Card's Estate (No. 2)

9 A.2d 557, 337 Pa. 82, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 563
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1939
Docket2; Appeals, 247, 248 and 256
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 557 (Card's Estate (No. 2)) 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
Card's Estate (No. 2), 9 A.2d 557, 337 Pa. 82, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 563 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Baenes,

William W. Card died on April 14, 1903, leaving a will in which he named The Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Pittsburgh, now the Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Company, as sole executor and trustee. In Card’s Estate (No. 1), 337 Pa. 69, there is involved the construction of the dispositive provisions of the will. In these three appeals there is in controversy the amount of compensation claimed by the trustee, and awarded to it by the court below. Exceptions were filed by the appellants and other beneficiaries of the trust estate, to the adjudication of the auditing judge confirming the account of the trustee, and ordering that distribution be made. From the final decree dismissing exceptions the appeals to this Court have been taken.

The executor’s first and final account was filed in 1904, and thereafter by decree of distribution entered in May 1904 the residuary estate of the testator (having an appraised value of $1,163,487.68) was awarded to the trustee for the purposes set forth in the will. The present account of the trustee, filed December 2, 1938, is the first one rendered since the inception of the trust, — a period over thirty-four years. During the entire time, the trustee rendered quarterly statements of account to the income beneficiaries named in the will, retaining as compensation for its services, a commission of two per cent upon the income of the trust estate, *84 without any indication whatsoever that such compensation was a partial one, or that a claim for additional commission on income would be made.

Upon the audit of the present account the trustee claimed an added one per cent of all income which it had received and distributed since assuming the trust in 1904. Its vice-president and trust officer, Mr. Price, testified that there was no thought of charging more than the two per cent commission until the present account was in process of preparation, when it was determined that this compensation was inadequate for the duties performed, and the responsibility assumed under the trust. It was then decided to present a claim for the additional amount.

Moreover the trust officer stated that the present effort to obtain such additional compensation would not have been made, except for the fact that the trustee had withheld from income beneficiaries certain shares of the Westinghouse Air Brake Company, received as stock dividends, which are now on hand, and furnish an available fund for the extra remuneration claimed. He testified : “Q. Oh, well, now, if you did not have these stock dividends which you ask to distribute now, would you ask for one per cent and ask that these beneficiaries be surcharged? A. No, sir, we would not. . . . Q. Did you tell any of these beneficiaries any time prior to the time of filing this account that you were going to charge one per cent additional [on] income? A. No, sir.”

Notwithstanding that over the period of the trust five of the original income beneficiaries have died and others, according to the terms of the will, have been substituted in their places, the claim for the additional one per cent is upon the sum of $2,606,860.60, which represents the total income collected since 1904. Thus, the shares of income now distributable to the present beneficiaries are charged with an extra one per cent upon all payments made to deceased beneficiaries.

*85 . It is asserted, however, that the testator expressly agreed to the payment of the larger commission. To establish the alleged agreement the trustee placed in evidence a copy of a letter dated June 9, 1902, written by its secretary and treasurer to the testator, the material part of which reads as follows: “From the information you gave me this morning, I am of the opinion that 1% for services as Executor would be reasonable, and as to the Trustee, that so long as the securities were not changed a charge of 2% on the income of the Trusts would be reasonable. Should it become necessary to convert the securities, then I think the compensation of the Trustee should be increased to 3% of the income, under the conditions you have named.” There was also a notation upon the trustee’s books relative to the estate, which was likewise offered and received in evidence. It sets forth the substance of the letter in these words: “Agreement dated June 9, 1902, fixes the compensation of the Executor at 1% and of the Trustee at 2% on the income of the trust estate as long as the securities are not changed. If necessary to convert the securities then compensation to be 3%.”

It appears from the record that from time to time many of the original investments received from the testator have been sold and reinvestments made by the trustee. At the time of the filing of the account in 1938 only three securities, valued at $57,644.02, remained unconverted.

It seems to us that the evidence upon which the trustee relies fails to establish a contract. The provisions of the purported agreement are so indefinite as to render it void for uncertainty. See Purves's Estate, 196 Pa. 438; Edgcomb v. Clough, 275 Pa. 90, 102-104. The conditions named by the testator, to which the letter refers, have not been set forth, and they are essential to an understanding of the terms of the undertaking. Even if it could be said that an enforceable contract existed, the provision relating to the conversion of securities is *86 ambiguous. Was the commission to be increased to three per cent on the entire income of the trust if any conversion of securities was effected, or was the higher percentage to be paid solely upon the income from rein-vestments? Under the decision in Baker’s Trust Estate, 333 Pa. 273, we held that the interpretation of such ambiguities by the parties themselves, evidenced by their conduct over a long period of time, must be controlling. Here the construction placed upon the alleged agreement by the parties clearly shows that the trustee was not to receive the increased compensation upon the existing facts.

On behalf of the beneficiaries, who are here the appellants, it is asserted that, whatever right the trustee may have had to collect a three per cent commission, it has been effectively waived by its failure to claim the added one per cent over a period of thirty-four years, and that the quarterly statements specifically setting forth the amount of compensation constituted an agreement on the trustee’s part to claim that amount and no more.

We have concluded that the trustee surrendered the right, if any existed, to additional commissions on income already distributed. A fiduciary may expressly, or by implication, waive compensation in whole or in part: Mulligan’s Estate, 157 Pa. 98; Taylor’s Estate, 239 Pa. 153, 167; Scull’s Estate, 249 Pa. 57; Fitzgerald’s Estate (No. 2), 252 Pa. 575. The quarterly statements, by failing to indicate that the two per cent deductions Avere merely on account, evidenced the trustee’s intention to accept them in full payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 557, 337 Pa. 82, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cards-estate-no-2-pa-1939.