Cunningham's Estate

16 A.2d 712, 340 Pa. 265, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 31, 1940
DocketAppeals, 207 and 208
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 712 (Cunningham's Estate) 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
Cunningham's Estate, 16 A.2d 712, 340 Pa. 265, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 708 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

These two appeals, Numbers 207 and 208, from decrees of distribution were argued together. The appeal at No. 207 was by testator’s son, Crawford B. Cunningham. After making certain disposition of property, which it is unnecessary now to mention, testator reached the residue of his personalty; this he gave to his wife and a trust company in trust, directing that it be divided into two equal parts to be “designated respectively as the vested half and the unvested half of the residue”; he directed that, on the death or remarriage of his widow, the “unvested” half should be divided into sixths and that one-sixth should be held in trust for each of his four children. No question concerning either the vested half or the four-sixths of the unvested half is presented. The dispute between the parties arises out of the twelfth paragraph of the will relating to the other two-sixths.

*267 “Twelfth: The remainder of said unvested half of the residue shall, at the death or remarriage of my wife, pass per stirpes to my children or descendants living at the time of such death or remarriage, as under said law of intestacy, except that, so far as the law does not prevent, none of them shall be entitled to come into the actual enjoyment of any part of the corpus thereof, until he or she shall have attained the age of twenty-six (26) years,— the corpus remaining meantime in the hands of the trustees. As each child arrives at the age of twenty-one years, he or she shall be entitled to receive the proper share of the income, but shall not, before arriving at the age of twenty-six years, have power to anticipate, sell or assign either income or principal. When the first one of the participants arrives at the age of twenty-six years, the said trustees shall make a fair and equitable division in writing of the cash, securities or other property which shall constitute the remainder of said unvested half, into the proper number of parts. I prefer that this shall be done after conference with those of the parties interested who shall then be more than seventeen years of age, and that their consent to the method of division shall be secured if possible. In this as in other instances, at the right times the proper formal transfers of securities, etc., shall be made. In the matter of education and instruction I particularly direct that said trustee, and any guardians who may handle funds coming from my estate, shall comply with my wishes expressed in the 10th section 1 above; and I further authorize them to use, for the purpose of such education and instruction, principal where needed as well as income, both before and after the beneficiary shall arrive at the age of majority.”

The widow died November 24, 1939. During her lifetime, on October 29, 1935, the appellant, Crawford B. Cunningham, then more than 26 years of age, assigned *268 to Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Company all his right, title and interest in his father’s estate to the extent of $25,345.00. The consideration specified in the assignment was “as collateral security for my certain existing contingent indebtedness as endorser upon certain obligations to PEOPLES-PITTSBURGH TRUST COMPANY of Barnes Motor Company, a Pennsylvania Corporation, in the amount of Twenty-three Thousand Three Hundred Forty-Five Dollars ($23,345.00) as well as collateral security for a certain contemporaneous loan to Barnes Motor Company in the amount of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00), in connection with which I contemporaneously become contingently liable as endorser.”

The question is, Did appellant then have an assignable interest? The assignment was presented at the audit and distribution to the assignee was decreed. Another claim was presented by appellant’s trustee in bankruptcy. On March 17, 1939, having filed a petition in bankruptcy, appellant was adjudicated bankrupt and has since been discharged. His trustee claimed for the excess of his interest over the amount due on the assignment to the Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Company and distribution was decreed accordingly. The appellant now challenges the decrees on the ground that he had no assignable interest; that nothing could pass to the assignee or to the trustee.

On his behalf it is also contended, a contention which counsel for the assignee says is made for the first time in this Court, that the transaction culminating in the assignment was unconscionable and inequitable; this contention may at once be dismissed with the statement that a study of the record shows there is not the slightest evidence to support it.

It is of course necessary to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the testator as expressed in the whole will and codicil and we have no difficulty in understanding that testator meant that if appellant survived the *269 death or remarriage of his mother a share of “the remainder of said unvested half of the residue” would then “pass” to him. There is no doubt under our cases that the interest was assignable. The appellant refers to expressions in other parts of the will but nothing in them creates any doubt on his right to receive a share in the contingencies specified. The subject was adequately dealt with in the opinion filed by the learned court below ; we need not repeat it; reference to the supporting authorities is sufficient: Wickersham’s Appeal, 18 W. N. C. 36 (Pa. 1885); Whelen v. Phillips, 151 Pa. 312, 25 A. 44; Phillips’s Estate (No. 2), 205 Pa. 511, 55 A. 212; Richardson’s Estate, 236 Pa. 136, 84 A. 670; Carter v. Martin, 307 Pa. 515, 162 A. 220; see also Norris’s Estate, 329 Pa. 483, 492 et seq., 198 A. 142, and Hirsh’s Estate, 334 Pa. 172, 178, 5 A. 2d 160; Restatement, Property (1936), section 162; Restatement, Trusts (1935), section 162.

The Bankruptcy Act provides: “The trustee of the estate of a bankrupt . . . upon his or their appointment and qualification, shall in turn be vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt as of the date of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy . . . except in so far as it is to property which is held to be exempt, to all . . . (5) property, including rights of action, which prior to the filing of the petition he could by any means have transferred or which might have been levied upon and sold under judicial process against him, or otherwise seized, impounded, or sequestered. . . .” 2

The word “transfer” is defined as follows: “ ‘Transfer’ shall include the sale and every other and different mode, direct or indirect, of disposing of or of parting with property or with an interest therein or with the possession thereof or of fixing a lien upon property or upon an interest therein, absolutely or conditionally, voluntarily or involuntarily, by or without judicial pro *270 ceedings, as a conveyance, sale, assignment, payment, pledge, mortgage, lien, encumbrance, gift, security, or otherwise. . . .” 3

Having, as we have held, an assignable interest, it passed pursuant to the Act of Congress to the trustee: Robbins’s Estate, 199 Pa. 500, 49 A.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 712, 340 Pa. 265, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunninghams-estate-pa-1940.