110 A.D.2d 644 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1985
On September 17, 1983, Mr. Waxman executed a purported revocation of the inter vivos trust and subsequently obtained consents to the revocation from his wife and children. He then brought a proceeding, inter alia, for a judicial determination that the trust had been established by mistake and could be rescinded and that it had been properly revoked pursuant to EPTL 7-1.9 (proceeding No. 2). The trustee moved, inter alia, for orders granting partial summary judgment, for the turnover of Mr. Waxman’s assets to the trust and restraining his family members and their attorneys from interfering with her duties as trustee. Special Term granted the petition and denied the trustee’s motions. The basis for the decision was that clause 15 of the trust, the irrevocability clause, contained a waiver of the settlor’s statutory right to revoke, but such waiver violated public policy against restraints on alienation. We now reverse.
At the outset, we note that the issue of the validity of the inter vivos trust was not adjudicated upon the prior appeal in this case to this court. The court merely observed that the existence of the trust was one reason why there was no need for the appointment of a conservator over the property of Mr. Waxman. The validity of the trust was neither expressly nor impliedly upheld. Indeed, the main ground for the dismissal of the conservatorship proceeding was the insufficiency of the petition and its supporting papers. Thus, Special Term properly ruled that an adjudication of the trust’s validity was not barred by res judicata or any other doctrine of preclusion.