Berks County Tuberculosis Society Appeal

208 A.2d 857, 418 Pa. 112, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1965
DocketAppeal, 47
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 208 A.2d 857 (Berks County Tuberculosis Society Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berks County Tuberculosis Society Appeal, 208 A.2d 857, 418 Pa. 112, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 565 (Pa. 1965).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Roberts,

This case arises out of a dispute between Berks County Tuberculosis Society, appellant, and Reading-Berks Tuberculosis and Health Association,1 appellee, each of which claims that it is the income beneficiary under a provision of an inter vivos trust known as “The Musser-Custer Memorial Fund.”2 The trust instru[114]*114ment, dated April 29, 1943,3 contained provisions for the distribution of certain income from the corpus of the trust in designated percentages to fifteen charitable organizations. Each party here claims that it is the beneficiary under the paragraph which gives “Six per cent (6%) thereof to The Tuberculosis Society of Berks County, of Reading, Pennsylvania.”

The court below concluded: “There is no organization in existence which meets the exact measure or name as used by the Settlors of the trust. There is a latent ambiguity in the instrument as to whom the Settlors intended to receive 6 per cent of the income from the trust.” Finding that there was a latent ambiguity, the court received evidence of settlors’ intent to assist it in determining the identity of the beneficiary. After making findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court held that the intended beneficiary was Reading-Berks Tuberculosis and Health Association. Following the filing of exceptions and absolute confirmation of the decree nisi, Berks County Tuberculosis Society filed this appeal.

The decree of the court below must be reversed. Although appellant’s correct name is “Berks County Tuberculosis Society” and not “Tuberculosis Society of Berks County”, it is possible to determine the identity of the beneficiary with certainty from the language of the trust instrument without resort to extrinsic evidence of the settlors’ intent. We have stated repeatedly that extrinsic evidence is not admissible to prove in[115]*115tent when the beneficiary designation in the instrument specifies a recipient with sufficient exactitude to clearly indicate a person or organization legally qualified to take. E.g., Houston Estate, 414 Pa. 579, 201 A. 2d 592 (1964); Beisgen Estate, 387 Pa. 425, 128 A. 2d 52 (1956); Logan v. Wiley, 357 Pa. 547, 55 A. 2d 366 (1947); Wusthoff v. Dracourt, 3 Watts 240 (Pa. 1834) .4 Although the settlor may actually have intended to benefit some other recipient, evidence of that fact is inadmissible if the designation in the trust instrument identifies with clarity another recipient.5 It is not required that the designation conform in every minute detail to the name of a person or organization. This is particularly so when a corporate or organizational name is involved. Lockwood’s Estate, 344 Pa. 293, 25 A. 2d 168 (1942). It is only necessary that the designation unambiguously identify a subject to which the terms of the trust are obviously applicable.

Admission of evidence to show the intent of the settlor is the exception and not the rule for the sound reason that the writing itself must be considered to be the best and controlling evidence of the settlor’s intent. See Sowers Estate, 383 Pa. 566, 119 A. 2d 60 (1956).

The trust instrument here specifies the beneficiary as “The Tuberculosis Society of Berks County, of Reading, Pennsylvania.” At the time the trust was created both appellant and appellee were functioning organiza[116]*116tions. As we have already noted, appellee’s name was Reading Tuberculosis Association at all times relevant-to the execution of the instruments in litigation.' Appellant’s name was, and still is, Berks County Tuberculosis Society. .We conclude that the trust.instrument identifies appellant with clarity as the object of the settlors’ bounty.

Although appellee bases part of its argument for finding an ambiguity on the fact that appellant’s name,-. “Berks- County Tuberculosis Society”, does not precisely coincide with the full designation in the trust instrument of “The Tuberculosis Society of Berks County, of Reading, Pennsylvania,” much of the difference-between those two appellations is readily explained by an examination of the trust instrument, itself. In the section of the instrument in which settlors dispose of income from the trust corpus there are fifteen designated beneficiaries, all of whose names are preceded by “The”. It is obvious that this was a stylistic characteristic of the scrivener which assumes no importance in identifying the. beneficiary.'.

, A reading of the instrument also amply demonstrates that the phrase “of Reading, Pennsylvania’’following the beneficiary’s name was not intended to be part of the name but was added merely to provide geographical identification. This conclusion is compelled by the fact that, of the fifteen beneficiaries indicated' in the pertinent section, a geographical identification is annexed to thirteen of the named beneficiaries and the phrase “of Reading, Pennsylvania” is annexed to twelve of those.6

The question narrows, therefore, to whether “Tuberculosis Society of Berks County” identifies with suf[117]*117ficient certainty “Berks County Tuberculosis Society”. In our view, neither the inversion of “Berks County” and “Tuberculosis Society” nor the facts and circumstances relied upon by appellee are sufficient to create an ambiguity in the beneficiary designation which would warrant the introduction of parol evidence to show the settlors’ intent.

Decree reversed; distribution to be made in accordance with this opinion. Each party to pay own costs.

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Berks County Tuberculosis Society Appeal
208 A.2d 857 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1965)

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208 A.2d 857, 418 Pa. 112, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berks-county-tuberculosis-society-appeal-pa-1965.