Blish Trust

38 A.2d 9, 350 Pa. 311, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1944
DocketAppeals 118 and 123
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 9 (Blish Trust) 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
Blish Trust, 38 A.2d 9, 350 Pa. 311, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 560 (Pa. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

Delaware County Trust Company, a substituted trustee under a deed of trust of Samuel A. Blish, upon the death of his widow, one of the remaindermen, filed its first and final account, to which Adell Blish, the mother of settlor and a life beneficiary filed exceptions. After hearing and argument, the learned court of common pleas entered its decree sustaining some of the exceptions filed and dismissing the others. These cross appeals by the substituted trustee and the except-ant followed.

Mr. Blish executed his will on January 30, 1928, naming his wife and Franklin Trust Company of Philadelphia executors and trustees; and at the same time executed a deed of trust in which he assigned certain policies of insurance on his life to the company as trustee. He died on October 5, 1929, leaving surviving his *313 widow, Nora S. Blish, and a then minor daughter, Elizabeth Ann, as well as his aged mother Adell Blish, the exceptant. Following his death, letters testamentary on his estate were granted to the named executors; and Franklin Trust Company qualified as trustee under the deed and received payment of the proceeds of the insurance policies.

Item 1 of the deed of trust provides, among other things, that the trustee shall collect all moneys due and payable under the policies, hold and manage the proceeds thereof, invest and reinvest the same, and pay three-fourths of the net income to settlor’s wife for life, and the other one-fourth to his daughter until she attains the age of thirty-one. It also is provided that distribution of the entire principal shall be made to the daughter in ten annual installments to begin when she reaches thirty-one years of age, providing the wife then be deceased; and if the wife be living at that time, distribution of the principal to the daughter is to commence on her next birthday following the death of the widow. The pertinent portion of Item 2, the construction of which gave rise to several of the exceptions filed, is as follows: “In the event that my estate shall be insufficient to take care of the provisions in Items No. . . . 8(a) ... of my Last Will and Testament dated the 30th day of January A. D. 1928, my Trustee shall set aside and apply out of the principal of the trust funds derived under this Deed of Trust a sum sufficient to carry out the provisions of the said items before any of the provisions made in this Deed of Trust shall become effective.” Item 8(a) of the will, to which settlor makes reference in Item 2 of the trust deed, provides as follows: “8. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate real, personal and mixed ... I give, devise and bequeath unto my Trustees hereinafter named in trust to collect and receive the rents, issues and profits, income, interest and dividends thereof, and after deducting all taxes and lawful charges incident to the admin *314 istration of the trust, to pay the net income as follows: (a) the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100) per month to my mother, Adell Blish, for and during the term of her natural life; and in addition thereto, I direct my Trustees to pay out of the principal the funeral expenses of my mother upon her death, said expenses, however, not to exceed the sum of Five Hundred Dollars ($500).”

Between October 15, 1929, and June 15, 1932, there were paid to the mother 27 monthly installments of $100 each and five monthly installments of $50 each, under the provisions of Item 8(a) of the will, but no payments have since been made to her either under the will or under the deed of trust. Franklin Trust Company failed in 1931, and the Secretary of Banking of the Commonwealth took possession of its business and property, and thereafter filed successive accounts. On November 16, 1934, pursuant to the petition of the widow, wherein she erroneously averred that the only persons having any interest in the trust were herself and her daughter, the court of common pleas entered a decree removing the trustee under the deed and substituting in its stead Delaware County Trust Company. On February 15, 1935, the bond of the latter company was approved and filed, and the Secretary of Banking then delivered to it all of the assets of this trust, including 2,469 shares of the common stock of Cities Service Company. From time to time, between January, 1936, and April, 1937, the substituted trustee sold 969 shares of this stock, and in July, 1939, it exchanged the remaining 1,500 shares for 150 shares of new common stock of the same corporation under a recapitalization plan, which stock it still retains. Also this trustee paid out of the principal of the trust the sum of $3,704 to the settlor’s widow for maintenance of the daughter; and out of income the sums of $939.31 to the widow and $416.93 to the daughter.

The mother had no knowledge of the deed of trust until June 6, 1941, when her attorney, in his investiga *315 tion to determine why the monthly payments to the mother had ceased, accidently learned of the existence of the trust. He immediately notified the substituted trustee that no payments had been received by the mother since June 15,1932. The widow died on January 26,1941, and the account to which these exceptions were made, was filed on September 3, 1941.

The exceptions were to the action of the substituted trustee in failing to pay exceptant $100 a month out of income and principal, as provided by Item 2 of the deed of trust; for its taking credit in the account for payments of principal and income made to the widow and daughter, and also for trustee’s commissions; and to the retention of the stock of Cities Service Company. The court below sustained the exceptions as to the payments of both income and principal to the widow and daughter and the failure to dispose of the stock within a reasonable time after its acquisition from the Department of Banking, and surcharged this trustee for the payments erroneously made, as well as for the value of the stock three months after it was thus obtained. The court, however, dismissed the exceptions as to commissions of the trustee, and as to its failure to pay except-ant out of the principal of this trust.

Both appellants contend that the court below erred in its interpretation of Item 2 of the deed of trust. The substituted trustee’s contention is that the insufficiency in the estate contemplated by the settlor referred only to an insufficiency at the time of his death in the income to pay the mother $100 a month, and not, as determined by the court, at the time of distribution of the estate. It further argues that since there was actually sufficient income from the estate at the time of settlor’s demise, as is evidenced by the monthly payments admittedly made to the mother up to June 15, 1932, it was error for the court to surcharge it in the amount of the payments of principal and income made by it to the widow and daughter. On the other hand, it is contended by *316

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 9, 350 Pa. 311, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blish-trust-pa-1944.