4/2005 at 1:10 PM). 58 JX 58 at 5 (entry dated 2/22/2005 at 2:21 PM). 59 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 3/7/2005 at 10:49 AM). 60 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM). 61 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM). 14 asked whether Fairchild’s employee “could notarize a copy as authentic.”62 Fairchild informed Jay that “the notary stamp only confirms that a signer’s signature, not the authenticity of a document,” and told Jay “[h]e could write and sign that the copy is authentic and have his signature notarized.” 63 Fairchild recorded that he “would not have notarized copy as it may have mislead [sic] others . . . Notary stamp simply says signature is his, nothing more. No reason to validate his signature in this case.”64 Jay never followed up. C. Georgene’s 2003 One Flintlock Trust The brothers’ aunt and Lillian’s sister, Georgene Castor, was a resident of Warren, New Jersey.65 After her husband passed away in 2000, Georgene lived alone with her four small dogs.66 When Jay moved to New York City in 2000, he and Georgene would regularly have lunch or dinner together. 67 Because he was nearby in New York City, he parked his car at her house, and would see his aunt at 62 JX 102 at 1 (entry dated 8/1/2005 at 10:30 AM). 63 JX 102 at 1 (entry dated 8/1/2005 at 10:30 AM). 64 JX 102 at 1 (entry dated 8/23/2005 at 1:01 PM). 65 Jay Tr. 360:2–3. 66 Jay Tr. 360:10–14, 362:18–23. 67 Jay Tr. 361:8–362:1. 15 least every other weekend when he retrieved his car to travel to Wilmington. 68 He visited often enough that he had a key her home. 69 In September 2003, at nearly seventy-one years old, Georgene was in relatively good health. 70 But that month, on September 14, Georgene fell while home alone and broke her hip. 71 Jay discovered Georgene had fallen after visiting her at her home.72 She was hospitalized and admitted to a rehabilitation center that same day.73 The next day, while under medical care, Georgene executed a General Durable Power of Attorney appointing Jay as her attorney-in-fact.74 That document was executed under seal.75 The parties stipulated that Georgene established the One Flintlock Trust by executing the One Flintlock Trust “by Agreement dated September 15, 2003” (the “2003 OFT Agreement”) with the assistance of counsel.76 68 Jay Tr. 361:8–362:1. 69 Jay Tr. 362:2–8. 70 Jay Tr. 364:8–14. 71 Jay Tr. 362:9–363:11. 72 Jay Tr. 362:9–363:11. 73 Jay Tr. 363:12–364:7. 74 JX 5. Paul has not challenged the validity of the power of attorney. 75 JX 5 at WF_000407. 76 PTO ¶ 25. This stipulation is not supported by the record. The document itself was not submitted to the Court. The first One Flintlock Trust document appearing in the record is a “restated agreement of trust” dated November 21, 2003. See JX 7. Jay did not testify as to why the 2003 OFT Agreement is absent from the record. 16 The 2003 OFT Agreement named Georgene as trustee.77 The 2003 OFT Agreement was not submitted to the Court.78 According to Jay, the 2003 OFT Agreement disinherited Paul and named only Jay and Lillian as beneficiaries.79 Jay testified that Georgene decided that Jay would have 51% of the Trust, Lillian would have 49% of the Trust, and Paul would have nothing.80 This was inconsistent with what Georgene And Jay’s testimony about its execution is inherently confusing. He testified that Georgene’s financial advisor, John Brady, “visited her fairly frequently” while she was in rehab after her fall, and that they then began “talking about wills and trusts and those sorts of things.” Jay Tr. 369:4–8. Jay testified: [M]y aunt knew a couple of her neighbors had charitable remainder trusts. So John Brady arranged for a man named Ian Richard Ploss . . . to talk to my aunt, see if this was something she wanted to do, how she wanted to do it, and the like. And this was a bit of a process, actually. And my aunt thought about it, discussed things with Ploss initially, and once she had a sense in her mind of what she wanted to do, she asked me if this made any sense. I had no experience with trusts per se. I mean, you know, my Aunt Agnes’s trust was the first trust I had any relationship with. But anyway, my aunt and Mr. Ploss worked out what my aunt wanted. Id. 369:9–23. If true, these frequent visits and the “process” must have occurred after Georgene was hospitalized on September 14, but before she signed the 2003 OFT Agreement on September 15. This is not credible. But Paul stipulated to the purported fact that the 2003 OFT Agreement was created on September 15. More globally, Jay contends that this stipulation, and others like it, mean that Paul concedes the document thereunder is a valid and legally binding document. See D.I. 133 at 40–41. I do not read Paul’s stipulations to concede more than the fact that the document was purportedly executed on the stated date. 77 PTO ¶ 26. 78 See supra note 76. 79 Jay Tr. 368:18–369:2, 369:4–371:4. 80 Jay Tr. 370:1–4. 17 told Paul and Lillian: both believed that Georgene intended for her estate to be distributed in equal thirds.81 1. Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment Georgene remained in a medical facility from September 14 until the second week of November, when she returned home. 82 From Georgene’s fall through the end of November, Jay travelled to New Jersey each evening to care for Georgene’s dogs and to visit her.83 During that time, Georgene executed a will, a document naming Jay as her power of attorney, and an amendment to the One Flintlock Trust. 84 Georgene had already named Jay as her attorney-in-fact on September 15.85 But, as the parties stipulated, on November 21, assisted by legal counsel, Georgene executed a General Durable Power of Attorney appointing Jay as her attorney-in- fact (“Georgene’s POA”). 86 Georgene’s POA enumerates the attorney-in-fact’s powers; it omits the authority to amend Georgene’s established trusts, and it limits Jay’s ability to make gifts.87 81 See Paul Tr. 125:1–128:19; JX 58 at 5 (entry dated 2/22/2005 at 2:21 PM). 82 Jay Tr. 363:24–364:7. 83 Jay Tr. 363:24–364:7. 84 See JX 7, JX 8, JX 9. 85 JX 5. 86 PTO ¶ 29. 87 JX 9, ¶¶ 17–22. 18 The parties also stipulated that Georgene, assisted by legal counsel, executed an amendment and restatement of the One Flintlock Trust, dated November 21 (“Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment”).88 This document was signed under seal.89 Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment named Georgene and Jay as co-trustees and Lillian as successor co-trustee of the One Flintlock Trust.90 At trial, when explaining that he served as trustee of the One Flintlock Trust since Georgene executed this amendment, Jay was surprised to learn that the amendment actually named him as co-trustee.91 Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment explicitly states that the settlor reserved the right to amend or revoke the trust: only Georgene had these powers.92 Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment also limits a trustee’s ability to make gifts to himself during the Settlor’s lifetime. 93 Reading the terms of Georgene’s POA and Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment together—especially considering that Georgene executed the documents on the same day with counsel’s assistance—it is clear that only Georgene, and not Jay, had the authority to amend the One Flintlock Trust. 94 88 PTO ¶ 27. 89 JX 7 at 31. 90 PTO ¶ 28. 91 Jay Tr. 359:9–20. 92 JX 7, § 2. 93 JX 7, § 3(2). 94 See JX 9, ¶¶ 17–22; JX 7, § 2. 19 Under Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment, Georgene was the sole beneficiary of the One Flintlock Trust during her life. 95 Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment permits the co-trustees to distribute trust principal to Georgene as they, in their sole discretion, deem appropriate. 96 The trustee need not treat all beneficiaries equally.97 Contrary to Jay’s testimony at trial, Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment does not contain a similar provision permitting the trustee to make discretionary distributions of principal after Georgene’s death.98 Upon Georgene’s death, Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment strictly requires the trust principal to be distributed to three sub- trusts: 51% to Jay, 25% to Lillian, and 24% to Paul. 99 Jay is named as trustee of both Lillian’s and Paul’s sub-trusts.100 The trustee does not have the discretion to distribute principal. 101 Rather, Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment mandates that the trustee distribute net income semi-annually to each beneficiary from their respective sub-trust.102 95 PTO ¶ 33; JX 7, §§ 2(a)(1–2). 96 JX 7, §§ 3(A)(2), 3(B)(1). 97 JX 7, § 7(F). 98 Compare Jay Tr. 379:24–380:13, with JX 7, §§ 3(A)(2), 3(B)(1), and JX 7, §§ 5‒8. 99 PTO ¶ 36; JX 7, § 5(A). 100 JX 7, §§ 6, 7. 101 JX 7, §§ 6, 7, 8. 102 PTO ¶ 36; JX 7, § 5. 20 Upon Lillian’s death, her share of the One Flintlock Trust would pass to Jay.103 Thus, once Lillian passed away and her share was added to Jay’s sub-trust, his sub- trust would hold 76% of the trust principal, and he would continue to receive income distributions.104 If both Lillian and Paul predeceased Jay, Jay would receive everything.105 But Paul’s share only increases if both Lillian and Jay predecease him.106 Finally, upon the death of the last surviving beneficiary, the principal is distributed to the urban planning program at Columbia University—Jay’s alma mater.107 2. Jay’s OFT Amendment Jay continued to play an active role in Georgene’s recovery as her medical needs increased. Georgene required occupational and physical therapy. 108 In December 2003 and January 2004, her health deteriorated rapidly. 109 Toward the end of her life, Georgene required round-the-clock care.110 Jay initially arranged for 103 PTO ¶ 38; JX 7, § 6. 104 Jay Tr. 375:22–376:21. 105 JX 7, § 7. 106 JX 7, §§ 6, 8. 107 PTO ¶ 40; JX 7, § 9 (“Ultimate Gift-Over”). 108 Jay Tr. 364:23–365:4. 109 Jay Tr. 365:5–366:9. 110 Jay Tr. 365:21–23. 21 the Visiting Nurse Association to come in daily to assist Georgene, but she grew uncomfortable with different individuals coming to her home each day. 111 Jay arranged what he believed to be a more comfortable situation for Georgene. While in the hospital, Georgene befriended a nursing student, Paula Munoz.112 Knowing that Paula had given Georgene her contact information, Jay reached out to Paula and her partner, Pilar Sanchez, whom Jay did not know at the time.113 He inquired as to whether they would be interested in helping Georgene, and they were.114 But because they lived nearly one hour away from Georgene, Jay suggested that Paula and Pilar move into Georgene’s home. 115 Jay continued to visit Georgene “maybe three times a week.”116 During this time, Jay amended the One Flintlock Trust,117 even though neither Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment nor Georgene’s POA empowered Jay to do so.118 Purportedly under Georgene’s POA, Jay prepared and executed an amendment to 111 Jay Tr. 367:1–8. 112 Jay Tr. 367:9–11. 113 Jay Tr. 367:11–21. 114 Jay Tr. 367:11–21. 115 Jay Tr. 367:22–368:8. 116 Jay Tr. 368:9–17. 117 JX 10. 118 See JX 9, ¶¶ 17–22; JX 7, § 2. 22 the Flintlock Trust, dated September 14, 2004 (“Jay’s OFT Amendment”). 119 Jay’s OFT Amendment is signed by Jay as Georgene’s attorney-in-fact120 and witnessed by Paula Munoz and Pilar Sanchez, 121 the individuals who Jay arranged to tend to Georgene while living in her home. 122 Jay executed Jay’s OFT Amendment under seal.123 Jay’s OFT Amendment authorizes him to revoke Paul’s or Lillian’s interest in the One Flintlock Trust if either “legally challenges, threatens to challenge, contests or attempt to overturn through legal action or any other means at any time and for any reason” Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment, Jay’s OFT Amendment, Georgene’s will, or Georgene’s POA. 124 It further provides that revocation is at Jay’s “sole discretion” and that he “shall be held harmless for any actions taken while acting in his full capacity as trustee.”125 Jay agreed that Jay’s OFT Amendment makes substantial changes to his powers as trustee. 126 Yet Jay never provided Paul 119 PTO ¶ 30. 120 JX 10 at 13. 121 JX 10 at 13. 122 Jay Tr. 449:11–24. 123 JX 10 at 13. 124 PTO ¶ 31; see also JX 10 at 3. 125 PTO ¶ 31; see also JX 10 at 3. 126 Jay Tr. 450:1–12. 23 with a copy of Jay’s OFT Amendment; Paul did not receive a copy until this litigation.127 At trial, Jay testified that “a lawyer who was a friend of [Georgene]” prepared Jay’s OFT Amendment during the summer of 2004, without providing the name of the attorney or the circumstances under which that attorney drafted the document. 128 He also testified that he was not provided with a copy of the document until its signing.129 Jay further testified that Georgene elected to have the document prepared:130 She was having discussions with my mother, and my mother kept saying, “I want you to change your documents. I want you to leave equal shares to all three of us.” And so my aunt, who had no intention of doing so, simply because it was my aunt’s money and not my mother’s, my aunt put a provision in her trust through this attorney for challenge.131 I do not find Jay’s testimony credible. His testimony is inconsistent with Lillian and Paul’s understanding that Georgene intended to divide her assets evenly among Lillian, Paul, and Jay.132 Jay’s statements are also inconsistent: Jay signed the 127 Paul Tr. 191:7–192:3. 128 Jay Tr. 440:2–10. 129 Jay Tr. 440:11–15. 130 Jay Tr. 441:5–6. 131 Jay Tr. 440:16–24. 132 Paul Tr. 125:1–11 (“A. The conversations for a long time were always a third, a third, a third. Q. The conversations between who? A. Jay and my mom. Jay, my mom, and myself. Q. Okay. So the conversations -- I want to make sure I understand you -- that you just described would be between you and Jay, you and your mom, or your mom and Jay, 24 document, but when referring to the document in later communications, Jay told Paul that Georgene signed Jay’s OFT Amendment. 133 Jay contends that his statement to Paul was a “mistake.”134 I believe it is only a mistake in covering his own tracks. or maybe all three of you. . . . A. All three of us.”); id. 125:12–15 (“Q. So your Aunt Gene was not included in those conversations about a third, a third, a third. Is that correct? A. Aunt Gene talked to my mom.”); id. 126:7–12 (“Q. Okay. So the basis of one-third -- your belief, and it sounds like your mom's belief, of one-third, one-third, one-third between you, Jay, and your mom was from conversations your mom had with her sister, Georgene Castor? A. When she was alive, yes.”); id. 126:24–128:12 (“Q. . . . You had never had a conversation with your Aunt Gene where she told you her estate or trust corpus was going to be divided a third, a third, a third. Is that correct? A. Let’s say it’s hearsay, but yes. Q. Well, it’s not hearsay if you tell me she never told you. So that was my question. So she never told you that it would be divided? A. No, she told us. Q. She told you? A. Yes. Q. You specifically? Not just your mom? A. (Witness nods head in the affirmative.) Q. When did she tell you that? A. When we went to her house to help her out with her -- Q. Did you go to her house more than once? A. Yes. Q. Okay. So which specific time when you went to her house, or specific times that you went to her house that she told you a third, a third, a third? A. Maybe 2003 and 2004. Q. So that’s after she had fallen and broken her hip and was trapped in the bathroom, I understand, numerous hours until Jay found her. Is that correct? A. I have no idea. Q. Well, had your Aunt Gene broken her hip at the times you recall her telling you that it was a third, a third, a third? A. Before that. Q. Okay. So it was before September 2003, because that’s when I understand she fell.”); see also JX 58 at 5 (entry dated 2/22/2005 at 2:21 PM) (“Mrs. Deputy remembers Jean saying two or three years ago that house was to be divided by thirds to Jay, Paul, and Lillian (Paul perhaps a witness to this declaration). Also remembers Jean saying few years ago ‘the stock all goes to you, Lil’ (stockbroker might be a witness to this discussion).”). 133 JX 126 at JDEPUTY_00339 (referencing “the ‘No Contest and Revocation Clauses’ of the One Flintlock Irrevocable Trust under the signature of Mrs. Georgene E. Castor” (emphasis added)). 134 Jay Tr. 450:13–452:3. 25 I find that Jay drafted and executed Jay’s OFT Amendment without Georgene’s knowledge or consent, without any power or authority via her estate planning documents, and in contravention of her wishes. 3. Georgene’s 2004 OFT Amendment The One Flintlock Trust was amended again on October 22, 2004. The parties stipulated that Georgene, assisted by counsel, executed that amendment (“Georgene’s 2004 OFT Amendment”).135 Jay witnessed this document under seal.136 Georgene’s 2004 OFT Amendment does not mention Jay’s OFT Amendment.137 With regards to Jay’s powers, Georgene’s 2004 OFT Amendment gives and takes away.138 It overrides her exclusive amendment power and grants Jay, as co- trustee, limited authority to amend the One Flintlock Trust: 139 135 PTO ¶ 32. 136 JX 11 at 3. 137 JX 11; Jay Tr. 452:4–453:4. 138 Jay contends that Jay’s OFT Amendment reflects Georgene’s wishes, but she executed another Amendment with conflicting terms just one month later. Jay, the only witness with knowledge of the circumstances under which Georgene allegedly directed both amendments, has offered no explanation about the discrepancies and time between the documents. 139 Compare JX 11 at 1, with JX 9, ¶¶ 17–21, and JX 7, § 2. 26 This Agreement of Trust and the trusts created hereby are irrevocable. The Trustees acting unanimously may amend any portion of this Agreement of Trust in writing from time to time in any manner that the Trustees deem necessary or advisable. In exercising such power to amend the provisions of this Agreement of Trust, the Trustees shall observe the general fiduciary duties of loyalty, good faith, fairness and due care.140 Further, this provision states that the Trust is irrevocable. 141 But Georgene’s 2004 OFT Amendment limits Jay’s powers with regards to Lillian and Paul’s sub-trusts; it names him “Administrative Trustee” with specifically enumerated duties and powers and “shall have no other duties, obligations, or authority.” 142 The enumerated list does not grant Jay revocation power.143 In particular, Georgene amended the One Flintlock Trust to include an additional provision relating to trustees.144 4. The Castor Estate Challenge Georgene passed away “much sooner than expected” on January 14, 2005. 145 Georgene was a trustee and the sole beneficiary of the One Flintlock Trust until her 140 JX 11 at 1. 141 JX 11 at 1. Compare JX 11 at 2–3 (“The following subsection L is hereby added to Section 142 FOURTEENTH of the Trust Agreement . . . .”), with JX 7, § 14. 143 JX 11 at 2–3. 144 JX 11 at 2–3. 145 PTO ¶ 23; JX 58 at 6 (entry dated 1/25/2005 at 10:32 AM). 27 death.146 Upon her death, the One Flintlock Trust, as amended by Georgene’s 2003 and 2004 OFT Amendments, divides the trust corpus into three beneficiaries’ sub- trusts: Paul (24%), Jay (51%), and Lillian (25%) with net income to be distributed semi-annually to each from their respective sub-trust.147 Jay became the sole trustee of the One Flintlock Trust upon Georgene’s death, as well as the executor of her estate.148 Lillian and Paul always understood that Georgene intended to divide her estate in one-third shares equally among Lillian, Paul, and Jay.149 After Georgene’s death, according to Paul, Jay initially assented to this understanding. 150 But then Jay claimed that the will was “private” and began distributing Georgene’s assets in a different manner. 151 As of March 7, 2005, Jay took everything (physically), including the Mercedes; the house is empty; the coin collection has been removed from the safe deposit box. Will, made 9-13-03, says house is in trust and distributes probate assets 51% Jay, 24% Paul, 25% Mrs. Deputy. She[’s] unsure of estate value, but thinks $500M for house. 152 146 PTO ¶¶ 23, 28, 33. 147 PTO ¶¶ 34, 36. 148 PTO ¶ 35; JX 8 at RDEPUTY_000089. 149 See, e.g., Paul Tr. 9:14–15; id. 122:17–129:10. 150 See Paul Tr. 125:1–19 (describing conversations after Georgene’s death between Paul, Jay, and Lillian regarding the equal payout structure of Georgene’s trust). 151 JX 58 at 6 (entry dated 2/17/2005 at 3:40 PM); see Paul Tr. 9:10–17. 152 JX 58 at 4–5 (entry dated 3/7/2005 at 10:07 AM). 28 Then on May 19, 2005, Jay sold Georgene’s personal residence for $525,000. 153 Until Georgene’s death, Lillian and Paul were completely unaware that Georgene’s plan was no longer to distribute one-third to each beneficiary. 154 Lillian eventually received a copy of the One Flintlock Trust and shared the news with Paul;155 “[s]he was angry, and she said, ‘I want to show you this, what Aunt Gene did.’”156 When the One Flintlock Trust did not reflect the equal-thirds division, Lillian blamed Jay.157 She believed “Jay had inherited assets away from her from her sister’s estate.”158 Lillian believed Jay had exercised undue influence over his great aunt, Agnes, and now over Georgene’s estate.159 Lillian told Fairchild, “Jay has us skunked again.”160 Jay’s actions are unsurprising to those who have come to know Jay and watch his schemes unfold over time. 161 153 PTO ¶ 39. 154 JX 58 at 5 (entries dated 3/7/2005 at 10:07 AM and 2/22/2005 at 2:21 PM); Paul Tr. 7:5–8:5. When asked about his understanding of the One Flintlock Trust, Paul stated “[t]hat Jay’s the executor; and the distribution points, he has 51 percent, my mom had 25 percent, and I have 24 percent.” Paul Tr. 8:1–5. I interpret Paul’s use of the word “executor” to refer to Jay in his fiduciary capacity as trustee. 155 Paul Tr. 123:7–124:15. 156 Paul Tr. 124:12–13. 157 JX 58 at 4–6; Paul Tr. 9:8–12. 158 Fairchild Tr. 213:7–9. JX 58 at 4; Fairchild Tr. 298:21–24 (“I had seen what I was told by Paul and Mrs. 159 Deputy was undue influence by Jay on his great aunt and his aunt’s estate . . . .”). 160 Fairchild Tr. 216:10–17; JX 58 at 4. 161 See Fairchild Tr. 204:7–18, 215:14–216:17. 29 As a result, Lillian made three decisions. First, she decided to seek recompense from Jay for lost inheritance from Agnes’s estate.162 Second, because she was “infuriated” with Jay, Lillian decided to disinherit him. 163 I describe this more in connection with the Deputy Trust, infra. Finally, Lillian sued Jay to contest Georgene’s estate on May 19, 2005. 164 Among other things, Lillian alleged that Jay asserted undue influence over Georgene and fraudulently converted her assets.165 But the lawsuit was short-lived.166 Jay approached Paul and Lillian to talk about dropping the lawsuit and reparations for Agnes’ estate.167 So the three met at Lillian’s home in Seaford in July 2005. 168 Jay admitted to being a “jerk.”169 162 JX 58 at 4–5. 163 Fairchild Tr. 213:7–10 (“In 2005, Mrs. Deputy’s sister died, and she felt that Jay had inherited assets away from her from her sister’s estate. And that infuriated her, so she wanted to disinherit Jay.”); id. 215:5–6 (“[W]hatever happened infuriated Lillian to the point that she disinherited a son.”); JX 58 at 6 (entry dated 2/17/2005 at 3:40 PM) (“Mrs. Deputy is removing Jay as POA and beneficiary.”). 164 JX 20; Paul Tr. 8:23–9:17, 11:3–24. 165 JX 20 at RDEPUTY_000111, 000115, 000116. 166 Fairchild Tr. 216:23–24 (“[T]hat challenge lasted about five months before she abandoned it.”). 167 Jay Tr. 387:18–19, 388:20–23, 453:5–13. 168 Paul Tr. 12:2–13:3; JX 22 at ASFI0000402. 169 JX 22 at AFSI0000403. 30 “Jay basically said that [he] did it for the family.” 170 Paul understood Jay’s comment to mean “he was protecting the three of [them] against, like, cousins and stuff like that” but did not understand why they would need such protection.171 Lillian was pleased by Jay’s turnaround and grateful he was back in her life after the past two years with little communication.172 Lillian decided to dismiss the case.173 “Jay [] distributed [Georgene’s] personal items among the three of them fairly,”174 and Lillian “was to relinquish her ¼ of [Georgene’s] estate to Paul.”175 As a result, Lillian expected to change her will to include Jay again, to change the account beneficiaries to include Jay again, and to drop the lawsuit despite an upcoming court date.176 Jay “agreed to pay Lillian $500/mo toward her $150M share of Agnes estate.”177 On July 28, Lillian informed Fairchild that she was contacting her attorney, David Baker, Esq., to return Jay to her estate, and she instructed Fairchild “to send 170 Paul Tr. 12:3–7 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also id. 148:11–22. 171 Paul Tr. 12:8–13. 172 Fairchild Tr. 218:10–15. 173 Paul Tr. 12:17–19. 174 JX 22 at AFSI00004043. Ultimately, this never happened. See JX 80. 175 JX 22 at AFSI0000403. 176 Fairchild Tr. 219:7–15; JX 22 at AFSI 0000403. 177 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM). 31 beneficiary change forms for sons, equally.”178 Lillian then officially withdrew the New Jersey lawsuit.179 Despite the fact that Lillian legally challenged the validity of the One Flintlock Trust documents,180 Jay did not exercise the power Jay’s OFT Amendment purportedly granted him to disinherit Lillian because of the New Jersey litigation.181 This, too, supports my finding that Jay’s OFT Amendment was fraudulently executed and my suspicion that it was likely backdated. D. The Deputy Trust I turn now to the story of Lillian’s estate plan, which begins before the litigation about Georgene’s. Lillian executed a basic will many years before she first met Fairchild. 182 As he did with many new clients, Fairchild advised Lillian to get her estate up-to-date.183 “[H]er plan was to distribute everything equally to her two sons outright.”184 Fairchild encouraged her to see an attorney to develop an estate 178 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM). 179 PTO ¶ 42. 180 Jay Tr. 453:1–18. 181 PTO ¶ 43; Jay Tr. 453:14–454:3. 182 Fairchild Tr. 206:5–207:12. 183 Fairchild Tr. 206:5–19; see also JX 58 at 9 (entry dated 10/9/2002 at 9:25 AM). 184 Fairchild Tr. 206:20–24. 32 plan.185 Lillian hired David Baker,186 who was her estate attorney from 2003 to at least 2005.187 With Baker’s assistance, Lillian established a trust.188 Before she did so, Lillian spoke with Jay and Paul.189 Paul testified that “[s]he automatically said to the two of us, that it’s 50-50 no matter what.”190 But Jay pressured his mother to deviate from this plan.191 Jay was eager to see Lillian establish a trust but wanted her to do so on his terms. 192 Lillian recognized that Jay was “strong willed and concerned that money not leave the family,” and “insistent upon” her adopting his preferred estate plan. 193 On January 7, 2003, Fairchild recorded that Lillian was “[very] troubled with disposition of the estate:”194 185 Fairchild Tr. 206:5–19. 186 Fairchild Tr. 206:16–19; Jay Tr. 459:17–19; 187 Paul Tr. 37:33–38:2. 188 Fairchild Tr. 206:8–207:12. 189 Paul Tr. 35:17–36:6. 190 Paul Tr. 35:22–23. 191 See JX 58 at 8–9 (entries dated 1/7/2003 at 2:00 PM, 1/7/2003 at 9:16 AM, and 1/6/2003 at 3:39 PM). 192 See JX 58 at 8–9 (entries dated 1/7/2003 at 2:00 PM, 1/7/2003 at 9:16 AM, and 1/6/2003 at 3:39 PM). 193 JX 58 at 8–9 (internal quotation marks omitted). 194 JX 58 at 8 (entry dated 1/7/2003 at 9:16 AM). 33 Jay insistent upon full estate in trust with income to him and [Paul]. [Paul] wants his share outright. She[’s] not inclined to place restrictions and favors outright disposition but Jay urging strongly otherwise, claiming “power in numbers” (perhaps thinking that the income generated by the whole is somehow more than twice the income generated by each half), suggesting that outright transfers will be taxed, and questioning whether acceptable for [Paul’s] portion to end up with his partner. I noted that transfers in trust most common when parents worried about spendthrift children (she[’s] not). V. important to her that the boys be treated equally. Urged she continue with living trust and PoA’s (with outright disposition to both boys), recognizing that she can change ultimate disposition if desired in the future. 195 Jay preferred that Lillian establish “some sort of continuing trust.” 196 Although Jay was “strong willed,” Lillian was convinced that “outright equally” was the “best method of disposition.”197 She revised her estate plan to reflect this decision. 198 Lillian executed several documents on January 21, 2003. First, she executed a Durable Power of Attorney appointing Jay and Paul as her attorneys-in-fact.199 Lillian intended for both Jay and Paul to serve thereunder. 200 Second, Lillian executed the Revocable Trust Agreement of Lillian K. Deputy, which Baker prepared (the “2003 Deputy Trust Agreement”).201 The 2003 195 JX 58 at 8–9 (entry dated 1/7/2003 at 9:16 AM). 196 Fairchild Tr. 210:2–8. 197 JX 58 at 8–9 (entry dated 1/7/2003 at 2:00 PM). 198 Paul Tr. 35:17–36:6. 199 JX 2 at AFSI0000711; Fairchild Tr. 211:8–12. 200 Paul Tr. 34:19–35:16; Fairchild Tr. 211:8–15. 201 PTO ¶ 48; JX 1. 34 Deputy Trust Agreement named Lillian as trustee and named Paul and Jay as substitute co-trustees.202 Thereunder, Lillian established a “standard revocable trust that leaves everything to her two sons equally outright.” 203 Lillian transferred the majority of her Ameriprise accounts to the Deputy Trust.204 But she also had annuity and IRA accounts that were not transferred, but rather were governed by beneficiary designations. 205 These would be distributed to Jay and Paul, “equally outright.”206 After Lillian executed the 2003 Deputy Trust Agreement, Baker and Lillian informed Jay and Paul that the new estate planning documents treated them equally.207 She anticipated that Jay would be unhappy with this structure because Jay “was pressuring her to change the dispositive provisions from the boys outright 202 PTO ¶¶ 49, 50. Neither Jay nor Paul served as trustee of the Deputy Trust under the 2003 Deputy Trust Agreement. PTO ¶ 54. 203 Fairchild Tr. 208:11–12. 204 JX 3; Fairchild 211:24–212:13. Her regular brokerage account, which had been owned by her individually, was owned by the Deputy Trust after she requested that it be transferred. Fairchild Tr. 212:6–23. 205 Fairchild Tr. 212:6–23. 206 Fairchild Tr. 212:6–23. 207 Paul Tr. 38:10–12 (“In 2003 we had a telephone call with Jay involved and saying that everybody -- it was 50-50 between us, me and Jay.”). 35 to some sort of continuing trust.”208 Lillian’s estate plan reflected her wishes, not Jay’s.209 1. Lillian Revises The Deputy Trust In 2005. In 2005, Lillian’s relationship with Jay took a dramatic turn, which spurred her to revise her estate plans.210 Jay was unhappy with the 2003 Deputy Trust Agreement because Lillian did not do what Jay wanted.211 Lillian and Jay scarcely communicated for roughly two years. 212 Lillian and Jay’s relationship worsened with Georgene’s death in January 2005, Jay’s management of Georgene’s estate, and Lillian’s subsequent lawsuit against Jay. Lillian repeatedly referred to this series of events as a “crisis.”213 208 Fairchild Tr. 210:3–5; see also JX 58 at 8. 209 See Fairchild Tr. 210:12–24; JX 58 at 8. 210 Fairchild Tr. 303:20–304:7. Fairchild testified that, in his twenty-six years of advising, rarely do individuals change the general dispositive provisions in their estate plans: “[P]eople’s estate plans develop and remain fairly consistent over time” and “the patterns of an estate plan don’t vary dramatically.” Id. 300:2–6, 301:9–11. When they do occur, significant changes in estate plans are typically the result of some “dramatic change” in the testator’s life. Id. 300:2–6 (“The instances I can think of are where there was some dramatic change of drug addiction, a terrible divorce, things like that. Otherwise, my experience is that people’s estate plans develop and remain fairly consistent over time.”). 211 Fairchild Tr. 303:20–24. 212 Fairchild Tr. 303:20–24; see also JX 22 at AFSI 0000403. 213 See JX 22 at AFSI0000403; JX 58 at 8. 36 As a result of that crisis, Lillian decided to disinherit Jay. 214 On February 17, 2005, Lillian informed Fairchild that she was “removing Jay as POA and beneficiary.”215 On March 10, 2005, again assisted by Baker, Lillian amended and restated the Deputy Trust by Revocable Trust Agreement, dated March 10, 2005 (the “2005 Deputy Trust Agreement”). 216 That same day, Lillian assigned all of her tangible personal property and personal residence into her Trust. 217 The 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement left “all to Paul, none to Jay.”218 Article III(B) names Paul as the sole beneficiary of the Deputy Trust upon Lillian’s death.219 Article III(C) explicitly disinherits Jay and includes a no-contest clause.220 The 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement named Lillian as the sole trustee and named Paul as substitute trustee.221 After executing the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement, Lillian contacted Ameriprise to complete her revised estate plan. 222 Ameriprise completed new 214 Fairchild Tr. 304:1–7. 215 JX 58 at 6 (entry dated 2/17/2005 at 3:40 PM). 216 PTO ¶ 51. 217 JX 15, JX 16. 218 Fairchild Tr. 22:6–9; JX 13 at AFSI0000686. 219 JX 13 at AFSI0000687. 220 JX 13 at AFSI0000687. 221 PTO ¶¶ 52, 53; JX 13 at AFSI0000686. 222 See JX 17. 37 beneficiary forms naming Paul as the sole primary beneficiary of assets not owned by the Deputy Trust.223 Lillian also submitted the Ameriprise forms to retitle her trust assets, including her investment account, in the name of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement. 224 Fairchild received this form, along with a copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement, on March 11, 2005.225 Ameriprise produced its copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement in this litigation, marked as Joint Exhibit 13 (“JX 13”). 226 A different copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement, marked as Joint Exhibit 14 (“JX 14”), was produced by Jay’s former counsel, Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP (“Morris Nichols”). 227 JX 13 and JX 14 have several differences.228 The first page of JX 13 bears Fairchild’s handwritten note, whereas the first page of JX 14 bears a handwritten note that reads “JAY HAS ORIGINAL.” 229 Article III, the dispositive provision, appears on the second page of both documents.230 In JX 13, Article III leaves “all to Paul, none to Jay.”231 But in JX 223 Fairchild Tr. 224:19–225:1. 224 Fairchild Tr. 225:2–15; JX 17. 225 JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 3/11/2005 at 12:13 PM). 226 See JX 13. 227 JX 14. 228 JX 13. 229 JX 14 at MNAT000052. Compare JX 14 at MNAT000052, with JX 13 at ASFI0000686. 230 Compare JX 14 at MNAT000053, with JX 13 at ASFI0000687. 231 JX 13 at ASFI0000687 (Art. III(B), (C)); Fairchild Tr. 222:6–9. 38 14, Article III states that after Lillian’s death, the Trust property “shall be distributed equally to the Grantor’s sons.”232 Paul and Fairchild testified that JX 14 is not consistent with Lillian’s 2005 wishes for her estate plan. 233 As Lillian’s financial advisor, Fairchild likely would have known about a revision to the Deputy Trust and would have seen the proper document.234 He did: JX 13.235 Fairchild never received a copy of JX 14.236 He explained, “To the best of my knowledge, [JX 14] is not a copy of the original trust.”237 Accordingly, the preponderance of the evidence suggests that Jay prepared JX 14 and provided it to Morris Nichols under the guise that it was a true and correct copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement.238 I find JX 13, not JX 14, is the authentic copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement. Pursuant to JX 13, Lillian disinherited Jay in 2005 in light of the actions he took with respect to Georgene’s estate and the One Flintlock Trust. 232 JX 13 at ASFI0000687 (Art. III(B)). 233 See Paul Tr. 41:13–42:3; Fairchild Tr. 223:16–224:16. 234 Fairchild Tr. 224:7–12. 235 Fairchild Tr. 222:6–9. 236 Fairchild Tr. 224:2–6. 237 Fairchild Tr. 224:15–16. 238 Jay Dep. 72:1–24. Jay did not testify at trial regarding JX 14. But at his deposition, he testified that he produced the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement to Morris Nichols without having read it because he respected his mother’s privacy. Id. 72:7–13. Jay’s ignorance is unconvincing. To the contrary, both Paul and Fairchild testified at trial that JX 13 is a true and correct copy of the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement. Fairchild confirmed that Lillian provided this copy to Ameriprise, as required, when she submitted a beneficiary change form. 39 As discussed, Jay extinguished Lillian’s qualms when he extended an olive branch to Paul and Lillian in July 2005. She decided to abandon the 2005 lawsuit and change her estate plan, including the beneficiary designations of her accounts and the Deputy Trust, to once again include Jay.239 She did not take any immediate steps to effectuate these changes. 2. Lillian Falls Ill, And The Deputy Trust Is Revised Again. A number of documents exist that purportedly revised the Deputy Trust in 2008. Jay drafted and executed these documents for his own benefit while acting as Lillian’s power of attorney. Jay did so shortly before Lillian passed away on March 5, 2008.240 I have reservations about the authenticity of these documents, which are integral to this action. During the 2007 Christmas season, Lillian visited Jay and his husband in New York.241 On December 26, 2007, Lillian was admitted to the emergency room of St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York. 242 Lillian was diagnosed with congestive heart 239 See JX 24 at AFSI0000399; JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM) (“She [left message] with Jeff Berezni (sp?) to drop lawsuit. We to send beneficiary change forms for sons, equally WROS. She will call atty Baker to return Jay to her estate. [Paul] not convinced yet that Jay is genuine. . . . She thanked us for everything we did during the crisis.”). 240 PTO ¶¶ 24, 58. 241 Paul Tr. 44:23–45:4. 242 PTO ¶ 21. 40 failure.243 In February 2008, Lillian was admitted to the emergency room in Milford, Delaware.244 Doctors informed Lillian that she required a quadruple bypass surgery.245 The surgery was scheduled for February 26, 2008. 246 According to Jay, Lillian was adamant that she revise her estate documents.247 When the surgeon informed Lillian that she needed surgery as soon as possible, she allegedly responded, “No; I have to finish my documents.”248 Paul testified differently.249 According to Paul, Lillian was “very frightened” by her health and did not discuss any changes to her estate plan at that time. 250 Lillian was a Christian Scientist, so according to Paul, her beliefs had kept her out of hospitals until this surgery.251 Paul testified that in the days between finding out that she needed surgery and actually undergoing the surgery, Lillian did not discuss any changes to her trust despite meeting with her two sons together for dinner on February 25, 2008. 252 I believe Paul. 243 Paul Tr. 44:23–45:14; see also JX 58 at 1 (entry dated 1/30/2005 at 3:36 PM). 244 JX 55 at Bayhealth00003. 245 Paul Tr. 45:11–17; see JX 55 at Bayhealth00003. 246 Paul Tr. 45:11–17; see JX 55 at Bayhealth00003. 247 Jay Tr. 387:10–389:17. 248 Jay Tr. 389:11–12. 249 See Paul Tr. 45:18–46:22. 250 Paul Tr. 45:22–23. 251 Paul Tr. 45:23–46:4. 252 Paul Tr. 46:5–49:19. 41 While Lillian’s health was failing, Jay reached out to his attorney, Thomas Pulsifer, Esq. of Morris Nichols, to revise Lillian’s 2005 trust and estate plan. 253 Lillian, though, had relied on Baker for her estate planning for years and had not met Pulsifer. 254 On January 17, 2008, Jay wrote Pulsifer: My mother has asked me to carry out her requests to have her will and trust amended. She originally asked me to do this in August, 2007, and I have neglected to get this underway. The original documents which were prepared by a lawyer in Georgetown, David W. Baker, have been in my possession since September, 2007. She chooses not to employ Mr. Baker to undertake the amendments. She has asked me numerous times within the last couple of months if I have gotten the process underway. The amendments to her will and trust reflect her desires to retain her monies, in trust, within her immediate family, (between my brother and me) and without any outside influences. As well, she does not want her monies to pass on to people outside the family once either brother has passed on, but rather to support the surviving brother until his passing when the trust will pass onto the charity she has chosen. My mother’s sister employed a “pour over” will that allowed her trust’s invested assets to benefit my mother, my brother and I. (Through your amending my aunt’s trust, the situs of the trust moved from the State of New Jersey to the State of Delaware). My mother would like to do the same, however, with only two beneficiaries.255 253 See JX 30; JX 35. 254 See JX 30 at MNAT000001. 255 JX 30 at MNAT000001. This excerpt suggests that Pulsifer aided Jay with the One Flintlock Trust. But the parties offered no testimony as to Pulsifer’s participation with Georgene’s estate and the One Flintlock Trust. 42 Jay dictated the terms of Lillian’s 2008 trust revision. 256 Neither Paul nor Fairchild knew that Pulsifer and Jay were working on a revised trust and estate plan.257 Fairchild first learned of the 2008 Deputy Trust revisions shortly before they were purportedly executed.258 On January 30, 2008, Jay contacted Fairchild and informed him of Lillian’s poor health and her purported desire to change the beneficiary designations on her Ameriprise accounts to a revised trust.259 Fairchild told Jay he needed a beneficiary change form signed by Lillian, along with a full copy of the latest Deputy Trust document.260 Jay responded that Jay and Lillian were amending the Deputy Trust and that it was “not ‘ready yet.’” 261 When Fairchild asked whether the new Deputy Trust documents were being prepared by an attorney, Jay became defensive, but informed Fairchild that he was working with a Morris Nichols attorney. 262 Pulsifer drafted revisions to the Deputy Trust, as well as Lillian’s then- existing will and power of attorney, and sent them to Jay for his review on February 256 See JX 30, JX 31, JX 35, JX 36. Nothing in the record suggests that Lillian herself informed Pulsifer of her desired changes to her estate plan. 257 See Paul Tr. 46:8–22; Fairchild Tr. 226:5–7. 258 Fairchild Tr. 227:1–7. 259 JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM). 260 JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM). 261 JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM). 262 JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM). 43 19, 2008.263 Pulsifer suggested that, if the drafts were satisfactory, he meet with Lillian and Jay so he could explain the changes to her and assess her capacity, and so she could execute the documents.264 On February 20, Jay responded with a number of proposed changes that he wanted, to address potential issues he wished to avoid.265 Jay asked whether Lillian’s revised will and trust would contain a provision directing the assets from “any outstanding bank accounts, policies of insurance, and so forth, where the beneficiaries have not been changed from [Paul] and [Jay]”266 to be poured over into the Deputy Trust, and whether there was “language that can be included which directs the Trust to be the recipient of these sums replacing or superceding [sic] [Paul] and [Jay].”267 Pulsifer replied that the beneficiary designations on those assets would govern and must be changed into the 263 See JX 35 at MNAT000007. 264 JX 35 at MNAT000007. 265 See JX 36 at MNAT000010 (“I’ve taken the opportunity to read through the drafts, and they are fine and are in good order. I have just a few questions. . . . The Trust’s amendments are also fine with a couple of minor questions/points. On page 2, I’m not really comfortable with the ability for the Successor Trustee having the ability to reduce the principal or corpus of the Trust, but rather to merely receive net income from the corpus. Is the ability to reduce principal standard in case of some dire emergency? I don’t want [Paul] to sue the Trust just to have the supposed ability to gain access to his portion of the principal. . . . The ‘Spendthrift Clause’ allows [Paul] and me to have the right to receive income. [Paul] and I are not married (but who knows what the future holds with respect to civil unions). I don’t want [Paul’s] partner declaring he has the right to receive income from the Trust (and I think that is somewhat clear in Section IV).” (emphases added)). 266 JX 36 at MNAT000010. 267 JX 36 at MNAT000010. 44 name of the revised Deputy Trust,268 consistent with what Fairchild’s January 30 statement.269 Jay also asked Pulsifer about “the ability for the Successor Trustee having the ability to reduce the principal or corpus of the Trust.”270 In particular, Jay expressed concern that Paul would sue: “I don’t want [Paul] to sue the Trust just to have the supposed ability to gain access to his portion of the principal.”271 Pulsifer informed Jay that “language permitting invasions of the trust principal for health, education, support and maintenance is common as it protects against emergencies but is not necessary,” and stated that they could “take out the principal invasion provisions if your mother wishes.”272 In fact, Pulsifer’s response emphasized that the documents should be drafted in accordance with Lillian’s wishes, despite Jay’s personal concerns: “[Y]our mother can write the agreement in any manner she wishes.” 273 The next day, February 21—five days before Lillian’s scheduled open heart surgery—Jay took Lillian to meet Pulsifer for the first time. 274 During that meeting, Lillian executed (i) a pour-over Last Will and Testament dated February 21, 2018 268 JX 36 at MNAT000009. 269 JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2005 at 3:36 PM). 270 JX 36 at MNAT000010. 271 JX 36 at MNAT000010. 272 JX 36 at MNAT000009. 273 JX 36 at MNAT000009. 274 See JX 35 at MNAT000007–08. 45 (the “2008 Will”);275 (ii) a Durable Power of Attorney (the “2008 Deputy POA”);276 and (iii) the Agreement amending and restating the Deputy Trust titled the “Amended and Restated Lillian K. Deputy Revocable Charitable Remainder Trust” dated February 21, 2008 (the “2008 Deputy Trust Agreement”).277 Pulsifer prepared each document.278 These documents recast the estate to the format that Jay had pressured his mother to adopt before she first established the Deputy Trust.279 The 2008 Will and 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement name Jay as the executor and successor trustee, respectively.280 The 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement reinstates Jay as a 50% beneficiary. 281 But instead of dividing Lillian’s estate outright equally to her sons, as she had always intended, the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement distributes income to the brothers during their lives and leaves the remainder of the trust to two charities.282 In addition, the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement requires the Trustee “to pay to [Paul 275 PTO ¶ 56; JX 37. 276 PTO ¶ 56; JX 38. 277 PTO ¶ 56; JX 39. 278 PTO ¶ 57. 279 Fairchild Tr. 240:20–241:2. 280 JX 37, Art. I; JX 39 § VII(1)(b). 281 See JX 39, § IV(1). 282 PTO ¶¶ 62, 65; JX 39, § IV(1)–(2). Following the death of the survivor of Jay and Paul, the remaining trust corpus of the Deputy Trust is to be distributed outright in 50/50 shares to Lynn House of Potomac Valley, Inc. of Alexandria, Virginia, and the Department of Education at Principia College, Elsah, Illinois. 46 and Jay] or either of them, in equal or unequal shares, so much of the principal of the trust, as Trustee in its sole discretion deems advisable, considering the property available to them from other sources, to provide for their health, education, support and maintenance.283 A non-liability clause also provides that “[u]pon the delivery of the trust property to a successor Trustee,” the predecessor trustee is not liable for future liability, and the successor “shall have responsibility only with respect to the property actually delivered to it by its predecessor trustee.”284 The 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement provides that with respect to revocation, “[a]t all times during her life, Trustor shall have the right by an instrument executed by her . . . to amend or terminate this agreement.”285 Thus, only Lillian, as trustor, has the authority to amend the Deputy Trust during her life. 286 But the 2008 Deputy POA empowers Jay, as Lillian’s attorney-in-fact, to establish and amend trusts on Lillian’s behalf: I, Lillian K. Deputy; of Sussex County, Delaware, hereby appoint my son, Jay C. Deputy, my attorney-in-fact . . . [t]o establish trusts on my behalf, on terms which my attorney-in-fact shall to his or her belief understand to be my wishes for my estate, and to amend trusts which I may have heretofore executed. 287 283 JX 39, Art. IV(1); PTO ¶ 63. 284 JX 39, Art. VII(1)(C); PTO ¶ 66. 285 JX 39, § VIII(6). 286 JX 39, § VIII(6). 287 JX 38, § 5. 47 This language empowering Jay to establish and amend Lillian’s trusts is broadly permissive, but the 2008 Deputy POA does not empower Jay to make gifts to himself absent written consent of all of Lillian’s “then living adult issue.” 288 The 2008 Deputy Trust surprised Fairchild, who testified that “it was contrary to everything [he] had seen for 12 years.”289 He added that he was concerned about Jay’s undue influence because after 12 years of hearing one thing repeatedly from Mrs. Deputy, days before her death, after Jay returned to her life, there is suddenly a big change in her estate plan along the lines that Jay had been interested in for some time for Mrs. Deputy and, in fact, for Mrs. Deputy’s sister, Georgene.290 Fairchild first learned of Lillian’s decision to revise the Deputy Trust during his January 30 conversation with Jay, during which Jay informed Fairchild that the “new trust is going to be like Aunt Gene’s.”291 He learned of her decision to revise her power of attorney at the same time or shortly thereafter.292 He never saw or received a copy of the 2008 Deputy POA or 2008 Will.293 Jay provided Fairchild with a copy 288 JX 38, §§ 10–11. 289 Fairchild Tr. 296:19–297:1. 290 Fairchild Tr. 240:20–241:2. 291 Fairchild Tr. 226:23–227:7; JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM); see also JX 90 at AFS0000673 (entry dated 02/19/2008). 292 Fairchild Tr. 227:15–24; JX 58 at 2 (entry dated 1/30/2008 at 3:36 PM); see also JX 90 at AFS0000673 (entry dated 02/19/2008). 293 Fairchild Tr. 228:1–4, 291:5–14. 48 of the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement just a few days before Lillian’s surgery in February 2008.294 Lillian did not consult Fairchild about the changes to the Deputy Trust,295 which deviated from their usual course of dealing. 296 Fairchild suspected that the sudden changes in Lillian’s estate plans were the result of Jay’s influence. 297 In the past, Jay had admitted to Fairchild that he had a “controlling nature” and that “he was not happy with his mother because she didn’t do what he wanted her to do.” 298 Fairchild testified: “I had seen what I was told by Paul and Lillian was undue influence by Jay on his great aunt and his aunt’s estate, and this seemed to be consistent with that pattern.” 299 Concerned, Fairchild resolved to discuss the changes “being so different” with Lillian “to make sure that [he] understood what she had in mind.”300 Fairchild and Lillian had intended to meet on February 26, but on February 22, Lillian called Fairchild to reschedule in light of her surgery. 301 She referred to herself as a 294 Fairchild Tr. 227:11–14. 295 Fairchild Tr. 226:5–7. 296 See generally JX 58. 297 Fairchild Tr. 291:23–292:18. 298 Fairchild Tr. 291:23–293:11. 299 Fairchild Tr. 296:19–297:1; see also id. 314:2–315:8, 316:7–14. 300 Fairchild Tr. 226:14–17. 301 Fairchild Tr. 226:17. 49 “walking time bomb.”302 Lillian was “rattled” by the sudden need for surgery. 303 Unfortunately, Fairchild was never able to meet with Lillian. 304 While Paul has not challenged the 2008 Deputy Trust as the product of undue influence, I note that the circumstances surrounding its execution are suspect, and Jay’s testimony is not credible. Jay testified that Lillian wanted to revise the Deputy Trust because “after reading [his] aunt’s trust quite carefully, she wanted that money to go further than just [Paul] and [Jay].”305 She thought establishing a trust similar to the One Flintlock Trust was a “wonderful idea.”306 To support this testimony, Jay relies on what he calls “transcripts” of conversations he purportedly had with his mother about her estate.307 He testified: “[I]n the transcripts, she – or the notes of our meetings specifically notes that she doesn’t want lump sums of money to be distributed.”308 These “transcripts” are marked as Joint Exhibit 112 (“JX 112”). 309 Jay drafted the 99-page document, which includes summaries of purported conversations 302 JX 90 at AFSI000672 (entry dated 2/22/2008); Fairchild Tr. 236:4–10. 303 Fairchild Tr. 236:11–16. 304 Fairchild Tr. 226:20–22. 305 Jay Tr. 419:1–12. 306 Jay Tr. 428:14–22. 307 Jay Tr. 419:1–12; see JX 112. 308 Jay Tr. 419:1–12 309 JX 112. 50 between Jay and Lillian. 310 He likens JX 112 to “board minutes or meeting minutes.”311 The document itself is dated June 4, 2019.312 Within the document, summaries are dated from July 24, 2007 to February 27, 2008, one day after Lillian’s surgery.313 The most recent entry—a cover letter Jay drafted—is dated September 15, 2011, over three years after Lillian’s death.314 That letter states, in relevant part: As Trustee of the Lillian K. Deputy Charitable Remainder Trust, it is my desire to give to this Trust, and through this memorandum, the working documents/transcript papers to become part of the record and property of this Trust. This gift is to protect the historical and present record and integrity of the trust and Mrs. Deputy’s thought process in the creation of the Lillian K. Deputy Charitable Remainder Trust. It is my intention for these documents to support and, if needed, to be used in defense of the Trust. It is intended for these documents to have a neutral purpose, and to be greater than any self-serving interests. The documents’ core purpose is to demonstrate a continuity of thought surrounding the trust’s creation and establishment as well as the explanation of an open and honest discussion of ideas related to a greater purpose beyond its beneficiaries.315 This exhibit contains nearly 100 pages of typewritten notes of conversations involving Jay regarding changes to the Deputy Trust. 316 310 JX 112. 311 Jay Tr. 429:15–16. 312 JX 112. 313 JX 112. 314 JX 112 at 2. 315 JX 112 at 2 (emphasis added). 316 JX 112. 51 Jay only has one copy of this document.317 He testified that Lillian recorded their conversations with a tape recorder, and he then drafted the summaries in either typed or handwritten form.318 He has not produced any tapes and testified that those tapes—which he “held” through 2012—no longer exist.319 I find this peculiar given the stated “purpose” of the “transcripts” and the fact that, according to Jay, Paul had allegedly mounted a “legal challenge” to the Deputy Trust as early as 2008.320 It seems odd that Jay would dispose of the tapes when they might “be used in defense of the Trust” in a potential lawsuit.321 Jay also claims he emailed these summaries once drafted to Lillian.322 Jay has not produced these emails in this action, and he conveniently testified that he no longer has them: “I can certainly say to you that, you know, the files were just kind of purged one after the other. I should have saved them, but I didn’t. My fault.”323 Further, each entry was purportedly “signed” by Lillian and “witnessed” by Mary Swanson, Lillian’s friend who has since passed away.324 Jay’s testimony on 317 See Jay Tr. 428:1–7. 318 Jay Tr. 431:3–17. 319 Jay Tr. 431:18–432:2. 320 See JX 112 at 2; JX 123 at JDEPUTY_00347. 321 JX 112 at 2. 322 Jay Tr. 432:3–24. 323 Jay Tr. 434:10–17. Jay apparently does not have these emails, but he has produced other emails from the same email address in this action. See Jay Tr. 468:14–22. 324 JX 112. 52 this point is extraordinary: he claims that Swanson “purposefully” witnessed each document and made a point to meet Jay and Lillian to watch them sign each entry. 325 I do not find his testimony regarding the supposed process of drafting and signing JX 112 to be credible. I find that Jay prepared JX 112 to create a paper trail that justifies his actions and that he likely drafted the document after Lillian’s passing. I believe that Jay forged the signatures of Lillian and Swanson. This behavior is consistent with Jay’s history of similar misdeeds, recited herein. Jay cannot use JX 112 to bolster his claims that Lillian thought revising the Deputy Trust to mirror the One Flintlock Trust was a “wonderful idea.”326 Consequently, I do not find Jay’s testimony on that point to be credible. More generally, Paul objected to JX 112 as hearsay not subject to any relevant exception.327 I conclude JX 112 must be excluded as hearsay for which no exception applies.328 “Hearsay is a statement made by a declarant outside the courtroom that 325 Jay Tr. 437:8–24. 326 Jay Tr. 428:14–22. 327 Jay Tr. 419:14–420:16. It was unclear at trial if JX 112 was ever produced during discovery, since Paul’s counsel represented that the only version of JX 112 produced in discovery included a bates stamp, and JX 112 does not. Jay Tr. 424:18–22 328 Jay contends that JX 112 falls within the following hearsay exceptions: D.R.E. 803(3), Then-Existing Mental, Emotional, or Physical Condition; D.R.E. 803(5), Recorded Recollection; and D.R.E. 807(a), Residual Exception. See D.I. 133 at 61–62. Aside from a conclusory allegation that these exceptions apply, Jay offers no substantive argument as to why JX 112 should not be excluded by the rule against hearsay. See id. For the reasons 53 is offered to prove the truth of the contents of the statement,”329 and unless the statement is offered for a nonhearsay purpose or falls within a hearsay exception, it is inadmissible.330 Jay kept these notes “to support and, if needed, to be used in defense of the Trust.” 331 Further, I find that Jay prepared JX 112 recently in the face of Paul’s claims against him, and that JX 112 lacks the necessary degree of trustworthiness to overcome a hearsay challenge. 332 JX 112 is inadmissible. 3. Jay Purports to Amend the 2008 Deputy Trust. Jay contends that the day before Lillian’s surgery, Jay, as her attorney-in-fact under the 2008 Deputy POA, prepared and executed an amendment to the Deputy Trust, dated February 25, 2008 (“Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment,” and together with Jay’s OFT Amendment, “Jay’s Amendments”). Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment purportedly gives Jay the power to remove and exclude a beneficiary as a recipient of trust income and as a successor trustee if that beneficiary “legally challenges, contests, or registers complaint or through written instrument attempts set forth in Paul’s post-trial reply brief, D.I. 134 at 27–28, I do not agree that these exceptions apply and conclude that JX 112 is inadmissible hearsay. 329 Brown v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 774 A.2d 232, 238 (Del. 2001) (citing D.R.E. 801(c)). 330 D.R.E. 802. 331 JX 112 at 2. 332 See, e.g., Smith v. State, 647 A.2d 1083, 1088 (Del. 1994) (“A hearsay declaration is admissible, usually under a specific exception, only where the declaration has some theoretical basis making it inherently trustworthy. Thus, absent some special indicia of reliability and trustworthiness, hearsay statements are inadmissible.” (citations omitted)). 54 to overturn” any of Lillian’s February 21 estate documents. 333 And it specifies that the trustee has no duties to, and need not provide an accounting to, a revoked beneficiary. 334 The Amendment simply requires notice of revocation to be mailed to the beneficiary’s last known address.335 The Amendment also purports to relieve the trustee of any obligation to provide an accounting to this Court, to the beneficiaries, or to any other representative.336 The language of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment tracks the language of Jay’s OFT Amendment; Jay testified that he used Jay’s OFT Amendment when drafting Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment. 337 The 2008 Deputy POA gave Jay the authority to amend the Deputy Trust, but Jay has failed to authenticate any instrument implementing that power. 338 The 333 JX 45 at 2; PTO ¶ 59. Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment further provides, in part: Trustee shall hold the trust fund in further trust for the benefit of the unrevoked beneficiary (either “Jay” or “[Paul]”) as is then and at any time during his lifetime. During the lifetime of the unrevoked or survivor beneficiary, Trustee shall distribute all of the net income, in convenient installments but not less frequently than annually to beneficiary. In addition, during lifetime of the beneficiary, Trustee shall pay to him, so much of the principal of the trust, as Trustee in its sole discretion deems advisable, considering the property available to him from other sources, to provide for his health, education, support and maintenance. JX 45 at 2; accord PTO ¶ 64. 334 JX 45 at 5. 335 JX 45 at 5. 336 JX 45 at 5. 337 Compare JX 45, with JX 10; Jay Tr. 441:12–442:4. 338 See D.R.E. 901 (“To satisfy the requirement of authenticating or identifying an item of evidence, the proponent must produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is.”); Hardy v. Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *14 & n.114 55 circumstances surrounding the execution of Jay’s Deputy Amendment are suspect at best. Jay testified that, after the 2005 lawsuit, Lillian asked Jay to be trustee of the Deputy Trust three times, and each time he refused.339 Finally, according to Jay, he agreed: I said to my mom, “Look, if you want me to be trustee, I shall consider it, but I needed revocation powers, and I needed sole authority in the trust. And those are my two conditions.” And those conditions were talked about and mulled over for two months, maybe three months. 340 Jay claims that the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement was prepared rather quickly due to Lillian’s insistence on revising her estate plan before her surgery in February 2008.341 The 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement did not address Jay’s revocation powers.342 Jay testified that he tried to put the “revocation aspect of it” on “hold” because he was “concerned,”343 and that Lillian agreed “[to] hold off on even talking (Del. Ch. July 29, 2014) (excluding documents under D.R.E 901 where the Court determined they “d[id] not constitute reliable evidence”). 339 Jay Tr. 387:17–24. Jay claims “this is all in the transcripts,” id. 387:21, but as stated, JX 122 is inadmissible, so I do not consider it here. 340 Jay Tr. 388:4–14. Jay’s testimony on this point was inconsistent. He testified that revocation powers were not a condition precedent to him assuming the role of trustee, but rather to assuming responsibility under the 2008 Deputy DPA. Id. 462:5–24. He also testified, “I had decided that revocation was something I didn’t want to handle. I was scared of it.” Id. 388:19–23. 341 Jay Tr. 388:21–389:17. 342 Jay Tr. 389:13–17, 464:10–17. 343 Jay Tr. 389:13–17. 56 further about revocation” until after her surgery. 344 But the 2008 Deputy Trust Amendment does give the trustor the right to amend or terminate the trust. 345 Jay testified that he began drafting his amendment on February 22, 2008, the day after Jay, Lillian, and Pulsifer met to execute the 2008 revisions.346 Jay never asked Pulsifer to review Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, and he never spoke to Pulsifer about revocation. 347 Rather, Jay testified that after they had “just finished with Pulsifer,” Lillian became “panicked” and said, “I made this promise to you, and you need to get the document done.”348 Jay believed he had the power to execute an amendment as her attorney-in-fact.349 According to Jay, “[s]he read the power of attorney, and through that discussion and her agreement to put this in place as a promise to me, as a protective measure to the trust, she said, ‘Please do this.’ So that’s what happened.”350 344 Jay Tr. 389:19–23. 345 JX 39, § VIII(6); Jay Tr. 463:1–5. 346 Jay Tr. 387:11–12. 347 See Jay Tr. 390:19–23. 348 Jay Tr. 390:1–9. 349 Jay Tr. 390:10–17. 350 Jay Tr. 390:13–17. But Paul’s testimony about his mother’s concerns prior to her surgery are inconsistent with Jay’s testimony. Paul testified that in his discussions with Lillian before her surgery, she was “very frightened” by her health and did not discuss any changes to her estate plan at that time. Paul Tr. 45:18–46:22. I believe Paul. 57 Jay then prepared the Deputy Trust Amendment between February 22 and 24,351 purportedly “at [his] mother’s request.”352 Curiously, Jay produced three versions of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, marked as Joint Exhibit 44 (“JX 44”), Joint Exhibit 45 (“JX 45”), and Joint Exhibit (“JX 46”); they are substantively identical but contain different handwritten markings and signature pages.353 The documents are not notarized or otherwise authenticated, but they are sealed.354 According to Jay, JX 44 is a copy that Lillian initialed. Jay testified that Lillian reviewed Jay’ Deputy Trust Amendment on February 24, but did not sign it at that time. 355 Jay claims he emailed Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment to his mother around February 24, and she then returned a hard copy that she had marked up by herself, appearing as JX 44.356 JX 44 is initialed “LKD” and bears check marks, but no signature or date.357 Paul testified the initials are not in Lillian’s handwriting.358 The back of JX 44 bears Jay’s handwritten note: “signed at BH on 2/27/08 12:05 351 Jay Tr. 467:6–7. 352 Jay Tr. 387:7–17. 353 Compare JX 44 at JDEPUTY_00659, with JX 45 at JDEPUTY_006667, and JX 46 at JDEPUTY_00674. 354 JX 44 at JDEPUTY_00659; JX 45 at JDEPUTY_006667; JX 46 at JDEPUTY_00674. 355 Jay Tr. 467:9–18. 356 Jay Tr. 394:12–395:15. This email was not produced. 357 JX 44 at JDEPUTY_00659. 358 Paul Tr. 193:21–23. Fairchild could not confirm whether Lillian made the initials. Fairchild Tr. 235:5–13. 58 p.m.”359 At that time, Lillian was resting in her hospital bed after her surgery. 360 I do not accept JX 44 as being initialed or signed by Lillian. JX 46 was purportedly signed by Jay as Lillian’s attorney-in-fact, and witnessed by Mary Swanson, on February 25. 361 Jay signed JX 46 without an accompanying indicator that he did so as Lillian’s attorney-in-fact. Swanson’s purported signature appears as “Mary Swason.”362 At trial, Jay could not explain why Swanson would have misspelled her own name. 363 JX 46 contains no initials or handwritten note. In his deposition, Jay testified that he, Lillian, and Swanson met in the afternoon of February 25 at Lillian’s house.364 At trial, Paul credibly testified that on that day (the day before Lillian’s surgery), Paul spent the entire day with Lillian beginning at approximately 9 a.m., and that Jay was never alone with Lillian.365 After Jay heard Paul testify that Paul was with Lillian beginning at 9 a.m., Jay changed his testimony to claim that he and Swanson met with Lillian at 7 a.m.366 Jay testified that he and Swanson signed JX 46 on February 25 in the sunroom of 359 JX 44 at JDEPUTY_006600; Jay Tr. 397:7–13. 360 Paul Tr. 53:5–55:18; Fairchild Tr. 235:24–236:3; Jay Tr. 471:4–18. 361 Jay Tr. 467:9–18. 362 JX 46 at JDEPUTY_00674; Jay Tr. 399:17–23. 363 Jay Tr. 472:24–473:4. 364 Jay Dep. 123:16–124:24. 365 Paul Tr. 47:1–50:7. 366 See Jay Tr. 400:2–13, 473:3–16. 59 Lillian’s North Circle House, at around 7:00 a.m., before going to Bayhealth “for pre-op sorts of things.”367 I do not accept JX 46 as being witnessed by Swanson, nor do I believe Jay’s testimony that she met with Jay and Lillian at any time on February 25. The third version of the amendment, JX 45, is signed by “Jay Deputy, DPOA” and witnessed by John Walton (Jay’s husband), but it contains no initials or handwritten note.368 JX 45 is also dated February 25.369 At trial, Jay confirmed that he backdated this document. 370 Referring to his handwritten note on JX 44, Jay testified that he and John signed JX 45 on February 27, at noon in the hospital lobby—not in front of Lillian, who was in her hospital bed. 371 JX 45 does not bear Lillian’s purported initials present on JX 44. I do not believe JX 45 was signed at that time. On February 27 at 9:30 a.m., Paul arrived at Kent General to visit his mother. 372 He spent the morning by her side, comforting her while she was in immense pain.373 Paul was the only person 367 Jay Tr. 400:5–10. 368 JX 45 at JDEPUTY_00667. 369 JX 45 at JDEPUTY_00667. 370 Jay Tr. 397:1–398:17; JX 45 at JDEPUTY_00667. 371 Jay Tr. 397:1–398:17. 372 Paul Tr. 52:18–23. 373 Paul Tr. 52:18–53:6. 60 with Lillian at noon on February 27. 374 Paul testified that Jay arrived at Bayhealth after 1 p.m. on February 27, just minutes before Paul had to leave to work at his restaurant.375 This was the first time Paul saw Jay that day.376 Paul’s testimony on this point is detailed and credible. Jay did not sign JX 45 at the hospital at noon. Under the 2008 Deputy POA, Jay has the authority to amend the Deputy Trust. But Jay has failed to authenticate any document implementing that power. He produced three different versions, all of which present plain authentication problems, and all of which inspired conflicting testimony. JX 44, JX 45, and JX 46 have not been authenticated under Delaware Rule of Evidence 901, and so they are not admissible.377 Paul first learned that changes had been made to Lillian’s estate plan shortly after her death.378 Paul would not see any of the revised estate planning documents 374 Paul Tr. 54:3–8. 375 Paul Tr. 53:9–11. 376 Paul Tr. 53:12–14. 377 D.R.E. 901. Jay has failed to “produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is,” even in the face of the low burden to do so. His testimony, often inconsistent, as well as the documents themselves, fail to substantiate Jay’s claims that these are legally valid and binding documents. See Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *14 & n.114. 378 See Paul Tr. 67:18–68:4. Lillian never told Paul she had revised her estate plan. See Paul Tr. 138:3–6; Fairchild Tr. 235:2–4. Jay testified that Lillian told Paul about the revisions the night before her surgery, when she and the brothers met for dinner at Peggy’s Diner in Harringon, Delaware. Jay Tr. 473:20–474:4. Paul testified that neither Lillian nor Jay mentioned any amendments or revisions to Lillian’s estate plan or trust during the dinner. Paul Tr. 49:4–19. Jay’s testimony is undermined by an October 13, 2009, email 61 until 2017.379 Jay never informed Paul of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, 380 and Paul never saw a copy of it until this litigation. 381 Likewise, Fairchild was unaware of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment.382 Lillian never mentioned any further amendment to the Deputy Trust to Fairchild. 383 Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment was not consistent with Fairchild’s understanding of Lillian’s estate plans.384 According to Fairchild, “these amendments go to great length, as I read them, to prepare to remove Paul as a beneficiary of the trust.” 385 I agree. 4. Lillian Dies, Fairchild Raises The Alarm, And Paul Begins To Investigate. On the morning of February 26, Paul drove Lillian to the hospital for her surgery.386 Before the surgery, Paul asked his mother whether she had a power of from Jay to Paul, suggesting that Lillian did not discuss any changes with Paul at Peggy’s Diner. Jay wrote Paul, “I’m sorry you probably feel left out of all of the changes to the documents. Mom had intended to go over the changes with you after her recovery.” JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006. I find Paul’s testimony credible and conclude that the trio did not discuss Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment on February 25 and that Paul was unaware of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment. 379 See Paul Tr. 69:5–18. 380 Jay Tr. 467:19–21. 381 See Paul Tr. 138:3–6. 382 Fairchild Tr. 233:17–23. 383 Fairchild Tr. 234:8–13. 384 Fairchild Tr. 234:14–235:1. 385 Fairchild Tr. 234:23–235:1. 386 Paul Tr. 49:21–50:1. 62 attorney, and Lillian said that she did not. 387 Paul stayed with his mother all day.388 When Lillian emerged from surgery, she could hardly speak because she was in so much pain.389 That day, Fairchild came to visit Lillian in the hospital, but Paul informed him that “she’s not up to that.”390 Jay did not visit his mother in the hospital on February 26.391 As stated, Paul spent the morning with Lillian on February 27, and Jay visited her that afternoon.392 When Paul left on February 27, Lillian was in pain, so the nurses brought her pain medication. 393 When Paul called Lillian that evening, “she was groggy because of the medicines.” 394 The next morning, Paul called the hospital to check on Lillian.395 Lillian “was complaining about pain” and told Paul, “I think there’s something wrong. I feel it. I think there’s something wrong.”396 A few days later, on March 4, Paul called the hospital to check on Lillian. 397 A nurse informed him that she could not speak to 387 Paul Tr. 50:12–14. 388 Paul Tr. 51:10–52:17. 389 Paul Tr. 51:10–52:1. 390 Paul Tr. 52:3–9. 391 Paul Tr. 52:10–14. 392 Paul Tr. 54:3–55:18. 393 Paul Tr. 54:3–55:18. 394 Paul Tr. 55:1–3. 395 Paul Tr. 55:19–23. 396 Paul Tr. 56:1–4. 397 Paul Tr. 56:9–14. 63 him because Jay, as power of attorney, had not added Paul’s name to the list of authorized individuals. 398 This was a surprise to Paul, as Lillian told him days earlier that she did not have a power of attorney. 399 At that time, Paul concluded that Lillian must have appointed Jay as her medical power of attorney for the duration of her time at the hospital.400 Paul immediately called Jay.401 Jay said he “forgot” to add Paul’s name to the list. 402 Jay added Paul’s name to the list after their conversation. 403 Also on March 4, Fairchild called Paul.404 Paul informed him that Lillian’s bypass was successful, but she was “still weak” and “in lots of pain and uncomfortable” due to gastrointestinal side effects from the surgery and medications.405 Fairchild asked whether Paul was aware of the recent changes to Lillian’s estate plan.406 Aside from recently learning that Jay was named as his mother’s power of attorney, Paul responded that he was not and that “they don’t tell 398 Paul Tr. 56:15–57:5. 399 Paul Tr. 57:6–8; 50:12–14. 400 Paul Tr. 57:9–16. 401 Paul Tr. 57:20–23. 402 Paul Tr. 58:6–8. 403 Paul Tr. 58:9–10. 404 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008). 405 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008). 406 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008). 64 [him] anything anymore.” 407 Fairchild asked Paul to inform him as to when Lillian would be strong enough to discuss her estate plan.408 That same day, Fairchild left a message with his registered principal and compliance supervisor.409 He stated, “I believe Jay [is] exerting undue influence over Lillian and her estate plan at the expense of Paul,” and noted that he has “lots of notes in file to back up feeling.”410 He was uneasy, asked what was required of him as an advisor in this situation, and wanted to know whether he could simply resign the accounts.411 The Ameriprise compliance team instructed Fairchild to “take good notes and be sure to respect the confidentiality of the different parties.”412 When Paul contacted the hospital again on March 4, they informed him that Lillian required an emergency surgery for a blockage in her intestines. 413 The next day, March 5, Lillian passed away.414 Jay called Paul at 8:30 a.m. to share the sad news.415 Paul was devastated.416 407 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008). 408 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008). 409 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008); Fairchild Tr. 240:7–17. 410 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008); Fairchild Tr. 240:18–241:2. 411 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/04/2008); Fairchild Tr. 240:7–241:2. 412 Fairchild Tr. 241:3–13. 413 Paul Tr. 58:11–15. 414 PTO ¶ 24. 415 Paul Tr. 58:17–19. 416 Paul Tr. 58:24–59:7. 65 That day, Paul called Fairchild to tell him of Lillian’s death.417 Fairchild was surprised that Jay, as agent of Lillian’s estate, did not contact Ameriprise. 418 He testified: “I think Jay knew we were on to him, and I think he didn’t want to talk to us.”419 On that same call, Paul asked about the recent changes to Lillian’s estate plan.420 In another call on that same day, Paul asked Fairchild which trust document governed the estate, and Fairchild explained that it was the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement. 421 Because Paul was unaware of the changes, Fairchild explained the new Deputy Trust structure and even had to inform Paul of the nature of the two charitable beneficiaries.422 Paul was “adament [sic] that she wanted everything simply split equally.”423 Paul said he would consider contesting the estate, but decided to postpone his decision until after the funeral. 424 Fairchild advised Paul to 417 Paul Tr. 60:15–20; Fairchild Tr. 265:22–266:1; JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/05/20078). 418 JX 66 at AFSI0000045 (“[W]e find it curious that Jay, as trustee of the 2008 trust that is either the owner or beneficiary of Mrs. Deputy’s Ameriprise assets, has not notified us of her death.”). 419 Fairchild Tr. 266:8–13. 420 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/05/2008). 421 JX 90 at AFSI0000671 (entry dated 03/05/2008). 422 JX 90 at AFSI0000671 (entry dated 03/05/2008). 423 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/05/2008). 424 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 03/05/2008). 66 make a careful record of the events leading up to Lillian’s death, and Paul followed Fairchild’s advice.425 Fairchild also encouraged Paul to contact an attorney, and on March 7, Paul hired James Deakyne, Esq.426 On March 12, Ameriprise sent a copy of the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement to Deakyne at Paul’s request,427 and on March 17, Fairchild sent Deakyne copies of the 2003 Deputy Trust Agreement and the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement.428 Fairchild did not include a copy of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment because he did not know about it at that time. He would not see it until this litigation. 429 At this juncture, readers may appreciate a summary of the ownership of Lillian’s assets. Upon Lillian’s death, her share of the One Flintlock Trust was transferred to Jay’s One Flintlock sub-trust. Jay, as trustee, remained obligated to pay himself 76% and Paul 24% of the One Flintlock Trust’s income. Upon the death of the last surviving beneficiary, the remaining principal was to be distributed to Columbia University. Jay also became the successor trustee of the Deputy Trust, 425 Paul Tr. 61:4–6, 61:20–62:10; Fairchild Tr. 319:10–16. Paul’s record of the events leading up to Lillian’s death is admitted as JX 52. 426 Fairchild Tr. 268:6–18, 323:4–12. 427 JX 63 at AFSI0000052. 428 PTO ¶ 72. 429 Fairchild Tr. 269:15–24; see also JX 62 at AFSI0000648 (“To the best of my knowledge, you mother did not establish any other trust agreements that pertain to the situation.”) 67 which was not divided into sub-trusts. He was obligated to pay himself and Paul each 50% of the Deputy Trust’s income. Principal was to be distributed according to the trustee’s discretion to provide for the recipient’s health, education, support, and maintenance. The North Circle House was an asset of the Deputy Trust. Some of Lillian’s Ameriprise accounts were titled in the name of the Deputy Trust. Others passed outright via beneficiary designations; by 2008, Lillian had reinstated Jay as a beneficiary on some of those accounts, equally with Paul. Lillian also held one money market account jointly with Paul, and to the exclusion of Jay. 430 Jay wreaked havoc on this state of affairs, doing whatever he could to ensure Lillian’s assets were disposed of consistent with his demands and for his personal benefit. 5. Jay Forges Ameriprise Change Forms. Lillian owned 20 shares of AT&T stock in an Ameriprise account.431 She had always intended the stock to pass to Jay.432 By letter dated February 21, 2008, Lillian asked Fairchild to change the transfer on death provision of her AT&T stock, then owned by the Deputy Trust, to Jay’s name. 433 Fairchild knew that those shares of 430 See Fairchild Tr. 332:7–333:14; Paul Tr. 79:23–80:11. 431 See JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 02/22/2008). 432 See JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 02/22/2008). The stock was originally held by Lillian’s husband, as custodian for Jay. PTO ¶ 17. 433 JX 41; see also JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 02/22/2008). 68 stock had been “earmarked” for Jay.434 On February 22, 2008, Fairchild spoke with Lillian and confirmed that he received her letter. 435 The letter alone was not sufficient to place the AT&T shares in Jay’s name.436 Ameriprise needed three forms to make that change.437 “If Mrs. Deputy had died with that AT&T stock in the account owned by her trust, it would have been split according to the dispositive provisions of the trust,” even if she intended otherwise.438 On March 6, 2008, Fairchild received the three necessary forms.439 They were postmarked March 5, the day that Lillian died.440 Jay told several stories about these forms. In one version, Lillian signed the forms on March 1.441 In a February 17, 2010 letter to Ameriprise, Jay wrote, “My mother understood the form she was to sign, and signed it seated upright in her hospital bed with intervenes tubes taped to 434 Fairchild Tr. 237:14–24. 435 JX 90 at AFSI0000672 (entry dated 02/22/2008). 436 Fairchild Tr. 241:14–24. 437 Fairchild Tr. 242:1–9. Fairchild testified that Ameriprise would need to create a new account to transfer the stock into; Ameriprise would then add a transfer on death provision, which is a beneficiary designation. Id. 242:3–9. 438 Fairchild Tr. 243:1–7. 439 JX 74 at 1. 440 JX 74 at 1; Fairchild Tr. 249:18–250:5. 441 JX 47 at AFSI0000173, AFSI0000179; JX 49 at 7; JX 50 at 4. 69 her right hand.”442 In an October 13, 2009 email to Paul, Jay also wrote: “While she asked me to sign the document on her behalf (which I could as Durable Power of Attorney) I asked her to sign it which she did. There is a third party document that attests and witnessed her signature.”443 Fairchild believed Jay forged Lillian’s signature on the three documents. 444 He believed the signatures did not look like known signatures Ameriprise had in Lillian’s file and was concerned that the signing date was between her surgery and death, during a period in which she was known to be very uncomfortable; he believed the signatures were “remarkably clear” to have been signed during that time. 445 On March 7, 2008, Fairchild signed the two forms that required his signature but noted that he was doing so “with doubt about client signatures herein.” 446 He was not required to sign the third form, but he noted his suspicions about Lillian’s signature on it as well.447 The same day, Fairchild reported the suspicious signatures to Ameriprise, as he is required to do. 448 Fairchild also contacted Paul to ask if he 442 JX 100 at AFSI0000017. 443 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006. 444 Fairchild Tr. 245:11–14, 246:15–17. 445 See JX 57; see also JX 51; JX 65 at AFSI0000057. 446 JX 47 at AFSI0000179; JX 49 at 7. 447 See JX 50 at 4. 448 Fairchild Tr. 248:8–249:5; see also JX 66. 70 could verify his mother’s signature.449 Paul, familiar with his mother’s signature, agreed.450 Ameriprise sent Paul a set of two signatures: a top verified signature above a bottom suspicious signature. 451 Paul identified the top signature as his mother’s and the bottom signature as inauthentic.452 Fairchild contacted Jay about the forged signatures. 453 Although inconsistent with other statements indicating that Lillian was unable to sign forms at that time due to tubes in her hand,454 Jay was insistent that he “watched Mrs [sic] Deputy sign the form in the hospital.” 455 Jay was “adament [sic] that the AT&T stock was always meant to be his,” and Fairchild agreed.456 While acknowledging his suspicions about the forged signatures, Fairchild submitted the change forms.457 Because Lillian had 449 JX 56; Paul Tr. 63:4–6; Fairchild Tr. 250:20–251:16. 450 Paul Tr. 34:4–6, 63:9–10. 451 JX 56; JX 57. 452 JX 65 at AFSI00000056; Paul Tr. 63:9–11. 453 JX 71 (entry dated 04/18/2008). 454 JX 51 at JDEPUTY_00619; JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006; Jay Tr. 492:10–493:4. 455 JX 71 (entry dated 04/18/2008). 456 JX 71 (entry dated 04/18/2008). Jay also expressed his willingness to send Paul to “jail” because he felt that Paul had stolen one of his mother’s money market accounts. Id. Paul, in fact, jointly owned those accounts with Lillian at the time of her death. See Fairchild Tr. 332:7–333:14; Paul Tr. 79:23–80:11. Fairchild was not surprised that Jay said these things because it was “consistent with Jay’s nature. He was surprised that there was an account owned jointly, and he didn’t like that. His nature is vindictive . . . .” Fairchild Tr. 332:7–333:14. 457 Fairchild Tr. 258:22–259:2. 71 died and could not contest the signatures, Ameriprise did not act on the forgeries. 458 Ameriprise ultimately transferred the stock to Jay by way of the company’s estate settlement process.459 The forged forms did not effectuate the transfer. 460 Fairchild was “completely satisfied” that the AT&T stock ended up with Jay because that was Lillian’s “long-term intention”: “the outcome was what everybody wanted.”461 In addition to the three forms Fairchild received from Jay, Jay claims that he sent Fairchild one “revised” stock transfer form dated March 2, 2008, under a cover letter dated March 3 (the “Revised Form”).462 Jay produced this Revised Form at trial. He signed the Revised Form himself, as “Lillian K. Deputy jd/dpoa.” 463 Lillian did not sign the Revised Form.464 The form bears Jay’s handwritten note: “resigned at [sic] DOPA and re-sent to TF[,] same w/ last page.”465 According to the note and Jay’s trial testimony, Jay signed the Revised Form because Lillian was “unable to 458 Fairchild Tr. 289:18–22, 290:5–12. Fairchild continued to contact Ameriprise’s home office about the forgeries. See, e.g., JX 74; JX 65; JX 90 at ASFI00000667 (entry dated 08/01/2008). 459 Fairchild Tr. 224:22–2, 285:6–10, 286:10–24, 288:20–289:22, 290:3–291:4. 460 Fairchild Tr. 224:22–2, 285:6–10, 286:10–24, 288:20–289:22, 290:3–291:4. 461 Fairchild Tr. 259:7–15. 462 See JX 48 (revised form); JX 51 (cover letter); Fairchild Tr. 261:20–22, 263:6–8. 463 JX 48 at JDEPUTY_00611, JDEPUTY_00617. My own observation is that Jay’s “revised” signature, bearing his mother’s name and his initials, looks as though it was made to look remarkably similar to Lillian’s own, verified signature. Compare JX 56 (top signature), with JX 48 at JDEPUTY_00611, JDEPUTY_00617. 464 See Jay Tr. 492:10–493:4. 465 JX 48 at JDEPUTY_00610. 72 sign as she has tubes in her hand,” and did so in Lillian’s presence. 466 Jay also produced a handwritten letter to Fairchild stating that Jay “resigned this document to include JD/POA,” which he “forgot” to include while being “hurried” in the hospital.467 The Revised Form bears Fairchild’s signature, dated March 7, 2008.468 But Fairchild never received the Revised Form, the purported cover letter, or the later handwritten letter, so he could not have signed the Revised Form after Jay signed it.469 Jay provided a Revised Form to replace only one of the three necessary Ameriprise forms.470 Fairchild believes that Jay created a doctored stock transfer form bearing Fairchild’s signature recently, and that Jay simply forgot that three forms were required to effect the beneficiary change: 466 JX 51 at JDEPUTY_00619; Jay Tr. 492:10–493:4. 467 JX 51 at JDEPUTY_00619. 468 JX 48 at JDEPUTY_00617. 469 Fairchild Tr. 261:20–22, 263:6–8. Fairchild testified that Ameriprise sends forms to the client without signatures. That form is then returned to Ameriprise with the client’s signature. Then Fairchild signs the document and sends it to the corporate office, where it typically becomes “trapped.” Id. 264:17. So, Jay must have doctored these forms after he saw the original signed copies at his deposition. Id. 264:24–265:3. 470 Fairchild Tr. 265:4–20. 73 And I think what happens is that Jay creates a fun house of mirrors so that he can reflect any story later that he wants. And in this time, understandably, ten years later, he forgot that there were three forms that he needed to re-sign. He only re-signed this one, I think only about a year ago, when he realized he got caught in his own house of mirrors. And then to cover himself, he created JX 51, which we had also never signed. And I think that, understandably, because it was ten years before, Jay wouldn’t remember there were three documents. So in his little handwritten note that I’m convinced is post hoc, he says he’s re- signed the document, instead of documents. If they had been contemporaneous, a day or so later, he would have remembered there were all three. And unfortunately, I think he caught himself up. 471 Fairchild further explained, “I can only surmise that somehow Jay realized that he tripped himself up when, during depositions a year ago, he saw this document with my notes about the questionable signatures.”472 I agree. Like many other documents produced in this matter, Jay recently wrote the letter and created the Revised Form to evidence his false narrative. They are inauthentic and inadmissible. 473 In addition to the forged AT&T stock forms, Jay also produced false documents purporting to change the beneficiaries on Lillian’s Ameriprise accounts from the brothers outright to the Deputy Trust. At trial, Jay produced three copies of a letter written to Fairchild dated February 21, the same date as Lillian’s authentic letter to Fairchild regarding the stock. 474 The letters request an “immediate” transfer 471 Fairchild Tr. 265:4–20. 472 Fairchild Tr. 264:24–265:3. 473 D.R.E. 901; Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *14 & n.114. 474 See JX 40, JX 42, JX 43. 74 of the beneficiary designations on Lillian’s accounts to the Deputy Trust, rather than to Jay and Paul equally outright. 475 They bear different signatures and subject lines.476 All three refer to a memorandum purportedly sent to Fairchild on February 10, 2008, which Fairchild never received. 477 Jay contends he sent these letters to Fairchild, but Fairchild never saw or received them.478 Fairchild testified he would have remembered and recorded receipt of the letters, and the purported memorandum, because “being aware of Jay’s nature, we were highly sensitive to anything to do with the Deputy family and case.”479 If any of the produced letters were sent to Fairchild’s office, they would have been carefully logged via Ameriprise’s correspondence system: they were not.480 I find that Jay’s February 21 letters, as well as the memorandum referred to therein, are disingenuous post hoc documents that Jay drafted to mirror the genuine letter Lillian sent to Fairchild on February 21, 2008.481 These letters are inauthentic and inadmissible.482 475 See JX 40, JX 42, JX 43. 476 Compare JX 40, with JX 42, and JX 43. 477 Fairchild Tr. 230:12–20. See, e.g., JX 40 at JDEPUTY_00061 (bearing handwritten note reading “faxed to 478 THF”); Fairchild Tr. 230:21–232:12. 479 Fairchild Tr. 228:16–18. 480 See Fairchild Tr. 228:5–229:5. 481 Compare JX 41, with JX 40, and JX 42, and JX 43. 482 D.R.E. 901; Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *14 & n. 114. 75 E. Jay Administers The One Flintlock Trust And The Deputy Trust. After Lillian and Georgene died, Jay assumed his role as trustee of both of their trusts. In that capacity, Jay administered those trusts to his benefit and to Paul’s detriment. 1. Paul Receives Distributions From The One Flintlock Trust From 2006 To 2009. While Lillian was alive, she received distributions of 25% of the One Flintlock Trust in accordance with Georgene’s 2003 OFT Amendment. 483 Jay also testified that he provided his mother with information about her sub-trust that she requested.484 Initially, he provided her with both annual K-1 forms and statements from Wachovia, the bank that held the One Flintlock Trust’s assets.485 But after they settled the 2005 lawsuit and Jay provided the One Flintlock Trust agreement to Lillian, “she wasn’t as much interested in the statements. She just was interested in the K-1. So she declined, actually, statements from Wachovia.” 486 When Lillian died, her 25% interest in the One Flintlock Trust was added to Jay’s sub-trust.487 483 JX 7, § 6; Jay Tr. 373:7–10. 484 Jay Tr. 373:23–374:24. 485 Jay Tr. 373:23–374:24. 486 Jay Tr. 374:5–9. 487 See PTO ¶¶ 37, 38. 76 When Jay became trustee of the One Flintlock Trust, he did not give Paul complete copies of the One Flintlock Trust documents, including Jay’s OFT Amendment. Jay reassured Paul that his interest in the One Flintlock Trust was secure. On November 30, 2008, Jay sent a letter to Paul confirming that Paul’s “portion [of the One Flintlock Trust] will remain at 24-percent, and will always remain so as long as I’m alive.”488 Paul received monthly distributions and bank statements, and annual K-1 forms for the One Flintlock Trust until 2009.489 In late 2009, Jay contacted Paul to discuss the One Flintlock Trust. Jay explained that the market was in turmoil and that they should defer distributions and reinvest any dividends. 490 Although Paul had some knowledge of the stock market, he felt that Jay was more knowledgeable and, therefore, trusted Jay’s advice and believed Jay was correct. 491 Accordingly, Paul agreed with Jay’s recommendation to stop distributions. 492 Paul received his last distribution from the One Flintlock Trust on December 3, 2009.493 Paul “figured the stock market’s going to be crashing 488 JX 80 at RDEPUTY_000093. 489 See PTO ¶¶ 44, 77; Paul Tr. 17:11–23, 18:9–19:2, 151:3––152:6; Jay Tr. 374:5–21. 490 Paul Tr. 19:3–10; see generally JX 97. 491 Paul Tr. 19:24–20:12. 492 Paul Tr. 19:9–10. 493 PTO ¶ 44; Paul Tr. 18:24–19:2. 77 for a long time,” so he did not inquire as to whether and when distributions would resume.494 Paul also stopped receiving statements for the One Flintlock Trust. 495 He did not press Jay for information despite the fact that he stopped receiving trust statements: “we didn’t have distributions, I didn’t get a statement.” 496 Paul has received no further distributions from the One Flintlock Trust. 497 Despite a number of potential red flags, Paul claims he did not suspect Jay’s wrongdoing resulting in the lack of distributions for many years.498 2. Jay Mismanages The Deputy Trust. Lillian served as the sole trustee of the Deputy Trust until her death. 499 Jay became trustee of the Deputy Trust, as well as executor of Lillian’s estate, on March 5, 2008.500 Jay collected the 2008 Will from Pulsifer, and recorded it with the Sussex County Register of Wills.501 He filed a Small Estate Affidavit, stating that Lillian’s 494 Paul Tr. 20:18–19. 495 Paul Tr. 20:20–23. 496 Paul Tr. 21:2–3. 497 PTO ¶ 44. 498 Paul Tr. 21:19–22:16 (Paul testifying that he did not question Jay in 2011 because he “trusted him”), 24:8–10 (Paul testifying that he emailed with Jay in 2011 for an update), 27:18–28:17 (Paul confirming that in April 2013, he “didn’t believe that Jay had any authority to revoke [his] interest in the trust”). 499 PTO ¶ 60. 500 JX 39 § IV(1); Jay Tr. 337:8–14. 501 See JX 72. 78 probate estate was less than $30,000.502 Accordingly, no estate was probated.503 At trial, Jay testified that the combined value of Lillian’s estate and the Deputy Trust totaled $644,000.504 Relying on that value, in 2008, Jay calculated a commission of roughly $18,000, purportedly for his services as executor of Lillian’s estate, and contends he paid himself roughly $14,000 or $15,000.505 The Deputy Trust requires its trustee to serve without compensation. 506 After Lillian died, Jay and Paul went through Lillian’s house and belongings and discussed selling or renting the North Circle House home.507 After combing through Lillian’s home and personal property, Jay turned to the financials. 508 Jay testified that since the stock market crashed in 2008, “it was incumbent upon [him] . . . to put the house on the market as quickly as [he] could.”509 Beginning in December 2009, Jay moved the Deputy Trust’s assets from Ameriprise to Wells Fargo.510 Jay invested the trust funds in stocks, bonds, 502 JX 72. 503 JX 72. 504 Jay Tr. 477:12–13. 505 Jay Tr. 477:8–24. 506 JX 39, Art. VII(2). 507 Paul Tr. 71:2–9. 508 Jay Tr. 338:7–11. 509 Jay Tr. 338:12–18. 510 PTO ¶ 78; Jay Tr. 339:1–15. 79 securities, and money market funds.511 He also invested the Deputy Trust’s money in two Florida properties sometime in 2010 or 2011.512 Jay later sold those properties and deposited the proceeds into to the Deputy Trust. 513 The Deputy Trust owned Lillian’s personal residence, the North Circle House.514 Shortly after Lillian’s death, Jay testified that he began using the North Circle House as his “residence,”515 but he did not pay rent to the Deputy Trust.516 In fact, Jay proudly displayed his “residence” in a Delaware Today article, which touted Jay as a “collect[or of] homes and their furnishings.” 517 In that article, Jay 511 Jay Tr. 339:19–340:2. 512 Jay Tr. 340:2–21. At the time, the properties cost roughly $70,000, and $30,000, respectively. Id. 340:22–341:6, 381–383. Jay also purchased a property in the name of the One Flintlock Trust. Id. 381:7–382:17. Jay says he did not use the properties personally, but rented them full-time on an annual basis. Id. 341:11–342:9. Jay did not handle the leases, and hired a management company. Id. 342:10–344:4. That company then deposited funds directly into the trust accounts after they took their fee from the rent. Id. 344:5–14. 513 Jay Tr. 380:14–382:5. Jay sold the Deputy Trust properties sometime in 2010, generating a total profit of roughly $110,000. Id. 381:3–13. At the same time, he sold the One Flintlock Trust property and deposited the profits into the One Flintlock Trust. Id. 381:14–17. 514 See JX 15, JX 16. 515 Jay Tr. 338:6. 516 See Jay Tr. 480:9–21. Jay testified that he paid rent for one year in 2010. However, the Delaware Today article touting the North Circle House as Jay’s personal getaway was published in 2017. See JX 134. I do not find Jay’s testimony convincing and find that personally he used the North Circle House more frequently than he let on at trial. And in accordance with his testimony, he did not pay rent for those many years of personal use. 517 JX 134. 80 claimed that he inherited the North Circle House.518 The North Circle House “struck [Jay] as the right place for a downstate getaway” where he could “comfortably” entertain.519 Jay stated that, after the death of a loved one, “[p]art of moving on is making a house one’s own,” and that he was renovating the home to “be more intimate” for entertaining.520 But at trial, Jay retreated from his statement that the North Circle House was his “residence” and insisted that he simply visited the North Circle House on occasion for “logistical reasons.”521 According to Jay, it was “logistical[ly]” convenient to stay at the North Circle House while restoring the property and preparing it for a future sale.522 Jay completed a number of improvements to the North Circle House by 2012 and 2013, using Deputy Trust funds. 523 He claims he 518 JX 134. 519 JX 134. 520 JX 134. 521 Jay Tr. 338:6. 522 Jay Tr. 344:19–347:12. But see JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00796. 523 Jay Tr. 351:14–354:8. 81 still has more to do.524 In addition to certain necessary repairs,525 Jay made multiple cosmetic and unnecessary updates.526 In 2010, shortly before the majority of the North Circle House improvements were completed, Jay granted himself an option to purchase the North Circle House.527 Jay signed the option in his personal capacity and in his capacity as Trustee.528 He testified that he carefully drafted the option for “the potential purchase of the house if [he] chose to purchase it, or, actually [his] partner chose to purchase it.”529 But the option lists “Jay Deputy as the purchaser.” 530 Paul never approved the option. 531 In the option contract, Jay purports to value the North Circle House at $140,000 based on the 2008 market crash, prices of comparable homes in Seaford, 524 Jay Tr. 351:14–354:8. 525 See Jay Tr. 351:14–354:8. Jay remedied termite damage; installed a new roof, new air conditioner, and new ceilings; fixed water leaks in the attic; repaired floors; and removed sick trees from the property. See JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00806. 526 See Jay Tr. 351:14–354:8. Among other things, Jay painted; purchased rugs; put in new light fixtures, including two chandeliers; had draperies made and installed curtain rods; installed skylights; and re-landscaped the property. According to Jay, he brought “harmony of design . . . back to materials, and the visuals of the house.” Id. 353:9–11. 527 JX 99. 528 JX 99 at JDPEUTY_00805. 529 Jay Tr. 347:23–348. 530 JX 99 at JEPUTY_00795 531 See JX 99. 82 and “known improvements” to the property.532 Two years before Jay drafted the option contract, in October 2008, Jay valued the North Circle House at $280,000 in a letter offering to sell the property.533 Contradicting the terms of the 2010 option, the October 2008 letter favorably frames the North Circle House and Seaford real estate market despite the market crash. 534 Under the option contract, even if Jay chooses not to exercise the option, “Jay Deputy has the right to furnish the house and to use the house as a residence conducive with the full rights of ownership, either permanently or from time to time without any issue or outside interference.” 535 The contract gave him the right to be fully reimbursed for the North Circle House’s improvements and keep all furnishings and decorations.536 Ultimately, as trustee, Jay gave himself an option to purchase the North Circle House in the future, after substantial improvements had been made and paid for with Deputy Trust funds, at a price much lower than fair 532 JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00792–94; see also Jay Tr. 348:16–349:21. 533 JX 78 at JDEPUTY_000790. 534 JX 78 at JDEPUTY_000790–91. 535 JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00796; see also JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00795 (“Jay Deputy as the purchaser or who holds the option for purchase have shall full rights of ownership and use of the property and without restrictions. Full rights of ownership shall include keeping and maintaining the property while it is vacant as well as during the pre and post- renovation and restoration periods, and at the sole discretion of Jay Deputy. Full rights of ownership further include the use of Jay Deputy’s money to restore and renovate the house as he sees fit based on his design, professional experience, and informed opinion and knowledge of the local real estate market.”). 536 JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00796–97. 83 market value; and ensured he could enjoy the property without exercising the option under the guise that he was improving it for the benefit of the Deputy Trust. Jay still uses the North Circle House537 and believes it is worth substantially more today.538 However, Jay has chosen not to exercise the option because the North Circle House is two hours away from his home in Wilmington. 539 He further claims that he refrained from exercising the option for the best interest of the Deputy Trust.540 Even if that is the case, Jay secured for himself the entire upside of the bargain: he reaps all benefits of ownership without having to pay rent or make a purchase.541 According to Jay, he never sold the North Circle House because “[t]he real estate market in Seaford is still fairly soft.” 542 But the house is currently listed for “quiet” or “soft sale” because “there’s no one living there full time” and he does not “want to draw attention to the house.”543 I find that Jay has retained the North Circle 537 Jay Tr. 346:19–21. 538 Jay Tr. 354:15–21. 539 Jay Tr. 354:22–3. Jay also included a requirement that he exercise the option within one year of selling his Manhattan property. JX 99 at JDEPUTY_00795. Further, despite drafting and executing the agreement, Jay testified that he “can’t answer if the option is still available or not.” Jay Tr. 355:3–14. 540 Jay Tr. 356:3–21. 541 See JX 99 at Section J. 542 Jay Tr. 344:15–18. 543 Jay Tr. 344:19–347:12. 84 House—held in limbo due the 2008 option—in order to enjoy it for himself, to the exclusion of Paul, and at the expense of the Deputy Trust. Finally, Jay paid himself distributions from the Deputy Trust but failed to pay Paul.544 The Deputy Trust, as amended, requires the trustee to distribute net income to Jay and Paul in equal shares at least annually, and does not allow distributions of principal.545 As discussed in more detail below, Jay never provided Paul financial statements for or an inventory or accounting of the Deputy Trust. 546 Paul has received no distributions from the Deputy Trust. 547 3. Jay Siphons Funds Out Of The Trusts. Jay repeatedly transferred funds from both Trusts’ accounts548 to his personal account ending in 6576 (“Jay’s Account”), 549 his dog rescue fund called Casey’s Fund,550 and to other accounts, some of which Jay was unable to explain.551 544 See generally, e.g., JX 107, JX 108, JX 110, JX 111, JX 113, JX 114, JX 116, JX 158, JX 159, JX 160, JX 161, JX 162, JX 162, JX 164, JX 165, JX 166, JX 167, JX 168, JX 169, JX 170, JX 171, JX 172, JX 173, JX 174. 545 PTO ¶ 62; JX 39 § IV(1). 546 PTO ¶ 69. 547 PTO ¶ 70. 548 See generally JX 158, JX 159, JX 160, JX 161, JX 162, JX 162, JX 164, JX 165, JX 166, JX 167, JX 168. 549 Jay Tr. 506:23. 550 Jay Tr. 497:13–14 551 See, e.g., Jay Tr. 504:16–505:2. 85 The One Flintlock Trust is the sole beneficiary of the Flintlock IRA (“Flintlock IRA”).552 Thus, only the One Flintlock Trust should have received any distributions from the Flintlock IRA. As of April 30, 2007, the Flintlock IRA had a portfolio value of $327,855.50. 553 By October 2010, the Flintlock IRA’s value had fallen to $213,075.53.554 On October 20, 2010, a distribution of $22,945.59 was made from the Flintlock IRA to an unidentified account at Region’s Bank.555 Jay testified that the One Flintlock Trust only had bank accounts at Wells Fargo, née Wachovia.556 Jay could not explain this distribution.557 Despite Jay’s feigned ignorance, I suspect Jay took this distribution for himself. In April 2012, the Flintlock IRA made two more distributions.558 One was to Paul’s sub-trust for the One Flintlock Trust (“Paul’s Flintlock Account”) and the other was to Jay’s personal account. 559 Paul did not receive a distribution to his personal account after December 2009. 560 552 JX 29 at WF_006866. 553 JX 29 at WF_006865. 554 JX 107 at WF_007147. 555 JX 107 at WF_007155. 556 Jay Tr. 497:3–5. 557 See Jay Tr. 504:16–505:2. 558 JX 113 at WF_007588. 559 JX 113 at WF_007588. 560 Paul Tr. 18:24–19:2; PTO ¶ 44. 86 Beginning in 2013, Jay drained funds out of Paul’s Flintlock Account into various accounts controlled by Jay. 561 Jay intensified his efforts in 2018. In July 2018, two months after Jay’s deposition in this matter, Jay took over $86,000 from Paul’s Flintlock Account.562 As of the end of July 2018, there was $115.97 left in Paul’s Flintlock Account.563 Between 2013 and 2018, Jay’s withdrawals from Paul’s Flintlock Account totaled over $133,000.564 Jay represented to Paul that the brothers must forego distributions due to poor market conditions at the end of 2009. Paul took Jay at his word and trusted Jay’s superior knowledge and experience. Unbeknownst to Paul, Jay continually siphoned off funds from the One Flintlock Trust to Paul’s exclusion. Jay took a similar approach with the Deputy Trust. Beginning in May 2008, and continuing at least through July 2018, Jay slowly siphoned funds out of the Deputy Trust into accounts controlled by Jay. 565 Jay’s withdrawals from the Deputy 561 See generally JX 169, JX 170, JX 171, JX 172, JX 173, JX 174. 562 JX 174 at WF_006493. 563 JX 174 at WF_006486. 564 See D.I. 130, Ex. A (collecting JXs). 565 See JX 158, JX 159, JX 160, JX 161, JX 162, JX 163, JX 164, JX 165, JX 166, JX 167, JX 168. July 2018 is simply the date of the most recent statement that Paul received in discovery. Jay’s siphoning may have continued. 87 Trust account total approximately $224,023.69.566 Jay continued this course of conduct even after this litigation was filed. F. Jay And Paul Communicate About The Status Of The Trusts. After Lillian died, Jay and Paul communicated about both Trusts. As stated, Paul received One Flintlock Trust distributions from late 2005 through December 2009. During that same timeframe, Jay and Paul grappled over the Deputy Trust. From 2009 on, the brothers disputed the status of both Trusts. Ultimately, Jay took the position that Paul had mounted a legal challenge against the Deputy Trust, and so, under Jay’s OFT Amendment and Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, he purportedly revoked Paul’s interest in the Trusts. Although Paul was suspicious about Jay’s motives as early as 2005,567 he believed Jay’s words were empty threats. Many years went by without Paul receiving distributions or statements from both Trusts, while Paul was preoccupied with other things. Eventually, Paul filed this action. 566 See D.I. 130, Ex. B (collecting JXs). 567 See JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM) (“She [left message] with Jeff Berezni (sp?) to drop lawsuit. We to send beneficiary change forms for sons, equally WROS. She will call atty Baker to return Jay to her estate. Ralph not convinced yet that Jay is genuine. . . . She thanked us for everything we did during the crisis.”). 88 1. Jay Delays Distributions from the Deputy Trust. In the year after Lillian died, Paul repeatedly asked Jay for information regarding the Deputy Trust.568 Paul requested updates from Jay every month or two.569 For example, in the fall of 2008, Paul asked about the Deputy Trust, and Jay told Paul he needed more time.570 On August 7, 2008, Jay sent Paul an email stating, “I’ve been concentrating on the house, so no other movement with monies has yet happened . . . probably won’t for another month or two.”571 Then, on October 2, 2008, in response to Paul’s inquiry, Jay again stated that he had just finished working on the house and it would be another month before he could turn to the estate’s other holdings.572 Jay explained that the estate administration was “involved” and told Paul to trust him. 573 Paul believed Jay,574 and he was glad that Jay contacted him with an update about the status of the Deputy Trust. 575 Paul explained at trial, “I knew that was 568 PTO ¶ 68; see, e.g., JX 97. 569 Paul Tr. 77:23–78:1. 570 See JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000023. 571 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000023. 572 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000021. 573 Paul Tr. 78:–8. 574 Paul Tr. 77:15–17. 575 Paul Tr. 77:5–6. 89 going to be taking so long to do. . . . Aunt Gene’s took a really long time, too.” 576 Paul had no experience in trust administration, but he knew that Jay did. Accordingly, Paul deferred to Jay’s superior knowledge and experience. 2. Jay Threatens to Revoke Paul’s Interest In The Deputy Trust And Warns That His Interest In the One Flintlock Trust Is In Jeopardy. After Paul learned about the forged AT&T documents, he approached his attorney, Deakyne, for assistance.577 On March 17, 2008, Deakyne wrote a letter to Fairchild regarding the beneficiary designations on Lillian’s Ameriprise accounts, focusing on the AT&T stock (the “March 2008 Letter”). 578 It does not mention or question the 2008 Deputy Trust Agreement, any Deputy Trust amendments, or Paul’s status as a Deputy Trust beneficiary. The March 2008 Letter states that “[Paul] questions the validity of the [2008 Deputy POA] given the medical crisis his mother was struggling with on the date the document purportedly signed by her,” but proceeds presuming the 2008 Deputy POA is valid.579 It further explains that, under the 2008 Deputy POA, Jay did not have the authority to transfer a 100% interest in the stock to himself, and that Paul remains entitled to receive a share of 576 Paul Tr. 76:22–24. 577 Paul Tr. 64:7–9. 578 PTO ¶ 73; JX 65. 579 JX 65 at AFSI0000057. 90 Lillian’s Ameriprise accounts.580 The March 2008 Letter requested that Ameriprise refrain from taking any action contrary to Lillian’s previously stated intentions. 581 Thereafter, Jay and Paul communicated about both the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts. During summer 2008, Jay and Paul exchanged a number of emails about distribution checks from the One Flintlock Trust. 582 In August 2008, Jay informed Paul that “the [North Circle House] is coming along okay,” and mentioned that he was considering renting the property because “mom was thinking long term investment strategies for the trust.”583 Jay further explained that “no other movement with monies has yet happened . . . probably won’t for another month or two.”584 After the stock market crashed, Paul was concerned about the One Flintlock Trust and contacted Jay on October 2, 2008.585 Jay and Paul then communicated about One Flintlock Trust distributions and one of Georgene’s assets, a Lennox Spring Garden set.586 Jay informed Paul that it was Paul’s “responsibility to provide a correct inventory” as a One Flintlock Trust beneficiary, and asked that he provided 580 JX 65 at AFSI0000057. 581 JX 65 at AFSI0000058. 582 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000022–24. 583 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000023. 584 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000023. 585 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000022. 586 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000019–20. 91 an updated and correct inventory,587 and reassured Paul that the One Flintlock Trust was mainly invested in bonds. 588 Jay also addressed the Deputy Trust, stating that “[i]t will be at least another month before I can get the financial stuff underway,” and “[Deputy] trust monies are to be invested for the long term; these were [Lillian’s] wishes.”589 On November 18, 2008, Jay wrote to Paul “upon the advice of [Pulsifer], the attorney for mom’s trust and estate,” to dispute Paul’s withdrawal of funds from a money market account Lillian had held jointly with Paul (the “November 2008 Letter”).590 Jay claimed that, although Paul’s understanding of the account’s ownership was “accurate on the surface,” Paul actually had no right to that money. 591 Jay stated that although the account was not a Deputy Trust asset, “it was to be part of the Trust.”592 In that letter, Jay proposed that he would 587 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000019. 588 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000019. 589 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000019, RDEPUTY_000020. 590 JX 79 at JDEPUTY_00421. 591 JX 79 at JDEPUTY_00421–22. Jay even goes as far as to claim that Paul unduly influenced Lillian into executing the 2005 Deputy Trust Agreement, disinheriting Jay and removing Jay from Lillian’s accounts. Id. at JDEPUTY_00422. These claims are unsubstantiated. 592 Jay Tr. 487:21–488:4. 92 use my legally granted powers as Trustee to escrow any net income from [Deputy] Trust until this money is returned. You would not receive any net income or benefit from the Trust until this money is remitted to the Trust. In an amendment to the restated trust, income is discretionary and not necessarily mandatory. As Trustee, net income distributions are at my discretion to try and accommodate certain types of investments . . . .593 He further explained that Paul “already compromised and jeopardized potentially [his] beneficiary status in the One Flintlock Trust” and that it was “not [his] intention for [Paul] to compromise [his] position in [the Deputy T]rust.”594 Jay gave Paul ten days to “substantiate” his claim to the money market account to “make the estate and [Deputy] Trust whole and to return the monies.”595 Then, on November 30, Jay wrote Paul again to “correct” a statement Lillian made to Paul about her share of the One Flintlock Trust. 596 He informed Paul that, upon Lillian’s death, the monies from her sub-trust were added to Jay’s share and that “your portion will remain at 24-percent, and will always remain so as long as I’m alive.”597 593 JX 79 at JDEPUTY_00423. 594 JX 79 at JDEPUTY_00423. 595 JX 79 at JDEPUTY_00423–24. 596 JX 80. 597 JX 80 at RDEPUTY_000093. 93 On December 8, Jeanne Singer, Paul’s then-counsel, sent a letter to Jay in response to the November 2008 Letter (the “December 8, 2008 Letter”). 598 Singer wrote, “it is clear from your letter that you do not have a firm grasp of your responsibilities as Executor and Trustee:”599 [Y]our threats to use your position as Trustee to coerce my client into returning money that rightfully belongs to him is a clear breach of your fiduciary duty as Trustee. If you continue with this course of action, we will be compelled to file suit to have you removed as Trustee and have an independent Trustee appointed.600 In closing, the December 8, 2008 Letter asked that Jay complete tax returns in a more timely fashion.601 Also on December 8, 2008, Jay learned of the March 2008 Letter in the process of transferring Lillian’s accounts to Wells Fargo.602 Jay believed the March 2008 Letter constituted a legal challenge to the 2008 Deputy Trust and 2008 Deputy POA under Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, and therefore saw the letter as grounds 598 PTO ¶ 74; JX 81 (responding to JX 80). 599 JX 81 at JDEPUTY_00414. 600 JX 81 at JDEPUTY_00414. 601 JX 81 at JDEPUTY_00414. 602 Jay Tr. 408:3–409:4 (referring to JX 65); JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00330 (“On or about 8 December I had a late-afternoon conversation with a Minneapolis representative from American Express’ Death and Estates Department regarding Mrs. Deputy’s estate and trust. I was informed by the representative, that through an attorney representing you (Mr. James Dykean [sic], although the spelling of the sir name may not be correct) a Letter of Challenge, on your behalf, had been received in their office at the end of March, 2008.”). 94 to revoke Paul’s beneficiary status.603 Jay called Paul on December 8 to ask about the March 2008 Letter. Paul told Jay that it was “meant to protect my interests.” 604 On December 12, 2008, Jay wrote a letter to Paul threatening to revoke Paul’s interest in the Deputy Trust if Paul did not talk to Jay (the “December 12, 2008 Letter”).605 Paul received this letter.606 Jay characterized the March 2008 Letter as a “Letter of Challenge,” claiming he was informed you were challenging and contesting the documents of Mrs. Lillian K. Deputy to include, at least, her Last Will and Testament and the Lillian K. Deputy Revocable Charitable Remainder Trust. This letter only presented a written statement towards challenge and contest, and no court order existed either impeding me from moving forward with the estate and trust or presenting a “full stop” to the financial administration of the estate and trust.607 The December 12, 2008 Letter further goes on to describe, in Jay’s own words, Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, which Paul did not know about and had never seen. 608 603 Jay Tr. 406:2–407:7. 604 JX 82 at REDPUTY_00330. 605 PTO ¶ 75; JX 82. 606 PTO ¶ 75. 607 JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00330. As described above, the March 2008 Letter relates to the Ameriprise accounts with beneficiary designations; it does not relate to the terms of the Deputy Trust, and it does not formally challenge the 2008 Deputy DPA. See JX 65. 608 JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00330–31. The December 12, 2008 Letter also references the alleged conversation about revocation that Jay, Paul, and Lillian had at Peggy’s Diner before her surgery. Id. at JDEPUTY_00332. In a similar vein, the December 12, 2008 Letter repeatedly references the inadmissible transcripts, JX 112, which Jay prepared to bolster his story. That conversation never happened, and those “transcripts” never existed when they were allegedly drafted. These references are part of Jay’s effort to continue gaslighting Paul. 95 Jay continued that Paul’s behavior and the March 2008 Letter “forced [Jay] to become comfortable with the idea of revocation for the [Deputy Trust].” 609 He writes: For no other purpose, I believe the inherent action of the [March 2008 Letter] was meant directly to do harm to the trust, to disturb its peace and unity, and to directly attack me. . . . Emanating from the language of the trust, and your intent, I believe the presented legal arguments to be sound in support of revocation. My decision is NOT based upon self-enrichment. . . . Initiated, external legal action, therefore, becomes the single act and purpose of revocation.610 The letter does not claim that revocation has occurred. Rather, emphasizing that the “effect of revocation can be far-reaching,” Jay gave Paul five days to respond to the December 12, 2008 Letter, stating that failure to respond would result in revocation from the Deputy Trust. 611 Further, the December 12, 2008 Letter alleges that Paul and Fairchild “colluded together . . . to generate the [March 2008 Letter] through the Georgetown, Delaware attorney. The receipt of the [March 2008 Letter] at the principal office of [Ameriprise] has clear implications that these things occurred without you or Mr. Fairchild possessing a full set of documents.” Id. at RDEPUTY_00331. These claims are unsubstantiated. 609 JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00332–33 (“I have never been comfortable with the idea of revocation. This is well documented in the transcripts between mom and I. (It was a much discussed topic over a period of months). I believe it to be too much responsibility weighted in the decision as to how this will affect your life in ways for which I never want to be blamed. Your history, however, demonstrates that you cannot work cooperatively with me, and subsequently, has forced me to become comfortable with the idea of revocation . . . .”). 610 JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00333. 611 JX 82 at JDEPUTY_00333. 96 Paul did not respond to the December 12, 2008 Letter.612 He did not believe Jay’s revocation threat was credible because he did not believe Jay had the authority to revoke his interest in the Deputy Trust.613 Paul did not know about Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, and Jay never gave Paul a copy of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment.614 Rather, Paul believed that Lillian was the only person who could revoke a beneficiary’s interest in the Deputy Trust. 615 Because Paul believed that Jay’s December 12, 2008 Letter was an empty threat, Paul did not immediately contact Jay to discuss the letter.616 Paul did not sue Jay in 2008 because he “ha[d] a restaurant . . . so [he] couldn’t give [his] time to [this dispute] until [he] finally got [himself] together with the restaurant.” 617 3. Jay Continues to Treat Paul As A Beneficiary Of The Trusts. The next time Paul and Jay communicated, on January 23, 2009, neither Jay nor Paul mentioned the December 12, 2008 Letter or revocation.618 In fact, after the December 12, 2008 Letter, Jay continued to treat Paul as a beneficiary of the Deputy 612 PTO ¶ 76. 613 Paul Tr. 27:20–28:1, 87:23–88:1. 614 Paul Tr. 88:8–24. 615 Paul Tr. 89:18–19. 616 See Paul Tr. 27:20–28:1, 87:23–88:1. 617 Paul Dep. 25:12–18; see also Paul Tr. 5:1–2; JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000007 (“[T]he restaurant is taking a lot of time these days.”). 618 See JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000015–16. 97 Trust. On January 29, Jay provided an update on distributions, and he continued to update Paul on the renovation and potential sale of the North Circle House.619 Throughout 2009, Jay continued to update Paul about the North Circle House. 620 In March, Jay and Paul discussed when Paul would receive his K-1 statement for the One Flintlock Trust.621 In June, Jay again provided an update regarding the delayed distributions.622 In October, Paul again inquired about K-1 statements.623 Jay responded that he had not attended to the matter, as he was continuing to work with the accountants on Lillian’s estate tax matters. 624 Jay also brought up the joint money market account again.625 Based on Jay’s representations, Paul believed that Jay was working with the accountants to resolve tax matters with the estate before Deputy Trust distributions could be made.626 As Jay continued to provide updates 619 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000014–16. 620 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000015–16. 621 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000014. 622 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000013. 623 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000008. 624 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000008 (“I am meeting with David this Thursday or Friday when I’m next in Seaford to wrap up the estate tax stuff. I’m trying to finish this as my schedule allows. I’m also trying to finish a few loose ends with the estate which I’ve mentioned to you in previous e-mails. You seemed to ignore these things. First, I am waiting for the clothing inventory. Second, I’m waiting for the resolve of the money market account and the extant power of attorney agreement which was never canceled at Wilmington Trust by mom, and therefore invalidated the name change to the account. I’m the one who is ultimately responsible for these issues, and not you.”). 625 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000008 626 Paul Tr. 92:20–93:4; see JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000008. 98 regarding the property of the Deputy Trust, Paul believed that he remained a Deputy Trust beneficiary.627 Nonetheless, at that time, Paul had never received a distribution or statement from the Deputy Trust.628 Paul responded to Jay’s email on October 13, 2009: It is apparent that we need to meet up with each other. This hatred or whatever it is towards me needs to stop. I have forgiven you because mom is no longer here to fuel the fire that has put such a wedge in between us. I say this because, you do not realize the anger and ill feelings that she put us both thru. That is why I want to meet up with you to resolve all of this between us. You need to know what I had gone thru also. Stop the hatred and lets move on with this whole matter. I will get You the inventory as I said I would, but the restaurant is taking a lot of time these days. Let’s arrange a date and time. 629 627 Paul Tr. 91:3–7, 92:3–6. 628 PTO ¶ 70. 629 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000007. 99 Jay responded that same day and raised a number of issues, 630 and proceeded to inform Paul about Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment: Fortunately, mom’s trust contains an amendment which cannot be challenged to any internal or external challenge of any document. This was put into place because I refuse to go through what I did in 2005. Is it now that your challenge didn’t hold up (and I’m assuming Mr. Fairchild mentioned the monies have been consolidated out of Ameriprise) that you want to meet to protect your interests in the trust? Again, whatever sincerity might exist on your part is suspect given the timing in all of this. 631 Jay then acknowledged that this was the first time Paul learned of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment.632 At the end of 2009, Jay explained that the market was in turmoil and advised that the brothers should stop distributions from the One Flintlock Trust. 633 Jay 630 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006 (“Let’s start with the letter to Ameriprise mailed one week after mom was buried. First, the signature isn’t forged as the letter on your behalf claims. Mom had tubes in her hand and writing her signature was difficult. While she asked me to do [sic] sign the document on her behalf, (which I could as Durable Power of Attorney) I asked her to sign it which she did. There is a third party document that attests and witnessed her signature. I’m not that ‘green.’ As well, there are a few documents beyond Ameriprise’s form which protect my interest [sic] the stock. You don’t realize very clearly, but I could have pursued (and still can) the fraudulent Lennox Garden inventory within the State of New Jersey, but I realized it would have potentially upset your life, and yet, in turn, and very underhandedly, you were willing and did to me what I refused to do to you.”). 631 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006. 632 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000006–07 (“I’m sorry you probably feel left out of all of the changes to the documents. Mom had intended to go over these changes with you upon her recovery. I have e-mails dating back to August before her surgery in which she discusses the changes and asks me to handle them. This wasn’t done underhandedly or to undermine, yet again, what you think you deserve, but rather a living legacy beyond you and me.”). 633 Paul Tr. 19:3–10. 100 previously advised Paul that “[t]hings are certainly tough” due to the “market correction(s) that is taking place.”634 Based on Jay’s advice, Paul agreed that they would stop distributions from the One Flintlock Trust.635 Paul received his last One Flintlock Trust distribution on December 3, 2009. 636 On September 26, 2010, Jay sent a letter to Paul providing an update as to their mother’s estate (the “September 2010 Letter”). 637 Jay informed Paul that there was one final issue with an annuity outstanding, but that Jay would be turning back to his doctoral work, writing: Therefore, with this outstanding and last piece of business, I must return to my doctoral work. I really have no other choice. I will remind you that during the course of events beyond Mrs. Deputy’s death, you have not offered to assist. I understand your business is your first priority. My doctoral degree is now my first priority.638 The September 2010 Letter calls Paul a beneficiary of the Deputy Trust. 639 In 2011, Paul asked Jay about the status of One Flintlock Trust.640 Jay advised that the market still had not recovered and so distributions and statements could not 634 JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000024. 635 Paul Tr. 19:9–10; PTO ¶ 70. 636 PTO ¶ 44. 637 JX 106 at REDPUTY_00633. 638 JX 106 at REDPUTY_00633. 639 PTO ¶ 79; JX 106. 640 Paul Tr. 21:19–22:3. 101 resume.641 Paul again trusted Jay’s superior knowledge and experience. 642 Paul believed that Jay kept him informed of the status of the One Flintlock Trust. 643 Even as late as 2017, Jay still treated Paul as if he were a beneficiary. 644 By letter dated October 17, 2017, Jay demanded reimbursement of $61,868 for upkeep and maintenance of Lillian’s home, which is a Deputy Trust asset.645 Paul was reassured by the regular contact with Jay regarding the Trusts. Paul explained at trial, “I still thought I was 50-50 with [the Deputy Trust] because we are communicating back and forth every once in awhile.”646 4. Paul Seeks Information About The Trusts And Jay Retaliates By Purporting to Revoke Paul’s Interests In The Trusts. In early 2013, Paul called the Trusts’ Wells Fargo contact, John Brady, to inquire about the Deputy Trust.647 Paul explained, “I contacted Mr. Brady and I said, I have no problem with Aunt Gene’s trust because I know what’s going on, but I 641 Paul Tr. 22:4–5. 642 Paul Tr. 22:12–16. 643 Paul Tr. 25:6–8. 644 See JX 136. 645 JX 136 at JDEPUTY_00568–70. 646 Paul Tr. 96:24–97:2. 647 Paul Tr. 27:2–5. 102 need to know what’s going on with my mom’s trust because I have no idea what is going on.”648 Jay learned about this phone call.649 In reaction, on April 21, 2013, Jay, as Trustee of the One Flintlock Trust, sent a letter to Paul (the “April 2013 Letter”).650 Jay claimed that Paul purportedly threatened to “instigate legal action” against him, and stated that “[y]our telephone calls, from time to time, to Mr. Brady constitute a direct challenge to my authority as Trustee as well as the investment, governance and administration decisions of the Trust.”651 The April 2013 Letter informed Paul that Paul’s interest in the One Flintlock Trust was revoked “effective immediately,”652 and discusses at length Jay’s 648 Paul Tr. 25:6–10. 649 JX 118 at RDEPUTY_000098. 650 JX 118. 651 JX 118 at RDEPUTY_000098. 652 JX 118 at RDEPUTY_000099. 103 OFT Amendment and the reasons the phone call amounted to a “legal challenge.”653 Jay concludes by stating: It is my principal duty to fulfill the terms and conditions set forth in the Trust, and to do so to through the best of my reasonable abilities as Trustee. Further, it is my duty to defend the Trust in the event of a challenge or legal action. My loyalty remains first with the Trust, and second to its protected, named beneficiaries. The removal of you as a beneficiary eliminates any potential and further legal disturbance of the Trust.654 Paul did not believe this letter actually revoked his interest in the One Flintlock Trust. Paul believed that this was another of Jay’s idle threats, and believed that only Georgene had the authority to revoke a beneficiary’s interest. 655 As Paul stated: I thought it was another smoking gun, basically, because he writes letters all – back – back in the day, before, and he’d always saying that “you’re going to be revoked” and stuff like that. And I felt that he didn’t have the power because my mom and my aunt had the power to revoke.656 653 PTO ¶ 45; JX 118 at RDEPUTY_000098–100; see also id. at RDEPUTY_0000100 (“As Trustee, it is evident and has been again demonstrated you cannot exist peacefully with the terms of the One Flintlock Trust as set forth by the Settlor and original Trustee, Mrs. Georgene E. Castor, and any subsequent terms set forth and promulgated by the Successor Trustee, Jay C. Deputy.”). 654 JX 118 at RDEPUTY_0000100. 655 Paul Tr. 27:18–28:1. 656 Paul Tr. 27:20–28:1. At trial, Paul repeatedly used the term “smoking gun” to mean an idle threat, rather than a particularly strong indicator of guilt. 104 All the same, the April 2013 Letter was concerning enough to Paul to cause him to contact an attorney.657 Because Paul was not receiving distributions or statements from the Deputy Trust, he also contacted Fairchild and requested that he provide his non-legal observations about the Deputy Trust and Jay’s performance as Trustee. 658 On March 11, 2014, Fairchild provided a summary.659 He stated, “I [] understand that Jay has inexplicably ‘removed you’ as a beneficiary of the trust,” and “[t]o the best of my knowledge, your mother did not establish any other trust agreements that pertain to this situation.”660 Fairchild did not believe that Jay did not have revocation powers.661 He told Paul that Jay was likely violating his fiduciary duties and encouraged Paul to contact an attorney. 662 On August 5, 2014, Paul’s legal counsel sent a letter to Jay requesting complete copies of all trust documents for the Trusts, tax returns, and an accounting (the “August 2014 Letter”). 663 The August 2014 Letter stated that Paul, as 657 Paul Tr. 29:10–15. 658 Fairchild Tr. at 310:24–311:1, 313:1–13; JX 62 at AFSI0000648; accord JX 120 at RDEPUTY_000047. 659 JX 62. 660 JX 62 at AFSI0000648; accord JX 120 at RDEPUTY_000047. 661 JX 62 at AFSI0000648–49; Fairchild Tr. at 274:2–275:1. 662 JX 62 at AFSI0000648–49; Fairchild Tr. at 274:2–275:1. 663 PTO ¶ 46; JX 122. 105 beneficiary, retained counsel to “investigate and, if appropriate, initiate proceedings relating to” the Trusts.664 Counsel further informed Jay that Paul would initiate proceedings if Jay did not respond by August 29.665 Jay did not provide the documents requested by the August 2014 Letter.666 Rather, Jay responded by letter dated October 3 (the “October 2014 Letter”).667 Jay, as Trustee of the Deputy Trust, unequivocally informed Paul’s counsel that Paul was not entitled to the requested documents because Paul had been removed as a beneficiary of the Trusts:668 Beneficiary revocation for the One Flintlock Trust occurred formally on 21 April 2013 (and informally occurred on 9 April 2009 after a challenge to an agreed upon investment policy change) for which a required letter was mailed by United States mail detailing my actions and authority as trustee towards revocation. Beneficiary revocation for Lillian K. Deputy Charitable Remainder Trust formally began on or about 12 March 2008 when a written challenge from Mr. James Deakine [sic], a Georgetown, Delaware attorney was received at Ameriprise Financial Services’ Death and Estates Department in Minneapolis, Minnesota by the end of March, 2008. My mother’s death occurred on 5 March 2008. I was unaware of his letter until on or about 8 December 2008 when I began the trust’s administrative work upon returning to Wilmington.669 664 JX 122 at JDEPUTY_00344. 665 JX 122 at JDEPUTY_00345. 666 PTO ¶ 47; Paul Tr. 32:4–6. 667 JX 123. 668 PTO ¶ 81; JX 123 at JDEPUTY_00347–49. 669 JX 123 at JDEPUTY_00347. 106 In response, Paul filed this action.670 II. ANALYSIS The Trusts are governed by Delaware law.671 Paul claims that Jay breached his fiduciary duties to inform, of loyalty, and of care; and that Jay was unjustly enriched as a result of these breaches. I agree. But Jay contends that even if Paul prevails on his claims, Paul slumbered on his rights, and as a result, his claims are barred by the doctrine of laches. While Paul delayed in asserting his claims, I nonetheless find that Jay has failed to prove his laches defense because Jay has not been prejudiced. Accordingly, Paul must prevail in this action. A. Jay Breached His Fiduciary Duties To Paul. The preponderance of the evidence demonstrates that Jay breached his fiduciary duties to Paul, who is and always has been a beneficiary of both the One Flintlock Trust and the Deputy Trust. 1. Jay Breached His Duty To Inform. Jay breached his duty to inform by failing to keep Paul abreast of his beneficiary status in both Trusts and by failing to furnish Trust information when requested. A trustee has a duty to furnish information to beneficiaries, 672 including 670 Paul Tr. 32:7–8. 671 PTO ¶ 82. 672 See, e.g., McNeil v. McNeil, 798 A.2d 503, 509 (Del. 2002). 107 the existence of the trust, their status as beneficiaries, and any significant change in their beneficiary status; and must keep beneficiaries reasonably informed, especially regarding material information needed to protect their interests.673 The trustee must furnish such information “upon reasonable request” by the beneficiary. 674 Even if the beneficiary does not request information, “a trustee must communicate essential facts, such as the existence of basic terms of the trust.” 675 This Court considers whether an individual is a current beneficiary to be an “essential fact.”676 Jay breached his duty to inform by failing to communicate essential facts, such as the basic terms of the Trusts and updates on Paul’s beneficiary status. Jay admits that Jay’s OFT Amendment and Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, if effective, would have materially changed the parties’ rights and obligations because they supposedly authorized revocation. 677 By not informing Paul of those Amendments, which supposedly gave Jay authority to revoke Paul’s beneficiary status, Jay deprived Paul of the opportunity to protect his interests. If Paul had known of Jay’s Amendments, he would have been able to challenge them sooner. 673 Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 82 (2007). 674 In re Tr. FBO DuPont Under Tr. Agreement Dated Aug. 4, 1936, 2018 WL 4610766, at *14 (Del. Ch. Sept. 25, 2018). 675 Id. 676 McNeil, 798 A.2d at 510. 677 Jay Tr. 450:10–12; see also McNeil, 798 A.2d at 510; In re Tr. FBO DuPont, 2018 WL 4610766 at *14. 108 Further, Jay had a duty to keep Paul informed of his beneficiary status. If Jay had revoked Paul’s beneficiary interest in the Trusts, then Jay had a duty to inform Paul of that revocation when it happened. In letters after the fact, Jay stated that Paul’s interests had been revoked (whether formally or informally) at specific times, but Jay failed to contemporaneously inform Paul of that revocation, and he waited to do so until provoked at a much later time. Jay fell short of his duty to inform Paul of Jay’s Amendments, notwithstanding my conclusion today that Jay’s Amendments are invalid. Jay failed to provide Paul with information necessary to protect his interests and to evaluate whether and how his interest in the Trusts had been terminated. Finally, on numerous occasions, Paul requested information from Jay about both Trusts, and Jay provided half-hearted, incomplete, and sometimes untruthful answers. With respect to the One Flintlock Trust, Jay breached his duty to inform by withholding statements after December 2009, likely in an effort to keep Paul in the dark about the lopsided distributions. When Paul specifically asked about One Flintlock Trust statements, Jay merely responded that he “ha[d] it under control.”678 Similarly, Jay failed to provide Paul with statements from the Deputy Trust. In fact, Jay failed so miserably to keep Paul informed that Paul resorted to contacting Wells Fargo and Ameriprise for information. In Paul’s words, “I need to know what’s 678 Paul Tr. 96:7; accord D.I. 133 at 29. 109 going on with my mom’s trust because I have no idea what is going on.”679 Financial information about the Trusts was material and needed for Paul to protect his interests. 2. Jay Breached His Duty Of Loyalty. Over his years of service as trustee, Jay breached his duty of loyalty on multiple occasions. For the sake of brevity, I address only those breaches Paul raised: a) adopting Jay’s Amendments and revoking Paul’s interests through those impermissible and invalid Amendments; b) failing to make distributions to Paul from both Trusts; c) using the North Circle House for himself without paying rent and granting himself an option at below-market value; d) paying himself a commission for handling Lillian’s estate out of the Deputy Trust; and e) forging documents to transfer the AT&T stock out of the Deputy Trust. A trustee has a duty to administer the trust “solely in the interest of the beneficiar[ies]”.680 “As a part of the duty of loyalty, a trustee must exclude all selfish interest and all consideration of the interests of third persons.” 681 The duty of loyalty 679 Paul Tr. 25:6–10. 680 Paradee v. Paradee, 2010 WL 3959604, at *10 (Del. Ch. Oct. 5, 2010) (“A trustee is ‘under a duty to [the] trust beneficiary to administer trust property solely in the interests of the beneficiary.’” (alternation in original) (quoting Walls v. Peck, 1979 WL 26236, at *4 (Del. Ch. Oct. 24, 1979)); accord Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 78. 681 Paradee, 2010 WL 3959604, at *10 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting George Gleason Bogert & George Taylor Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees § 543 (2d ed. 1993)). 110 is implicated where the trustee has a substantial self-interest that is not consistent with the interests of the trust. 682 Under trust law, “self-dealing occurs when the fiduciary has a personal interest in the subject transaction of such a substantial nature that it might have affected his judgment in material connection.” 683 Unlike corporate law, “[u]nder trust law, self-dealing on the part of a trustee is virtually prohibited.” Originally under Delaware law “a trustee [was] prohibited absolutely from purchasing the property entrusted to his care.” Under current Delaware law: “[a]n interested transaction is not void but is voidable, and a court will uphold such a transaction against a beneficiary challenge only if the trustee can show that the transaction was fair and that the beneficiaries consented to the transaction after receiving full disclosure of its terms.”684 682 See Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 78. 683 Stegemeier v. Magness, 728 A.2d 557, 564 (Del. 1999) (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Vredenburgh v. Jones, 349 A.2d 22, 39 (Del. Ch. 1975)). 684 Id. at 563 (alterations in original) (quoting Oberly v. Kirby, 592 A.2d 445, 466 (Del. 1991), and also quoting Wilm. Tr. Co. v. Carrow, 125 A. 350, 352 (Del. Ch. 1924)); see also Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *8 (“Inherent in the trust relationship is the duty of loyalty, which requires a trustee to administer the trust solely for the interest of the beneficiary and exclude all selfish interests and all consideration of the interests of third persons. Self-interested transactions by fiduciaries are not prohibited altogether, but require the beneficiary’s voluntary consent to the transaction after full disclosure. Under Delaware law, when a fiduciary has a close confidential relationship with the beneficiary, such consent requires impartial advice from a competent and disinterested third person, sufficient to allow the beneficiary to make an informed decision. Self-interested transactions involving a fiduciary or one in a confidential relationship with another are presumptively fraudulent and voidable in equity. If the transaction is challenged, the burden of persuasion to justify upholding the transaction is on the fiduciary. That burden is even greater where the transfer of property is made without consideration.” (alteration, footnotes, and quotations omitted)). 111 “In any case, the burden of persuasion to justify the upholding of a transaction by an interested trustee rests on the fiduciary, not the beneficiary.” 685 Jay breached his duty of loyalty to Paul as beneficiary of both Trusts by wrongfully and fraudulently attempting to revoke Paul’s beneficiary interests in an effort to take the whole of the Trusts for himself.686 According to Jay, he executed Jay’s OFT Amendment in September 2004 in his role as co-trustee of the One Flintlock Trust.687 Jay did not have amendment authority in that role: as discussed, Jay’s OFT Amendment is invalid because Jay did not have the authority to amend the One Flintlock Trust under Georgene’s POA. Accordingly, he breached his duty of loyalty by wrongfully attempting to change his own powers under the One Flintlock Trust to Paul’s detriment, using an invalid and likely fraudulent document. Likewise, Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment is a fraudulent attempt to increase his own powers as trustee to Paul’s detriment. Even assuming that Jay’s Amendments are valid, Jay breached his fiduciary duty of loyalty when he revoked Paul’s interests because Paul never mounted a “legal challenge” to the Trusts or related documents, as required to revoke under 685 Stegemeier, 728 A.2d 557 at 563. 686 See id. 687 For example, Jay curiously did not exercise his supposed revocation powers when Lillian sued him in 2005. If Jay genuinely believed he had revocation powers at that time, he would have revoked Lillian’s interest in the One Flintlock Trust. It is likely that Jay drafted Jay’s OFT Amendment sometime thereafter so that he could take Paul’s interest. 112 Jay’s Amendments. Jay claims that Paul’s call to Brady in early 2013 constituted a legal challenge to the One Flintlock Trust. Setting aside that the phone call did not constitute a “legal challenge” to anything, that call did not challenge the One Flintlock Trust documents because Paul contacted Brady to discuss Lillian’s estate, not the One Flintlock Trust. Jay also argues that Deakyne’s March 2008 Letter to Ameriprise constitutes a legal challenge to Lillian’s estate. It was not. The March 2008 Letter was in response to Ameriprise’s communication informing Paul that Lillian’s signature may have been forged on beneficiary change forms. These forms changed the owner of the AT&T stock, and did not pertain to the terms or validity of the Deputy Trust itself. The March 2008 Letter does not challenge the Deputy Trust documents. To the contrary, while expressing some concerns about the circumstances of the 2008 Deputy DPA’s execution, the letter assumes the 2008 Deputy DPA is valid. Thus, even assuming Jay’s Amendments are valid, Jay impermissibly revoked Paul’s beneficiary status in an effort to claim the Trusts’ assets for himself. In purportedly and unjustifiably revoking Paul’s interests, Jay placed his own interests above Paul’s, and therefore breached his duty of loyalty. Jay executed his Amendments secretly, without the knowledge of Georgene, Lillian, or Paul, and with the sole intent of disinheriting Paul. Jay waited for the opportune time to invoke his nonexistent revocation powers and chose to proceed as 113 though he was the sole beneficiary of the Trusts. But Paul is and always has been a beneficiary of the Trusts. As trustee of the One Flintlock Trust, Jay is required to distribute 24% of all net trust income to Paul at least annually.688 But Jay proceeded as though he was the sole beneficiary, appropriating nearly all the funds from the Trusts without considering Paul’s interest and failing to pay Paul distributions. Beginning in 2010, Jay began transferring funds out of the One Flintlock Trust, despite telling Paul that distributions must stop due to the market crash. Jay used the market as an excuse to mislead Paul. Unbeknownst to Paul, Jay continued to make distributions to himself even after the brothers agreed to cease distributions until the market bounced back. Then, from 2013 on, Jay siphoned off over $133,000 from Paul’s OFT Account, transferring those funds into various accounts Jay controlled. 689 By taking distributions for himself and slowly draining Paul’s OFT Account for his own personal benefit, Jay breached his duty of loyalty. Jay pursued a similar course of conduct with respect to the Deputy Trust. Before Paul’s interest was allegedly revoked in December 2008, Jay disbursed roughly $12,000 from the Deputy Trust.690 After the purported revocation, Jay 688 JX 7, § 7(A). 689 See D.I. 130, Ex. A (collecting JXs). 690 JX 158; D.I. 130, Ex. B (collecting JXs). Jay states that Paul has offered no evidence regarding what those funds were for, and suggests that those funds were allocated for repairs and updates to the North Circle House after Lillian’s death, as well as 114 withdrew nearly $224,023.69 from the Deputy Trust for his own use. 691 Throughout 2008 and 2009, Jay reassured Paul that he was working on Lillian’s estate and could not yet make distributions. Likewise, in view of Jay’s representations about market conditions, Paul consented to Jay’s suggestion that they defer distributions from the Deputy Trust. But Jay was transferring Deputy Trust funds to himself.692 He failed to inform Paul of this fact, but instead repeatedly indicated to Paul that Paul remained a beneficiary of the Deputy Trust who would receive distributions when Jay determined it was prudent to do so. Jay retained all trust income for his own reimbursements for Jay’s expenses related to those repairs or other estate expenses. D.I. 133 at 57. Jay states that “most checks written on the trust account were for estate expenses or for Ms. Deputy’s home.” Id. (citing JX 158). As discussed at length below, Jay used and repaired the North Circle House for his own benefit. The accounting Jay must perform as a result of this action will resolve this issue. 691 D.I. 130, Ex. B (collecting JXs). Jay argues that the total reflected by Exhibit B has been inflated by $2,633. D.I. 133 at 57 n.67. That payment was directed to Casey’s Fund, Jay’s non-profit charitable organization. Jay contends that Paul has offered no evidence that Casey’s Fund is a “sham,” impliedly arguing that the $2,633 should not be considered for purposes of the duty of loyalty analysis. Id. This small dispute does not disturb the larger conclusion that Jay breached his duty of loyalty. Further, Jay transferred the funds to his own charity and has failed to demonstrate that transfer accords with this duty of loyalty. He asserts no explanation as to why this transfer was for the benefit of the trusts and its beneficiaries. See Stegemeier, 728 A.2d at 563. Accordingly, the transfer breached Jay’s duty of loyalty, and without any justification for the transfer, his duty of care. See Section II(A)(3), infra. 692 See generally JX 158, JX 159, 160, JX 161, JX 162, JX 163, JX 164. 115 benefit.693 And during this litigation, Jay continued to siphon off Deputy Trust funds.694 All the while, Paul received nothing. In addition to simply taking funds, Jay also executed a number of self- interested transactions as Trustee of the Deputy Trust, which Jay has not shown to be fair or approved by Paul. First, in 2010, Jay gave himself the option to purchase the North Circle House, a Deputy Trust asset, for half of its alleged 2008 value. 695 “A trustee with power to sell trust property is under a duty not to sell to himself either by private sale or at auction, whether the property has a market price or not, and whether or not the trustee makes a profit thereby.” 696 “This principle was established not only to prevent fraud in the management of the sale, but to the broader object of relieving trustees from any possible conflict between duty and self- interest.”697 Aside from the unfairness of the sale, the Court may consider that “the trustee may have obtained important information regarding the value of the property that he has kept to himself.”698 693 Jay even impermissibly transferred funds between the Trusts. See Jay Tr. 525:23– 526:23. 694 See generally JX 165, JX 166, JX 167, JX 168. 695 JX 99. 696 Stegemeier, 728 A.2d at 564 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 170 cmt. b (1959)). 697 Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (Downs v. Rickards, 1872 WL 2123, at *8 (Del. Ch. Jan. 1, 1872)). 698 Id. 116 Although Jay framed this transaction as an option, the same principles apply. Jay knew that the option was a steal, having previously valued the home far above the option price and knowing that its value would increase once the market bounced back. He had an intimate knowledge of the property and its completed and forthcoming improvements, but he failed to accurately reflect that in the option price. And the terms of the option agreement are plainly self-interested. Under the agreement, Jay gave himself the right to use the North Circle House as if he owned it, as well as the right to be fully reimbursed by the Deputy Trust for renovations. There is no evidence that Jay informed Paul of the option or extended the same terms to Paul, or that Paul approved this transaction or Jay’s free use of the North Circle House. As trustee, Jay breached his duty of loyalty by granting himself the 2010 option. While Jay never exercised the option, he has used the home without paying meaningful rent to the Deputy Trust. Since Lillian’s death, he used the property as his “residence,” touting it as such as recently as 2017. But he only paid “rent” to the Deputy Trust for one year.699 Paul has never used the North Circle House. Further, Jay has enhanced the home for his own comfort using Deputy Trust funds. While Paul was aware that Jay was dealing with the North Circle House while “administering” the Deputy estate, there is no evidence that he consented to the use 699 See Jay Tr. 480:9–18. 117 of Deputy Trust funds to tailor the home to Jay’s taste, with the knowledge that his brother would solely occupy and benefit from the property. Thus, to the extent the funds were used for ordinary maintenance for the home, I find Jay did not breach his duties. But to the extent Jay used Deputy Trust funds to renovate or otherwise maintain the North Circle House for his own benefit, rather than to maintain it as a Deputy Trust asset, those allocations were self-interested and a breach of Jay’s duty of loyalty. To determine the approximate value of the self-interested improvements to the Deputy home, I order an accounting. Jay also breached his duty of loyalty when he used Deputy Trust funds to pay himself a large commission for his efforts as executor of Lillian’s estate. Jay calculated a commission of $18,126 in 2008, based on his estimated combined value of Lillian’s estate and the Deputy Trust of $644,000. 700 He testified that, of that calculated amount, he paid himself approximately $14,000 or $15,000. 701 The Deputy Trust mandates that the trustee serve without compensation. 702 And Jay swore in the Small Estate Affidavit that Lillian’s estate was worth less than $30,000.703 Accordingly, no estate was actually opened. The commission, at 700 Jay Tr. at 477:2–479:2. 701 Jay Tr. at 477:2–479:2. 702 JX 39, Art. VII(2). 703 JX 72. 118 approximately half the upper limit of a qualifying small estate, was not reasonable.704 Even accepting Jay’s dubious explanation for the payment as true, Jay breached his duty of loyalty by paying himself such a disproportionate commission for non-Trust related tasks. Finally, Jay breached his duty of loyalty when he forged forms to transfer the AT&T stock out of the Deputy Trust and into his name individually. The fact that those shares were “ear marked” for Jay does not bear on this analysis, aside from evidencing that Jay would have held a motive to proceed with the forgery. At the time of Lillian’s death, she had not executed the change forms necessary to transfer the shares to Jay. Jay executed and forged the forms himself. Although Ameriprise did not investigate the forgery and ultimately transferred the shares, the preponderance of the evidence presented at trial demonstrates that Jay, in fact, forged the documents. Thus, the AT&T shares would have remained Deputy Trust property but for Jay’s forgery. Jay’s transfer of those shares from the Deputy Trust to himself personally was an entirely self-interested manipulation of the Deputy Trust corpus, to Paul’s detriment. 704 In re Estate of Link, 2011 WL 2084161, at *1 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2011) (“The administrator of an estate is entitled to compensation for his services. 12 Del. C. § 2305 provides that commissions shall be allowed as provided by Rule of this Court. Rule 192 directs this Court in its review of the commission sought by a personal representative. That Rule provides that the amount of any commission must be reasonable, and that this Court may reduce a commission that it finds unreasonable.”) 119 In light of these transactions, Jay failed to administer the Trusts “solely in the interest of the beneficia[ries].”705 Rather than “exclud[ing] all selfish interest and all consideration of the interests of third persons,”706 Jay consciously, consistently, and systematically administered the Trusts for his own personal gain. Jay’s behaviors exemplify the reasons that, under our law, “self-dealing on the part of a trustee is virtually prohibited.”707 And he has failed to justify his actions in the face of Paul’s allegations. Accordingly, Paul is entitled to relief. 3. Jay Breached His Duty Of Care. A trustee “must act as the reasonable and prudent person in managing the trust.”708 Trustees must manage the assets under their care “with the care, skill, prudence and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use to attain the purposes of the account.”709 “Not only must the trustee deal with trust property with ordinary prudence but he is held to two additional standards: (1) since he is dealing with the property of another for whom he is morally bound to provide, he 705 Paradee, 2010 WL 3959604, at *10 (quoting Walls, 1979 WL 26236, at *4; accord Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 78. 706 Id. (quotation omitted). 707 Stegemeier, 728 A.2d at 563 (quotation omitted). 708 McNeil, 798 A.2d at 509. 709 12 Del. C. § 3302(a). 120 must avoid even those risks which he might take with his own property and (2) he must take no risk which endangers the integrity of the trust corpus.” 710 Jay managed the One Flintlock and Deputy Trust assets with the primary disloyal goal of appropriating them for himself. Jay committed a host of disloyal acts that Paul also asserts breached Jay’s duty of care: a) adopting Jay’s Amendments and revoking Paul’s interests through those impermissible and invalid Amendments; b) failing to make distributions to Paul from both Trusts; c) paying himself a commission for handling Lillian’s estate out of the Deputy Trust; d) forging documents to transfer the AT&T stock out of the Deputy Trust; and e) using the North Circle House for himself without paying rent, and granting himself an option at below-market value.711 As explained, Jay’s OFT Amendment is invalid and Jay’s Deputy Trusts Amendments are inauthentic and inadmissible. And as explained, these efforts to change the terms of the trust for his own benefit constitute breaches of the duty of loyalty. I need not reach whether these actions also breached the duty of care. It seems to me that actions taken in frustration of the Trusts’ dispositive scheme are 710 DuPont v. Del. Tr. Co., 320 A.2d 694, 697 (Del. 1974). 711 Paul also contends that Jay breached his duty of care by allowing an annuity, which was to pass to both brothers outright via a beneficiary designation, to escheat to the State of Delaware. This annuity was never the property of either Trust, and so its management is not governed by Jay’s fiduciary duties as a trustee. Paul eventually retrieved his share. I do not reach Jay’s handling of this annuity. 121 not prudent. But the parties did not tackle this doctrinal issue, and I need not reach it: I stop with my conclusions that Jay’s Amendments are ineffective and breached his duty of loyalty. The other misdeeds Paul identifies are breaches of the duty of care. The commission was improper under the terms of the Deputy Trust and in view of the size of Lillian’s estate that otherwise would have been subject to probate. The administration of Lillian’s small estate was, by design, outside of the purpose of the Deputy Trust. The commission was not based on any action taken to further the administration of the Deputy Trust, which on its terms precluded a commission to its trustee. And the $18,126 commission was wildly disproportionate to the work involved in administering Lillian’s estate, which amounted to filing a small estate affidavit. A prudent, objective trustee would not have paid that commission. Second, in 2008 and 2009, Jay explained to Paul that it was prudent to withhold distributions from both Trusts due to market conditions. But Jay made distributions to himself during that time. If Jay’s reading of the market was accurate, those distributions were not prudent in light of the circumstances. Third, Jay’s handling of the North Circle House fell short of the care, skill, prudence and diligence that a prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use to attain the purposes of the account. Jay as trustee gave away an option to purchase the North Circle House for far below the market 122 price. Jay as trustee allowed the North Circle House to be used as a residence without collecting meaningful rent,712 and he allowed the resident to decorate the North Circle House to his liking at the Deputy Trust’s expense. Jay as trustee has not taken meaningful measures to sell the North Circle House, having merely told one local realtor he would sell it but to stop short of listing it. A prudent trustee would have utilized or monetized the North Circle House for the benefit of both Deputy Trust beneficiaries.713 As for the AT&T stock, the evidence shows that Lillian intended for that stock to pass to Jay outright at the time of her death. But in order to effectuate that intent, Jay engaged in forgery. That is not how a prudent trustee would have handled the issue. Paul has proven that Jay has breached his duty of care. B. Jay Has Been Unjustly Enriched By His Misconduct. To prevail on an unjust enrichment claim, Paul must demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence (1) an enrichment, (2) an impoverishment, (3) a relation between the enrichment and impoverishment, (4) the absence of 712 As stated, Jay paid “rent” of $500 per month during 2010 to use the North Circle House, but otherwise used the property for many years without paying rent to the Deputy Trust. 713 Jay had experience renting properties for the benefit of the Deputy Trust. Shortly after the market crash, Jay purchased three Florida properties at low prices: two in the name of the Deputy Trust and one the name of the One Flintlock Trust. Despite the ravaged market, he rented those properties and generated income for the Trusts, knowing that the properties would be worth more once the market rebounded. Jay sold the properties and turned a handsome profit for both Trusts. 123 justification, and (5) the absence of a remedy provided by law. 714 Paul has prevailed. Jay used his position as trustee of both the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts to impermissibly oust Paul and take the lion’s share for himself. To effectuate this scheme, Jay not only breached his duties to Paul, but also created a fraudulent paper trail in an effort to support his version of the facts. A remedy at law is insufficient: Paul is entitled to the equitable remedies of an inventory and accounting for both Trusts, and to Jay’s removal as trustee. Jay attacks the justification prong, claiming his actions properly flowed from his revocation of Paul’s interest, which in turn was justified because Paul violated the Amendments’ no-contest clauses. This argument fails because, as discussed at length, Jay did not have the power to effect Jay’s September 2004 OFT Amendment, and the differing copies of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment are unauthenticated and inadmissible. Paul has shown that Jay lacked the power to revoke Paul’s interest in the Trusts, and any benefit Jay received as a result of the purported revocations is not justified. Further, Jay has failed to show his self-interested transactions preceding the purported revocations were justified. Thus, Jay’s use of his trustee powers of both trusts to his benefit and to the exclusion of his brother constitutes unjust enrichment. 714 Nemec v. Shrader, 991 A.2d 1120, 1130 (Del. 2010). 124 Jay further argues that Paul’s unjust enrichment claim is duplicative of his breach of fiduciary duty claim.715 But Delaware law does not preclude a plaintiff from bringing two equitable claims involving overlapping facts. 716 And if a plaintiff is able to prove the defendant breached his duty of loyalty, then the plaintiff will also be successful in proving unjust enrichment.717 Paul has demonstrated that Jay breached his fiduciary duty of loyalty in numerous ways. Accordingly, Paul prevails on his unjust enrichment claim. Where the claims seek identical recovery, such as disgorgement of distributions that Jay received from the Trusts, Paul will only be entitled to one recovery. 718 C. The Doctrine of Laches Does Not Bar Paul’s Claims. Jay contends that laches bars Paul’s claims. “The equitable doctrine of laches prevents a plaintiff from exercising unreasonable delay in bringing an action when that delay prejudices a defendant’s rights.”719 “[T]he laches inquiry is principally whether it is inequitable to permit a claim to be enforced, the touchstone of which is inexcusable delay leading to an adverse change in the condition or relations of the 715 D.I. 133 at 60. 716 See Dubroff v. Wren Hldgs., LLC, 2011 WL 5137175, at *11 & n.58 (Del. Ch. Oct.28, 2011); MCG Cap. Corp. v. Maginn, 2010 WL 1782271, at *25 n.147 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2010). 717 MCG Cap. Corp. v. Maginn, 2010 WL 1782271, at *25 n.147 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2010). 718 See Dubroff , 2011 WL 5137175, at *11 & n.58; MCG Cap. Corp., 2010 WL 1782271, at *25 n.147. 719 Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Starr, 575 A.2d 1083, 1088 (Del. 1990). 125 property or the parties.”720 “A finding of laches generally requires the presence of three factors: the claimant’s knowledge of the claim, unreasonable delay in bringing the claim, and resulting prejudice to the defendant.” 721 “Laches bars an action in equity” where these elements are met. 722 The party asserting the laches defense bears the burden of proving each element.723 “[T]here are no hard and fast rules regarding laches . . . .”724 “In determining whether an action is barred by laches, a court may consider numerous factors including the plaintiff’s knowledge of his rights, the reasons for the delay, and any change of position by the defendant.” 725 I denied the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment so that the record could be developed as to Jay’s laches defense.726 The parties’ legal positions remain the same, with the added benefit of a developed record. The parties primarily dispute 720 Reid v. Spazio, 970 A.2d 176, 183. (Del. 2009). 721 Kraft v. WisdomTree Invs., Inc., 145 A.3d 969, 974 (Del. Ch. 2016). 722 Whittington v. Dragon Grp., L.L.C., 991 A.2d 1, 8 (Del. 2009). 723 Hudak v. Procek, 806 A.2d 140, 153 (Del. 2002) (“The doctrine of laches acts as a bar to an action in equity if the defendant carries the burden of persuasion that two conditions have been satisfied: (1) the plaintiff waited an unreasonable length of time before bringing the suit and (2) the delay unfairly prejudices the defendant. What constitutes unreasonable delay and prejudice are questions of fact that depend upon the totality of the circumstances.”); see also James Julian, Inc. v. Dep’t of Transp. of State of Delaware, 1991 WL 224575, at *14 (Del. Ch. Oct. 29, 1991) (“To prevail on the defense of laches, the defendants have the burden of proving that the plaintiffs delayed unreasonably in bringing the action and that the unreasonable delay resulted in prejudice to the defendants.”). 724 Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs., N.V., 85 A.3d 725, 787–88 (Del. Ch. 2014). 725 Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 575 A.2d at 1088–89. 726 Deputy, 2019 WL 2452550, at *4. 126 the moment Paul had knowledge of his claims, balancing the red flags evident from Jay’s service as trustee against Paul’s faith in Jay and Jay’s occasional pacifying statements. “[A]ctual or constructive knowledge of the claim” can trigger laches’ knowledge requirement. 727 Actual knowledge is defined as direct and clear knowledge. Constructive knowledge is defined as knowledge that one using reasonable care or diligence should have, and therefore that is attributed by law to a given person. A party is also chargeable with such knowledge of a claim as he or she might have obtained upon inquiry . . . . Inquiry notice does not require full knowledge of the material facts; rather, plaintiffs are on inquiry notice when they have sufficient knowledge to raise their suspicions to the point where persons of ordinary intelligence and prudence would commence an investigation that, if pursued would lead to the discovery of the injury.728 As a result, “laches will foreclose recovery if a plaintiff failed to act when it would have been reasonable for [him] to inquire into the situation, and further inquiry would have uncovered the claim,”729 assuming the other elements of the defense are met. 727 All Pro Maids, Inc. v. Layton, 2004 WL 1878784, at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 9, 2004), aff’d, 880 A.2d 1047 (Del. 2005). 728 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *49 (Del. Ch. Feb. 12, 2018) (quotations omitted), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds sub nom. Oxbow Carbon & Minerals Hldgs., Inc. v. Crestview-Oxbow Acq., LLC, 202 A.3d 482 (Del. 2019). 729 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *49 (quoting Whittington, 991 A.2d at 9); accord Deutsche Bank Nat. Tr. Co. v. Goldfeder, 2014 WL 644442, at *2 (Del. 2014) (TABLE). 127 1. Paul Had Knowledge Of His Deputy Trust Claims In 2008 And His One Flintlock Trust Claims in 2011. Jay’s handling of Agnes’ estate gives important context to the information Paul received about the Deputy Trust and One Flintlock Trust. Paul stood by Lillian as she confronted and eventually sued Jay for taking Lillian’s share of Agnes’ estate. Even after Jay and Lillian arrived at a détente in July 2005, Paul remained skeptical about both Agnes’ estate and the One Flintlock Trust.730 Paul’s skepticism carried over to Jay’s handling of the Deputy Trust in the days after it was executed, when Jay first wielded his power as Lillian’s newly appointed attorney-in-fact in March 2008. Jay’s new role was a surprise to Paul, as Lillian had told him she did not have a power of attorney. Paul arrived at the reasonable conclusion that Lillian had appointed him for short-term service surrounding her hospitalization. Paul suspected Jay’s wrongdoing with regard to the Deputy Trust in the days after Lillian’s death. When Fairchild told Paul of the changes to Lillian’s estate plan, Paul (like Fairchild) immediately concluded they were against her longstanding wish to distribute everything to Jay and Paul equally and outright. Paul said he would 730 See JX 58 at 4 (entry dated 7/28/2005 at 9:04 AM) (“Ralph not convinced yet that Jay is genuine.”). 128 consider contesting the estate, but ultimately decided to hold off on making a decision until after the funeral. After the funeral, Paul began to inquire about Jay’s behavior with respect to the Deputy Trust. He had “sufficient knowledge to raise [his] suspicions to the point where [he] commence[d] an investigation.” 731 Paul was concerned enough that, on March 7, 2008, he hired Deakyne to review the available Deputy Trust documents. Deakyne also investigated the forged AT&T documents, resulting in the March 2008 Letter. That letter explicitly questions the validity of the Deputy DPA. Even though Paul did not have “direct and clear” knowledge of his claims at that time, he knew enough to consider the possibility that Jay was breaching his duties.732 Paul’s suspicions solidified upon receipt of the November 2008 Letter, and Paul retained counsel yet again. Paul’s counsel sent the December 8, 2008 Letter, telling Jay that “it is clear from your letter that you do not have a firm grasp of your responsibilities as Executor and Trustee,” and informed Jay that if he continued that course of action, Paul would be compelled to file suit. In response, by the December 12, 2008 Letter, Jay informed Paul his beneficiary status in the Deputy Trust would be revoked if he failed to respond within five days. 731 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *49. 732 See id. 129 Thus, in December 2008, Paul had direct knowledge of Jay’s intention to revoke him as a beneficiary of the Deputy Trust. Paul did not respond to the December 12, 2008 Letter because he believed it was an empty threat. Even believing Jay did not have revocation power, a reasonable person still would have investigated. And Paul still believed a lawsuit was necessary: Paul waited not because he thought Jay was fulfilling his fiduciary duties, but because Paul “ha[d] a restaurant . . . so [he] couldn’t give [his] time to [this dispute] until [he] finally got [himself] together with the restaurant.”733 On these facts, I find that Paul had inquiry notice of his Deputy Trust claims as early as March 2008 and likely had actual knowledge of his claims as early as December 2008. The parties dispute what effect, if any, Jay’s treatment of Paul as a beneficiary from 2009 through at least 2011 has on this analysis. During that period, Jay continued to give Paul only partial updates about the Deputy Trust. Paul received no distributions or statements. Thus, though Jay was calling Paul a beneficiary in an effort to dodge Paul’s questions and concerns, he was not treating Paul as a beneficiary. While Jay’s half-measures may have reinforced Paul’s belief that Jay did not have revocation powers, they were in fact further evidence of Jay’s failure 733 Paul Dep. 25:12–18; see also Paul Tr. 5:1–2; JX 97 at RDEPUTY_000007 (“[T]he restaurant is taking a lot of time these days.”). 130 as a fiduciary. And the fact remains that Paul began inquiring about Jay’s suspicious behavior, and even threatened to take action, before this period. Jay’s lip service did not eliminate Paul’s concerns. In 2013, Paul explained, “I need to know what’s going on with my mom’s trust because I have no idea what is going on.”734 Paul sought the assistance of counsel, yet again, to collect and review the Deputy Trust documents and send the August 2014 Letter, threatening suit if Jay did not cooperate. Even accepting Paul’s argument that the accumulation of these red flags did not give him “direct and clear knowledge” of his claims until 2014, Paul possessed “sufficient knowledge to raise [his] suspicions to the point where persons of ordinary intelligence and prudence would commence an investigation”735 starting in the days after Lillian’s death in March 2008. Paul’s growing understanding of Jay’s misdeeds regarding the Deputy Trust should have colored his evaluation of Jay’s handling of the One Flintlock Trust. In 2008, when Paul first suspected wrongdoing in connection with the Deputy Trust, Paul was receiving regular One Flintlock Trust distributions and statements. In the November 2008 Letter, Jay informed Paul that he had “already compromised and jeopardized potentially [his] beneficiary status in the One Flintlock Trust.” Paul 734 Paul Tr. 25:6–10. 735 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *49. 131 testified that he did not inquire about Jay’s statement because Paul was receiving the distributions and statements he expected as a beneficiary. But on December 8, 2008, Paul’s counsel threatened Jay with suit regarding the Deputy Trust due to his failures as executor and trustee. Jay responded by setting a deadline for revocation of Paul’s interest in the Deputy Trust. In this context, it was not reasonable for Paul to overlook Jay’s posturing with regard to the One Flintlock Trust and conclude Jay was fulfilling his fiduciary duties. Throughout 2009, Paul inquired about K-1 statements for the One Flintlock Trust. He continued receiving monthly One Flintlock Trust distributions and statements until December 2009, when Jay convinced Paul that it was best to stop distributions until the market rebounded. Paul also stopped receiving One Flintlock Trust statements. “[Paul] figured the stock market’s going to be crashing for a long time,” so he did not inquire as to whether and when distributions would resume. 736 He did not press Jay for information despite the fact that he stopped receiving trust statements: “we didn’t have distributions, I didn’t get a statement.” 737 Paul waited until 2011 to ask Jay again about the One Flintlock Trust. Jay advised that the market still had not recovered and so distributions and statements could not resume. Paul did not question this, despite his constant reservations about 736 Paul Tr. 20:18–19. 737 Paul Tr. 21:2–3. 132 his brother’s behavior. And although Paul casually tracked the market on his own, he did not try to verify Jay’s claims. I conclude Paul had inquiry notice of his One Flintlock Trust claims in 2011. “Inquiry notice does not require full knowledge of the material facts.”738 At that juncture, a reasonable person would have inquired further into why Jay had been withholding both distributions and statements for years. If Paul had inquired further, he would have discovered that Jay had been transferring money out of the One Flintlock Trust, but not to Paul,739 and that Jay had “informally” revoked Paul’s beneficiary status in 2009, therefore discovering his claim. Further, by this time, Paul had knowledge of both how Jay had handled Agnes’s estate and Paul’s Deputy Trust claims, which should have informed his view of how Jay was handling the One Flintlock Trust. Even after Paul had inquiry notice of his One Flintlock Trust claims in 2011, nearly two more years passed without receiving One Flintlock Trust distributions or statements. Paul continued to ignore these warning signs, stating in early 2013 that he had “no problem with Aunt Gene’s trust because I know what’s going on.”740 But shortly thereafter, on April 21, 2013, Paul obtained actual notice of his One Flintlock 738 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *49. 739 See, e.g., JX 107 at WF_007149. 740 Paul Tr. 25:6–10. 133 Trust claims when Jay unequivocally informed Paul that his beneficiary status in the One Flintlock Trust had been revoked “effective immediately.” 741 Then, on October 3, 2014, in response to yet another threat from Paul’s counsel, Jay issued the October 2014 Letter that addressed revocation from both the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts. Even if Paul believed this to be an empty threat, he had direct and clear knowledge, or actual notice, of his claims for both Trusts at that time. 2. Paul Unreasonably Delayed In Bringing His Claims. Paul unreasonably delayed in bringing this action. “An ‘unreasonable delay’ for purposes of laches can range from one month to many years. The length of the delay is less important than the reasons for it.” 742 “While this Court will consider the analogous statute of limitations, such limitations applicable in a court of law do not control a court sitting in equity; a court of equity may also consider concerns of conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence.” 743 Thus, “the element of 741 JX 118 at RDEPUTY_000099. According to Jay, “[b]eneficiary revocation for the One Flintlock Trust occurred formally on 21 April 2013 (and informally occurred on 9 April 2009 after a challenge to an agreed upon investment policy change).” JX 123 at JDEPUTY_00347. 742 Stewart v. Wilm. Tr. SP Servs., Inc., 112 A.3d 271, 295 (Del. Ch.), aff’d, 126 A.3d 1115 (Del. 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting IAC/InterActiveCorp v. O’Brien, 26 A.3d 174, 177 (Del. 2011)). 743 Houseman v. Sagerman, 2015 WL 7307323, at *8 (Del. Ch. Nov. 19, 2015). 134 unreasonable delay involves consideration of whether the plaintiff acted with the degree of diligence that fairness and justice require.”744 Nonetheless, where parties bring equitable claims seeking equitable relief, this Court is not strictly bound by statutes of limitation, but will “give the analogous limitations period great weight in deciding whether the claims are barred by laches.”745 The parties agree that Paul’s claims are entirely equitable in nature. As a result, laches applies and the Court looks to the relevant statutes of limitation with great, but not presumptive, weight.746 The parties do not dispute that 10 Del. C. § 8106’s three-year statute of limitations applies to the breach of fiduciary duty claims at issue here.747 Likewise, the three-year statute of limitations applies to Paul’s unjust enrichment claim. 748 Accordingly, I look to the three-year statute of 744 Id. 745 Kraft, 145 A.3d at 978 (quoting Whittington, 991 A.2d at 9 (“Where the plaintiff seeks equitable relief, however, the Court of Chancery applies the statute of limitations by analogy. Absent a tolling of the limitations period, a party’s failure to file within the analogous period of limitations will be given great weight in deciding whether the claims are barred by laches.”)). 746 Id.; Whittington, 991 A.2d at 9. 747 D.I. 130 at 48; D.I. 133 at 12. See Tilden v. Cunningham, 2018 WL 5307706, at *14 (Del. Ch. Oct. 26, 2018) (“Under 10 Del. C. § 8106, a three-year limitations period applies to claims sounding in breach of fiduciary duty.” (citing In re Tyson Foods, Inc. Consol. S’holder Litig., 919 A.2d 563, 584 (Del. Ch. 2007)). 748 See, e.g., Vichi, 62 A.3d at 42. The parties briefly dispute what analogous statute of limitations I should consider for Paul’s unjust enrichment claim. Jay contends that Paul’s unjust enrichment claim is also subject to the three-year statute of limitations. While Paul concedes that the three-year statute of limitations generally applies to an unjust enrichment claim, Paul pushes further, arguing two alternative positions. First, Paul contends that 12 Del. C. § 3585 grants a beneficiary five years to sue for breach of trust, and that because 135 limitations when determining whether Paul unreasonably delayed in bringing his claims against Jay.749 The statute of limitations “begins to run upon accrual of the claim,” 750 or “as soon as the wrongful act occurs.”751 The analogous limitations period for the claims in this case began when Paul had at least inquiry notice of his claims. 752 For the Deputy Trust claims, the analogous period began in 2008, and for the One Flintlock Trust claims, the analogous period began in 2011. Paul initiated this action in 2015, his “claims involve a breach of trust . . . a five-year statute of limitations is more analogous to [his] unjust enrichment claim.” D.I. 130 at 53. Paul cites no authority for this position, and I do not adopt it here. Second, Paul argues that Jay executed the Deputy Trust and September 2004 OFT Amendments under seal, and, therefore, his unjust enrichment claim is subject to the twenty-year statute of limitations under Whittington v. Dragon Group L.L.C., 991 A.2d at 11. See D.I. 130 at 53. Because Jay’s Amendments are inadmissible, that argument bears no weight here. 749 The parties also quarrel over whether the limitations period for any of Paul’s claims were tolled under the doctrines of fraudulent concealment and equitable tolling. The record supports that Jay acted in secret, as explained in analyzing his breaches of the duty to inform. And while Paul may have genuinely relied on Jay’s explanations and half-truths, Paul also selectively ignored a litany of warning signs. See Tilden, 2018 WL 5307706, at *14 (“While our courts will toll the limitation period under certain circumstances, “[m]ere ignorance of the facts by a plaintiff, where there has been no ... concealment, is no obstacle to operation of the statute [of limitations.]” (alternation in original) (footnotes omitted) (quoting In re Dean Witter P’ship Litig., 1998 WL 442456, at *5 (Del. Ch. July 17, 1998)). At bottom, I need not reach those doctrines because, as discussed below, Jay’s laches defense fails because he failed to demonstrate prejudice. 750 Tilden, 2018 WL 5307706, at *14. 751 Id. (quoting Albert v. Alex. Brown Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 2005 WL 1594085, at *18 (Del. Ch. July 29, 2005)). 752 See, e.g., Whittington, 2008 WL 4419075, at *6 (“[T]he statute of limitations will not run until the plaintiff is on inquiry notice of her claims.”); In re Tyson Foods, Inc., 919 A.2d at 594 (finding that analogous statute of limitations period began to run when plaintiffs were on inquiry notice of their claims). 136 after the analogous limitations period had run for both the One Flintlock Trust and Deputy Trust claims. While Paul’s claims are not presumptively barred by the limitations period, I give the three-year statute of limitations great weight in my analysis. Paul’s failure to bring his claims within the analogous limitations period supports a finding of unreasonable delay. In addition to the analogous statute of limitations, I also consider concerns of conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence.753 While Jay’s indiscretions are extraordinary, they afford Paul little latitude, as Paul was aware of Jay’s character and his specific misdeeds.754 Jay’s occasional reassurances did not sufficiently precipitate Paul’s delay to excuse it. On more than one occasion, Paul failed to act with reasonable diligence in pursuing his claims; the egregiousness and obviousness of Jay’s deception reinforce this conclusion. Paul repeatedly testified that the he relied on Jay’s representations. Paul considered pursuing his claims multiple times, but consciously abandoned that course of action, deciding to focus on his restaurant instead. As early 753 Houseman, 2015 WL 7307323, at *8. 754 Reid, 970 A.2d at 183 (“Under ordinary circumstances, a suit in equity will not be stayed for laches before, and will be stayed after, the time fixed by the analogous statute of limitations at law; but, if unusual conditions or extraordinary circumstances make it inequitable to allow the prosecution of a suit after a briefer, or to forbid its maintenance after a longer period than that fixed by the statute, the [court] will not be bound by the statute, but will determine the extraordinary case in accordance with the equities which condition it.” (alteration in original) (quotation omitted)). 137 as 2005, Paul was skeptical of Jay’s motives, and by 2008, Paul knew that he needed to begin protecting his interests. By 2011, Paul had sufficient knowledge of Jay’s indiscretions to justify mounting a claim. But he chose not to do so. Considering the reasons for his delay and the analogous limitations period, I find that Paul unreasonably delayed in bringing his claims. 3. Jay Has Failed To Demonstrate That He Has Been Prejudiced By Paul’s Delay. Jay has not demonstrated that that he has been prejudiced by Paul’s unreasonable delay. “[L]aches may not bar an action that would be untimely in terms of the analogous statute of limitations if, in terms of equity, the plaintiff’s delay has caused no prejudice to the defendant . . . .”755 The party asserting the laches defense bears the burden of demonstrating he has been prejudiced by petitioner’s delay. 756 “Prejudice can be either procedural, such as when a party is unable to call a crucial witness due to the delay and the witness has since become unavailable, or substantive, such as when a party relies to his detriment on the plaintiff’s failure to file a claim in a timely manner.” 757 Substantive prejudice may occur where the delay caused another to incur expense, to enter into obligations, or suffer some other 755 O’Brien, 2009 WL 2490845, at *8. 756 See, e.g., Sussex Cty. v. Berzins Enters., Inc., 2017 WL 4083131, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2017), aff’d, 197 A.3d 1050 (Del. 2018). 757 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *50 (quoting Meer v. Aharoni, 2010 WL 2573767, at *8 (Del. Ch. June 28, 2010)). 138 detrimental change of position.758 “Some change in position to the disadvantage of another is essential.”759 Where the respondent is “able to point to nothing else in the way of prejudice,” the laches defense must fail. 760 This is true even if the petitioner has delayed nearly twenty years in bringing the action. 761 Jay contends Paul’s failure to diligently pursue his claims resulted in both procedural and substantive prejudice. First, Jay contends that Mary Swanson was unavailable to testify because she passed away before Paul sued. Swanson was Lillian’s close friend for many years, and Jay contends she witnessed his signature on JX 46, a purported copy of Jay’s Deputy Trust Amendment, as well as JX 112, the “transcripts” of Lillian’s purported conversations with Jay. Unable to point to any other specific sources of procedural prejudice, Jay generally contends that “[t]he 758 See also In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *50 (“A defendant may be substantively prejudiced where the plaintiff ‘sit[s] by inactive and in what amounts to silence . . .until affairs had become so complicated that a restoration of former status was difficult, if not impossible.’” (quoting Fed. United Corp. v. Havender, 11 A.2d 331, 344 (1940)). 759 Bovay v. H.M. Byllesby & Co., 22 A.2d 138, 142 (1941). The respondent must prove that petitioner’s delay lead to “an adverse change in the condition or relations of the property or the parties.” Houseman, 2015 WL 7307323, at *9 (quoting Reid, 970 A.2d at 183). 760 Berzins Enters., Inc., 2017 WL 4083131, at *4. 761 See Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Deane, 27 A.2d 365, 368 (1942) (“No prejudice to respondents from the delay of twenty years, nor change of situation during neglectful repose have been demonstrated. Complainant is willing that the insured should have all for which he bargained and paid. In consequence, the defense of laches must fail.” (quotation omitted)). 139 availability of witnesses and evidence does not necessarily alleviate prejudice since ‘such evidence may now be stale’ and memories fade.”762 Jay has failed to suggest any procedural prejudice. The Delaware Supreme Court has stated that the doctrine of laches is founded on “the difficulty of doing entire justice, when the original transactions have become obscure by time, and the evidence may be lost, or depends on the precarious memory of witnesses.”763 No such difficulty is present here. As explained above, the documents Mary Swanson purportedly witnessed have been excluded as inadmissible because Jay has failed to show they are authentic. Her name is misspelled on JX 46, and Jay’s testimony about the circumstances under which she purportedly witnessed JX 46 and JX 112 is suspicious and contradicted by more credible testimony. Jay produced two other copies of the Deputy Trust Amendment that were not witnessed by “M. Swason”; both of those are also unauthenticated and inadmissible. Mary Swanson’s absence is not the reason Jay has failed to introduce an authentic copy of the Deputy Trust Amendment. And the circumstances surrounding JX 112 are so far-fetched that I cannot conceive of Mary testifying that she actually witnessed those “transcripts.” 762 D.I. 133 at 30 (quoting Houseman, 2015 WL 7307323, at *10, and then citing Chaplake Hldgs., LTD. v. Chrysler Corp., 766 A.2d 1, 6 (Del. 2001)). 763 Hudak, 806 A.2d at 159. 140 Mary Swanson is not a “crucial” trial witness: she never witnessed those documents. Furthermore, in light of my belief that Jay created JX 46 and JX 112, among other documents, recently in view of this litigation, it is possible that Jay chose Mary Swanson as his fictional witness for his paper trail because she died in 2013 or 2014.764 This matter does not depend on Mary Swanson’s memory, and even it had, the length of Paul’s delay was not so extensive as to be the sole cause of Mary Swanson’s unavailability. 765 Jay’s more general concerns about faded memories and stale evidence are also unpersuasive, as Jay’s testimony and documents are foundationally incredible. If anything, the passage of time has allowed Jay to create more documents and fine-tune his story. Jay has also failed to demonstrate that he has been substantively prejudiced by Paul’s delay. Jay contends that after he revoked Paul’s interests in the Trusts, “he administered the trust accordingly,”766 and that, if both Paul and he were beneficiaries, he would have proceeded differently. Jay argues that Paul “sat silent from 2008-2015, which makes it difficult if not impossible to return to the trust and [Paul] to their 2008 positions because he has not been a beneficiary since 2008.”767 764 See Jay Tr. 401:2–6. 765 Hudak, 806 A.2d at 159–61 (collecting cases in which the delaying party waited far more than three to five years to bring his claim, therefore supporting a finding that unavailability was “attributable exclusively” to the plaintiff’s delay). 766 D.I. 133 at 30. 767 Id. at 31. 141 He therefore believes he will be substantively prejudiced “if required to provide [Paul] with what he would have received if he remained a beneficiary after he slumbered on his rights for over 5 years.”768 “A defendant may be substantively prejudiced where the plaintiff ‘sit[s] by inactive and in what amounts to silence . . . until affairs had become so complicated that a restoration of former status was difficult, if not impossible.’”769 But prejudice does not exist where the respondent “could not reasonably have been unaware of the possibility of future claims against them arising out of their dealings” with the petitioner.770 Jay was well aware of his wrongdoing, and Paul made it clear as early as 2008 that he might bring claims against Jay.771 The fact that Paul waited to follow through satisfies the first two prongs of the laches analysis, but it did not prejudice Jay.772 At bottom, Jay asks the Court to excuse his years of wrongdoing because it went on for so long. Jay contends that if Paul filed this action sooner, Jay would have taken less money. As an initial matter, even after Paul filed this action, Jay 768 Id. 769 In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 2018 WL 818760, at *50 (quoting Havender, 11 A.2d 331 at 344). 770 Stewart, 112 A.3d at 296. 771 See id. 772 Deane, 27 A.2d at 368. 142 misappropriated enormous sums from the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts; he presumably would have done the same if Paul had filed sooner.773 And, more fundamentally, Jay complains it will be harder to right his wrongs because he committed more wrongs as time went on. That is justice, not prejudice. Because Jay has failed to show that he has suffered an “essential” 774 disadvantage from Paul’s delay and is “able to point to nothing else in the way of prejudice,” his laches defense must fail.775 D. Jay Is Removed As Trustee And Paul Is Appointed Trustee; Jay’s Self-Interested Transactions Are Voidable; And Jay Shall Provide Inventories, Accountings, And Other Information. Jay has breached his duties of care, of loyalty, and to inform. He has done so through fifteen years of obfuscation, deceit, and forgery. He obtained control over the assets that his aunt and mother desired to leave to others in his family, and he systematically created extensive schemes to justify appropriating those assets for 773 See D.I. 130, Ex. A; D.I. 130, Ex. B (quantifying from the various JXs the total amount Jay withdrew from the Trusts from 2013 through 2018). Between 2013 and 2018, Jay siphoned off roughly $133,613.95 from the One Flintlock Trust, with his largest withdrawal of $87,392.13 occurring in 2018. See D.I. 130, Ex. A (citing JX 169, JX 170, JX 171, JX 172, JX 173, JX 174). Between 2008 and 2018, Jay siphoned off roughly $224,023.69 from the Deputy Trust, with his largest withdrawal of $77,568.24 occurring in 2013, and his withdrawals ranging from roughly $8,000 to over $12,000 occurring between 2015 and 2018. See D.I. 130, Ex. B (citing JX 158, JX 159, JX 160, JX 161, JX 162, JX 162, JX 164, JX 165, JX 166, JX 167, JX 168). The ultimate amount of Jay’s wrongful distributions and withdrawals will later be determined through a Court-ordered accounting. 774 Bovay, 22 A.2d at 142 (1941). 775 Berzins Enters., Inc., 2017 WL 4083131, at *4. 143 himself. He did so as his brother relied on him as fiduciary and as the more knowledgeable of the two. Paul is entitled to relief. “The Court of Chancery has exercised its power for the removal of trustees appointed by will or deed very sparingly. The principle maintained is, that there must be a clear necessity for its interference, in order to secure the trust fund against loss or misapplication.”776 Such interference is necessary here. Even while this litigation has been pending, Jay has continued to loot the Trusts. At trial, Jay showed no potential for remorse or reflection; my impression was that he anticipated that he would also deceive the Court. Jay is removed as trustee effective immediately, and he is replaced with Paul. Paul is also entitled to an inventory and an accounting of both Trusts under Jay’s tenure as trustee. As fiduciaries, trustees have a duty to account to beneficiaries for their disposition of trust assets and bear the burden of proving that a disposition was proper. Included within the duty to account is a duty to maintain records that will discharge the fiduciaries’ burden, and that if that duty is not observed, every presumption will be made against the fiduciaries.777 Jay shall file the inventories and accountings within ninety days and shall provide Paul with copies of all supporting documentation. 776 Massey v. Stout, 1871 WL 2090, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 1, 1871). 777 Hardy, 2014 WL 3736331, at *12 (internal quotations and alterations omitted). 144 Jay’s numerous self-interested transactions are voidable at Paul’s behest.778 “[A] court will uphold such a transaction against a beneficiary challenge only if the trustee can show that the transaction was fair and that the beneficiaries consented to the transaction after receiving full disclosure of its terms.”779 In particular, the rights Jay granted himself with regard to the North Circle House, namely the option, right of residence, and right to use Deputy Trust funds to furnish it to his liking, are self- interested, and Jay has not shown they are fair or that Paul knowingly consented. This transaction may be readily unwound, and so it is voidable. 780 I conclude this transaction cannot be upheld. Paul, as trustee of the Deputy Trust, may grant Jay such rights of residence in the North Circle House as may be appropriate and equitable. He may take measures to secure the North Circle House, including by changing the locks. Its furnishings are presumed to be trust property subject to an accounting; Jay shall not remove them from the premises until that presumption is addressed. Jay’s self-interested payment of his commission, and all self-interested payments from Paul’s interest that he made under the guise of having revoked Paul’s interest, are also voidable. After reviewing the inventories and accountings, Paul is 778 Stegemeier, 728 A.2d at 563. 779 Id. 780 See id. at 565. 145 invited to quantify his requested relief for unjust enrichment, income payments under the Trusts, and disgorgement or voiding of Jay’s self-interested payments.781 Jay is invited to respond. Finally, Jay’s transfer of the AT&T stock from the Deputy Trust to Jay is voidable. Paul shall also submit the specific relief he seeks with regard to this stock, and Jay is invited to respond. As a consequence of Jay’s extensive and meaningful breaches of his duty to inform, Paul has requested and shall receive additional equitable relief. Within thirty days, Jay shall identify any other trust that, to Jay’s knowledge, ever existed or purported to exist relating to Lillian K. Deputy or Georgene E. Castor and for which Jay was ever trustee or co-trustee, and for which Paul was ever a beneficiary. He shall also provide copies of all such trust agreements. Within ninety days, Jay shall provide an inventory and accounting of all such trusts. E. Paul Is Entitled To Reasonable Attorneys’ Fees; Jay Is Not. Delaware courts generally follow the American Rule, which holds litigants responsible for their own costs and fees.782 “Under the American Rule and Delaware 781 E.g., PTO ¶¶ 150, 151 (seeking income payments owed under the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts); id. ¶ 153 (seeking an order requiring Jay to “bear all attendant losses incurred by the Trusts); id. ¶ 155 (requesting disgorgement of all improper Trust distributions). 782 See, e.g., Tandycrafts, Inc. v. Initio P’rs, 562 A.2d 1162, 1164 (Del. 1989). 146 law, litigants are normally responsible for paying their own litigation costs.” 783 The Court recognizes an exception to this rule where a party has acted in bad faith. The party invoking the bad faith exception bears the stringent evidentiary burden of producing clear evidence of bad-faith conduct by the opposing party. The standard is arduous: situations in which a party acted vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.784 “Delaware courts have previously awarded attorneys’ fees where (for example) parties have unnecessarily prolonged or delayed litigation, falsified records or knowingly asserted frivolous claims.”785 “Ultimately, the bad faith exception is applied in extraordinary circumstances primarily to deter abusive litigation and protect the integrity of the judicial process.”786 A lesser breach of fiduciary duty alone will not merit departing from the American Rule. 787 Further, in a judicial proceeding involving a trust, “the court, as justice and equity may require, may award costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees, to any party, to be paid by another party or from the trust that is the subject of 783 Mahani v. Edix Media Gp., Inc., 935 A.2d 242, 245 (Del. 2007). 784 Marra v. Brandywine Sch. Dist., 2012 WL 4847083, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 28, 2012) (quotations omitted); see also Estate of Carpenter v. Dinneen, 2008 WL 859309, at *17 (Del.Ch. Mar.6, 2008) (“The American Rule recognizes an exception ‘where the pre- litigation conduct of the losing party was so egregious as to justify an award of attorneys’ fees as an element of damages.’”); see Arbitrium (Cayman Is.) Handels AG v. Johnston, 705 A.2d 225, 231 (Del.Ch.1997), aff’d, 720 A.2d 542 (Del.1998). 785 Montgomery Cellular Hldg. Co. v. Dobler, 880 A.2d 206, 227 (Del. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Johnston, 720 A.2d at 546). 786 Nichols v. Chrysler Gp., LLC, 2010 WL 5549048, at * 3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2010). 787 See HMG/Courtland Props., Inc. v. Gray, 749 A.2d 94, 124-25 (Del. Ch. 1999). 147 the controversy.”788 “Whether to award attorneys’ fees falls within the discretion of this Court.”789 Justice and equity require that Jay personally pay Paul’s fees in this case. Jay’s behavior falls well within the ambit of the bad faith exception to the American Rule. Jay has falsified a number of records to use for his advantage in this litigation, and has continued to siphon off Trust funds while this matter remained pending. As a result, Jay has almost entirely depleted the One Flintlock and Deputy Trusts. In this case, a fee award is necessary to deter Jay’s abusive litigation tactics and protect the integrity of the judicial process.790 And because of the extent of Jay’s abuse and of Paul’s financial detriment, Jay is required to bear Paul’s costs personally. Based on the foregoing, Jay is not entitled to fees. III. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, judgment is entered in Paul’s favor on all counts. Jay is removed as trustee of the One Flintlock Trust and the Deputy Trust, and Paul is appointed trustee effective immediately; Jay shall provide an inventory and accounting of both trusts, and supporting documentation, within ninety days; and Paul and Jay shall work towards quantifying what Jay has taken from Paul. Jay shall 788 12 Del. C. § 3584. 789 Paradee, 2010 WL 3959604, at *15 (citing McNeil, 798 A.2d at 514). 790 Nichols, 2010 WL 5549048, at * 3. 148 pay Paul’s attorneys’ fees and bear his own. The parties shall submit a stipulated implementing order within twenty days. 149