Cogan Estate

71 Pa. D. & C.2d 13, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 395
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedOctober 29, 1975
Docketno. 45505-B
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Pa. D. & C.2d 13 (Cogan Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cogan Estate, 71 Pa. D. & C.2d 13, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 395 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

SATTERTHWAITE, P.J.,

The first and final account of Industrial Valley Bank and Trust Company, executor of the estate of said decedent, was presented to the court for audit, confirmation and distribution of ascertained balances on February 3,1975, as advertised according to law. Due proof of appropriate notice thereof to all parties legally interested in said estate appears in the record.

Said account has been examined and audited by the court. Balances for distribution shown thereby include principal in the amount of $82,018.37, composed of invested securities at $85,570.07, plus jewelry at $250, plus a commercial variable note at $12,000, all subject to cash due accountant of $15,-801.70; and income in the amount of $4,936.44 in cash. Said respective balances for distribution appear to have been correctly computed and stated on the accounting filed.

No additional receipts or disbursements since the accounting were suggested.

Pennsylvania transfer inheritance tax has been paid in full, and liability therefor on the appraisement filed on October 10, 1974, has been discharged, as per certificate of the register attached to the petition for adjudication.

The instant executor’s account was called for audit contemporaneously with audit of the account of the within accountant as trustee under an inter [15]*15vivos deed of this decedent dated April 25, 1969. See No. 45,505-A. That account showed balances of $107,433.51 principal (in stocks, bonds and cash) and $2,828.88 income, all of which, upon decedent’s death, had been distributed pursuant to the deed of trust to accountant itself as the executor of the estate, which distributions, as inventoried by accountant in the within decedent’s estate, comprised substantially all of the assets herein accounted for. The trustee’s account took no credits either for accountant’s compensation as such or for terminal counsel fees. The within executor’s account, however, requested approval of such charges respecting both capacities:

Donald L. Toner, Esq., counsel fees for the trustee accounting $2,700

Lee B. Lansberry, Esq., counsel fees for the executor’s account $4,500

Industrial Valley Bank and Trust Co., compensation

—as trustee $5,400

—as executor $4,789

$17,389

The life beneficiary of the trust under decedent’s will and the guardian ad litem on behalf of the remaindermen filed objections to these claimed credits, and an audit hearing was duly held thereon.

The objections must be sustained, not because of any disagreement with these respective charges had they related to entirely separate and independent matters, but rather because of the patent duplication of such credits under the circumstances herein appearing. The auditing judge does not agree with objectors that $5,400 fiduciary’s commission, plus $5,400 counsel fee, [16]*16would have been excessive or improper on a $108,-000 gross estate, even though both were fixed on a percentage basis, a mode of computation now specifically recognized for personal representatives (section 3537 of the Decedents, Estates and Fiduciaries Code of June 30, 1972, P.L. 508 (No. 164), 20 Pa. C.S. section 3537 as well as for trustees: (Section 7185(a) of the code supra, 20 Pa. C.S. section 7185(a)).

However, in the instant case, accountant cannot, in good conscience, be permitted significantly more than these charges merely because it had occasion, solely by reason of the circumstance of this one decedent’s death, to handle and deal with practically the same assets in what legally were two different capacities but which actually involved only slightly more activity and responsibility than it would have had it been only one. As trustee, it had almost all of decedent’s property already in hand when it took on the additional legal responsibility of collecting such assets as executor. By the same token, its duty to distribute upon termination under the trust deed involved no problems of ascertaining and paying over the same to any person or entity other than itself with ultimate responsibility by reason thereof only for administration and distribution under decedent’s will in its capacity as executor.

Strangely, the auditing judge has neither found nor been referred to any precedent involving the exact situation herein presented. There are, however, decisions concerned with circumstances which were analagous. Thus, as a general rule, where co-executors of an estate were severally represented by independent counsel, the aggregate allowed out of the estate as fees to all should not [17]*17exceed the amount properly allowable if only one counsel had represented all co-fiduciaries: McCalla’s Estate, 33 D. & C. 643 (1938); Davis’ Estate, 54 D. & C. 216 (1945). The same principle was applied where multiple counsel were engaged even though only one fiduciary was involved, in the absence of extraordinary circumstances or unusual services: Fischer Estate, 1 Fiduc. Rep. 83 (1950); Williams Estate, 9 Fiduc. Rep. 681 (1959). So, too, where an executor discharged counsel upon the substantial completion of administration of the estate but before filing an account, and new counsel was retained solely for accounting and audit, only one fee was allowed for both counsel, the same to be allocated in proportion to the services performed: Erdman Estate, 96 Pitts. L. J. 345 (1947). Cf. Williamson Estate, 78 Montg. 85(1960). And where an administrator, after performing some services, was removed and an administrator d. b. n. completed the administration, each represented by different counsel, it was held that the combined charges of all should not exceed the commissions and fees properly payable to one administrator and his attorney as though they alone had completely administered the estate: Burns Estate, 22 D. & C. 2d 201 (1960), affirmed per curiam, 401 Pa. 556, 165 A.2d 379 (1960), and cited with approval and distinguished in Browarsky Estate, 437 Pa. 282 263 A.2d 365 (1970), which was concerned with fees for multiple counsel where the executors were involved in complicated matters of more than mere routine.

In the instant case, as trustee under the inter vivos trust, accountant had taken $1,313.06 in income commissions (at a five percent rate) over the four and a half years life of the trust, as to which no [18]*18objection has been made. Accountant had originally received assets from decedent in 1969 valued and carried at $89,471.36, comprised of United States bonds, nine issues of common stock (six of which were still on hand at decedent’s death), and certain checking and savings accounts. In 1973, decedent apparently sold her residence and added the net proceeds of $19,741.41 to the corpus of the trust. Over the life of the trust, accountant invested and reinvested, apparently routinely, principally in United States Treasury obligations with one purchase of a corporate bond and another of shares of stock. All of the securities and principal cash on hand at decedent’s death were turned over to the executor’s account without liquidation, as was the undistributed balance of income which had not been paid out to decedent or on her behalf in her lifetime. Neither the account nor the evidence at the hearing disclosed other than usual or routine demands upon accountant for its services as trustee.

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Related

Browarsky Estate
263 A.2d 365 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1970)
Burns Estate
165 A.2d 379 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
71 Pa. D. & C.2d 13, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogan-estate-pactcomplbucks-1975.