Baker's Estate

47 Pa. D. & C. 444, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 519
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Lancaster County
DecidedAugust 12, 1942
Docketno. 8
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Pa. D. & C. 444 (Baker's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker's Estate, 47 Pa. D. & C. 444, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 519 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Appel, P. J.,

Exceptions filed to the adjudication of this court, and which were not disposed of at argument court, will be discussed in six groups. Preliminarily, however, some general observations should be made as to the business operations of decedent which show how the various questions which are now before the court have arisen.

Decedent was a manufacturer of hosiery. He came from Philadelphia to Ephrata, this county, six or seven years ago, where he was affiliated with the Super Tex Hosiery Mills until that concern was taken over by another company in bankruptcy proceedings. He did not succeed to the business or acquire any of the machinery of the Super Tex company. Thereafter, decedent on his own account became a manufacturer of ladies’ full-fashioned hosiery at Ephrata. For this purpose he acquired machinery and equipment; employed laborers; bought materials and supplies; engaged other manufacturers, to whom he shipped or ordered to be shipped ^materials to be manufactured into articles for him; rented real estate from Ira E. Fasnacht; bought real estate upon which he erected a factory building, making the necessary and incidental contracts therefor, out of which arose two mechanics’ lien claims which are hereinafter discussed; and borrowed money, especially from The Farmers National Bank of Ephrata, the repayment of which was partially secured by assignment of life insurance policies, others by conditional sales agreements, and a large part of which was unsecured. He also became indebted to a large number of merchandise creditors, of whom Ewing-Thomas Corporation was the largest, Paul Clayton’s trustees the second largest, and Samuel Kasson Company the third largest. He died on December 21,1940, intestate and insolvent. Thereafter The Farmers National Bank of Ephrata, which was his largest secured and unsecured creditor, became the administrator of his estate, sold the factory real estate under an order of this court, liquidated the [446]*446personal estate, and filed its account, which, subject to exceptions, came before this court for audit. At this audit preferred and common claims were presented and allowed to an amount of $48,186.29, and the funds awarded by way of distribution in the adjudication were $14,228.71 — common claims being allowed a dividend at the rate of 20.5197 percent. Exceptions to this adjudication are now before the court for determination. ...

II. Accountant’s exception to the reduction of its compensation and accompanying surcharge in the sum of $120.13.

In the account filed the administrator took credit for the payment of accountant’s compensation for $923.94, to which exceptions were filed. The account was incorrectly stated in that the proceeds of the sale of real estate sold under the order of court, and the expenses in connection therewith, and items properly chargeable against the proceeds of said sale were mingled with the receipts from the liquidation of the personal estate and the payments therefrom. The real estate was sold, subject to the payment of a mortgage of $2,000, for the sum of $3,025, which appears to be ample to pay items which should have been properly charged against a real estate account, as well as two mechanics’ lien claims filed against said real estate. For this reason we have excused the irregular form of the account as filed. The total charges in the account amount to $18,478.77, of which $3,025 are the proceeds of the real estate and $15,453.77 are items of charge of the personal estate. The accountant took credit for commissions at the rate of five percent, amounting to $923.94, on the whole amount of charges in the account. For many years in this jurisdiction, in the absence of proof of extraordinary services rendered by a fiduciary in connection with a sale of real estate, commissions have been usually claimed and allowed at the rate of 2% percent on the proceeds of sale of such real estate. No [447]*447testimony has been offered or sufficient reason shown to this court why the usual local rate of such commissions on the proceeds of the sale of real estate should be exceeded in this estate. Such commissions, therefore, at the rate of 2% percent on the $3,025 should be claimed and allowed, amounting to the sum of $75.63. In the adjudication the accountant was erroneously surcharged in the amount of $120.13, to which the accountant has excepted. This exception to the surcharge of the $120.13 is sustained to the extent that the amount of the surcharge is reduced to the sum of $75.62, which the court finds the accountant overcharged by way of commissions on the proceeds of the sale of real estate sold.

III. Exception to award of $721.08 to A. H. De Long on mechanic’s lien claim.

This claim arose for money due from decedent to A. H. De Long for materials furnished and labor performed in doing the electrical work in the construction of the new factory building for decedent, who died on December 21, 1940. The mechanic’s lien claim was filed on December 23,1940, subsequent to the death of decedent, against certain real estate of which decedent died seized, and which later was sold under proceedings had in this court for the payment of decedent’s debts by reason of the insufficiency of the personal estate for such purposes. At the time of the administrator’s sale of this real estate said mechanic’s lien claim was a lien thereon and attached to the proceeds of said sale in the order of its priority. The proceeds of said sale were accounted for and were a part of the funds distributed by the court in its adjudication, whereby said claim was allowed as a preferred claim against said proceeds. No error as to the form of this lien or the validity of the lien and the proceedings thereunder has been shown to this court at the various hearings in the audit of this account. Under the Act of June 4,1901, P. L. 431, sec. 20, 49 PS §80, a mechanic’s lien may be filed against [448]*448real estate after the death of the owner: Wagner v. Manbeck, 18 Pa. C. C. 471. See 12 Standard Pennsylvania Practice, 51, sec. 70, and sec. 170, pp. 115, 116. Claimant at the audit was competent to prove his accounts, which the court finds sufficiently and adequately substantiated the correctness and validity of the claim. See opinion of Holland, P. J., in Barclay’s Estate, 50 Montg. 81, McCrory v. Safier, 1 Fayette 17, Whalen’s Estate, 17 Erie 51. Exceptions to the allowance of this claim must be dismissed.

IV. Exception to the disallowance of the mechanic’s lien claim of Irwin W. Groff for $1,099.57.

Irwin W. Groff filed his mechanic’s lien claim in the office of the prothonotary, Lancaster County, Pa., on January .21,1941, against the real estate of which Harold R. Baker died seized, and the proceeds of the sale of which were accounted for in the account which came before this court for audit. This claim was filed for labor and materials furnished in the installation of the plumbing and heating equipment in the erection of a new factory building for decedent, between December 22, 1939, and September 3,. 1940, on which date it was alleged that the last work was done and material furnished. The work was done and the materials furnished pursuant to a contract between claimant and decedent, who agreed to pay for the same at the fair and reasonable market value thereof, according to the averments in the claim as filed.

At the audit of the account in this estate claimant produced his accounts which appear sufficient in form to constitute his “book of original entry”, which substantiated his mechanic’s lien claim as filed.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Pa. D. & C. 444, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakers-estate-paorphctlancas-1942.