Many banks and financial services companies offer a variety of services related to creating and managing trusts. When large trusts are established for minor children, it is necessary to use a professional trustee, but there are no guarantees that the professional trustee will carry out their fiduciary duties appropriately.
In and of itself, this is not an unusual story. A beneficiary of a trust needs cash for a particular purpose and to obtain the cash trust assets need to be sold.
The unusual aspect here is that Militello later sued Wells Fargo for fraud. She claimed that the bank conspired with a third-party to sell the trust assets at below market value. After a trial a Texas judge agreed with Militello and ordered Wells Fargo to pay $8 million in damages. The Dallas Morning News reported this story in "Judge: Wells Fargo to pay $8M for fraud tied to trust set up when Dallas woman was orphan."
The lesson here is that even when using the services of a professional trustee, such as a bank, trust beneficiaries should always pay attention and make sure the trustee is not acting for its own benefit. Click here to contact one of our estate planning attorneys and to make sure your trust is done the way you wish it to be.
Reference: Dallas Morning News (July 10, 2015) "Judge: Wells Fargo to pay $8M for fraud tied to trust set up when Dallas woman was orphan."