Brock Estate

41 A.2d 347, 156 Pa. Super. 616, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1944
DocketAppeal, 197
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 347 (Brock Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock Estate, 41 A.2d 347, 156 Pa. Super. 616, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Reno, J.,

This is an appeal from the decree dismissing exceptions to the adjudication of the account of the trustees *618 under the will of Alice Gibson Brock. The question to be decided is whether a proper construction of the will permits payment to the estate of a deceased annuitant of arrearages accumulating in his lifetime, which remained unpaid because the income during those years was insufficient to pay the annuity in full, out of income accruing to the trust estate after the death of the annuitant.

Testatrix died September 14, 1939, leaving a will which, so far as now material, provided in the sixth paragraph that the residue of her estate should be held in trust “to pay out of the net income from said trust estate, the following annuities for the life or lives of the respective annuitants”. Seven beneficiaries were then enumerated; among them, Arthur Brock, Jr., whose annuity was fixed at $2,400; and the total annual gifts to all annuitants aggregated $18,700. The will continued: “It is my desire that the said annuities be paid in quarterly instalments, if possible, on the first days of January, April, July and October in each year, ......I direct my said trustees to pay such part of the said net income as shall be in excess of $18,700 (the aggregate maximum amount of the annuities above provided for) to my friends, Augustine Haughton and Margretta Stewart Dietrich, in equal shares for their respective lives, and from and after the death of the one of them who shall first die, to pay such excess to the survivor of them for life; and from and after the death of each annuitant above named, but subject to the prior payment in full of all the other annuities herein provided for, to pay over and divide in equal shares in perpetuity to and between Bryn Mawr College and The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, all of the net income from said trust estate which shall not be payable to one or more living annuitants hereunder; ..... Testatrix was survived by six of the seven annuitants, but one of the survivors, Arthur Brock, Jr., whose executor is the appellee here, died on February 10,1943. *619 If the income from the trust estate during his lifetime had been sufficient to pay all annuities in full he would have been entitled to have received $8,173.33, but his pro rata share of the actual income accrued to the date of his death was only $1,788.05, which sum was paid by the trustees either to him or to his executor after his decease. At the audit of the account of Alice Gibson Brock’s trustees there was awarded to the executor of Arthur Brock, Jr.’s, estate the deficiencies which had accumulated in Arthur’s lifetime, and it was ordered that the arrearages be paid ratably with the payments to the remaining living annuitants out of subsequently accruing income. Appellants, the trustees of Bryn Mawr College, one of the remaindermen, insist that the order of the court below is based upon, an erroneous interpretation of the sixth paragraph of the will of Alice Gibson Brock. •

The guiding principle to be kept in mind’in the construction of a will, where its meaning is not free from doubt, is that the law seeks to discern the true intention of the testatrix as it may be gathered from the four corners of the document. Brennan’s Estate, 324 Pa. 410, 188 A. 160; Calder's Estate, 343 Pa. 30, 21 A. 2d 907. The pursuit is of the intended meaning of the language used, not what might have been intended but was left unsaid, ánd when ascertained effect will be given to testatrix’ purposes unless they are in contravention to positive rules of law. Primers Petition, 335 Pa. 218, 6 A. 2d 530; Conner’s Estate, 346 Pa. 271, 29 A. 2d 514. It is laid down as a general rule “that where the income out of which an annuity is to be paid fails in any year of years the arrearages on the annuity are to be paid out of subsequent accumulations, unless there is a plain intent expressed in the will to the contrary”: Reed’s Estate (No. 1), 236 Pa. 572, 577, 85 A. 15. This general rule, however, enjoins rather than precludes a careful study of the instrument in search of the real intentions of the decedent.

*620 Were the annual gifts of income to the several beneficiaries intended to be charged against the net income of the trust estate generally, so that deficiencies in earlier years are to be applied against subsequent excesses, or was it testatrix’ purpose to have an annual casting up of accounts so that each year is to be made a separate financial pei'iod? Her intention in the latter direction is manifest from a consideration of the entire dispository scheme which she created.

The direction in the will that beneficiaries be paid in quarterly instalments “if possible”, while it might be taken primarily as an indication of the time at which payments are to be made, reflects in addition a recognition by testatrix of the contingency that the income from the fund might not be sufficient at all times to render it possible for regular distributions to be made. The sum of $18,700 is described as the “aggregate maximum amount” of the annuities provided for. (Italics supplied). This clearly points to a realization by testatrix that the specific annual gifts of income, while they could not be more than that amount, might in some years be less than the maximum allocated as an annuity or yearly payment to each of the life beneficiaries. Testatrix’ disposition of all the net income in excess of $18,700 makes it impossible to pay arrearages out of surplus net income arising in subsequent years, for there can be no surplus income undisposed of without doing violence to the express language of the will. The will plainly directs that all net income above $18,700 shall be divided in equal shares between Augustine Haughton and Margretta Stewart Dietrich during their joint lives and that it shall all be paid to the survivor for life after the death of the one first to die. The payment of past deficiencies to other annuitants would be in direct contradiction to what is unmistakably otherwise ordered to be done with the income exceeding the named figure. The excess above $18,700 is obviously intended to be calculated on g yearly bgsis, for *621 the will declares that all sums above that amount are to be distributed to Augustine Haughton and Margretta Stewart Dietrich. It would be anomalous to say that the individual life beneficiaries were to receive annual gifts totalling $18,700 but only until the cumulative net income from the fund was sufficient to provide each of them with a single yearly payment and that the entire net income thereafter accruing was to be divided between the two more favored beneficiaries to the exclusion of all the others. Appellee’s argument that any distribution to remaindermen is “subject to the prior payment in full of all the other annuities,” and that therefore the arrearages should be made up before remaindermen are entitled to take, is not helpful because it assumes the very point in issue.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 347, 156 Pa. Super. 616, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-estate-pasuperct-1944.