Detre's Estate

117 A. 54, 273 Pa. 341, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 20, 1922
DocketAppeals, Nos. 137 and 231
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 117 A. 54 (Detre'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
Detre's Estate, 117 A. 54, 273 Pa. 341, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 575 (Pa. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Walling,

These cross appeals are from the same decree and will be considered together. Christian H. Detre, late of Philadelphia, died on January 6, 1895, leaving a widow, one son and two daughters, and a last will which pro[344]*344vides, inter alia, “I do hereby give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed whatsoever and wheresoever the same may be unto my executor hereinafter named, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns in trust nevertheless to lease and demise the real estate and to invest and keep invested the personal estate investing and reinvesting the same from time to time in such securities as to him may seem best without responsibility as to the exercise of his discretion in so doing, and to collect the rents, income, interests and dividends arising therefrom and during the lifetime of my wife Mary A. to pay,” etc. Frank K. Hippie was appointed executor and trustee and acted as such until his death in 1906, when the orphans’ court appointed the Philadelphia Trust Co. as substituted trustee. The son, Cyrus S. Detre, died without issue in 1908, but the daughters, Mrs. Celena E. Booz and Mrs. Annabella L. Headly are. still living, while the widow, Mary A. Detre, died in 1920. Thereafter the trustee filed an account wherein it claimed credit, inter alia, for the amounts invested in certain bonds for the estate as follows, viz:

No. 1. “$5,000 Aurora, Elgin and Chicago R. R. Co. 1st and refunding gold coupon 5’s, due 7-1-1946, purchased in July and August, 1912, at $94%, and now worth about $12.”
No. 2. “$3,000 Jacksonville Gas Company 1st Mortgage S. F. Gold Coupon 5’s, due 6-1-1912 to 1942, purchased Aug. 12,1919, at $94.50, and now worth $65.50.”
No. 3. “$5,000 Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company 50 yrs. S. F. Gold Coupon 5’s, due 3-1-1917 to 1962, purchased September 17,1912, at $99, and now worth $65.”
No. 4. “$5,000 Georgia Railway & Electric Co. Ref. & Imp. Mtg. S. F. Gold Coupon 5’is, due 7-1-09 to 1-1-1945, purchased on Dec. 3,1915, at $98.12, and now worth $70 to $72.”
No. 5. “$5,000 Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Transportation Company 1st & Refunding Mortgage S. [345]*345F. Gold Coupon 5’s, due 4-1-1910 to 1945, purchased Nov. 12,1912, at $98.25, and now worth $42 to $45.”

The beneficiaries excepted to the credit claimed for those five investments and the auditing judge, after a full hearing, dismissed the exceptions as to all the bonds except No. 5, which we will call the Terre Haute bonds; with the cost of which he surcharged accountant. From a decree of the orphans’ court dismissing all exceptions and confirming the adjudication the accountant brought an appeal, as did Annabella L. Headly, a beneficiary.

The trust, as stated in the will, was created to carry out an antenuptial agreement between testator and his wife, which necessitated its continuance until her death, and as to the son’s share of the estate the will provides for a continuance of the trust until his death, which naturally might not have been expected until long after that of the widow; so the testator doubtless had in mind the probability that some day another trustee would be necessary, which may account for the language, “his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns,” when referring to the trustee. Moreover, the individual testator appointed executor is not referred to by name in the paragraph creating the trust, nor is there anything to show an intent to deprive a succeeding trustee of the broad discretionary powers necessary to such management of the estate as the will directs. We conclude, therefore, that the lower court was right in holding the discretionary powers belonged to the office and not to the individual, and that accountant when appointed, under the Act of April 22, 1846, P. L. 483, succeeded to the discretionary powers of the former trustee: see Cresson et al. v. Ferree, 70 Pa. 446; also Wilson v. Pennock, 27 Pa. 238; De Silver’s Est., 211 Pa. 459.

Where, as here, a trustee is clothed with discretionary powers as to investments and reinvestments, neither the state constitutional provision as to trust funds, nor the rule as to legal investments, applies: Barker’s Est., 159 Pa. 518; Cridland’s Est., 132 Pa. 479, 484. In fact, the [346]*346beneficiaries, anxious for a good rate of interest, did not urge such securities.

When the investments in question were made, the beneficiaries were sui juris and consulted with reference thereto and in advance approved of purchases Nos. 1, 2 and 3, except as to the Aurora bonds (No. 1), which were bought $2,000 in July and $3,000 in August, 1912; it is. not clear that appellant, Mrs. Headly, approved of the former purchase in advance, while she did of the latter, which would indicate a tacit approval of the earlier purchase of the same issue. Moreover, much hereinafter said as to the Terre Haute bonds (No. 5) applies to the Aurora bonds, with the added fact that as to the latter the trustee had its agent make an advance investigation ¡upon the ground. As to the effect of the prior approval the court below aptly says: “Where all parties, of full age, with a vested interest, possession only being postponed to a future time, request the investment of that fund in certain securities, they cannot be heard nearly eight years thereafter, during all of which time they received the income from said securities, to question the propriety of making such investments, and charge responsibility upon the trustee for any shrinkage in value thereof.” And see Armitage’s Est., 195 Pa. 582.

Furthermore, the beneficiaries ratified these purchases (Nos. 1, 2 and 3) promptly after they were made and accepted the interest thereon for many years. The bonds were bought at current rates and, had they proved unsatisfactory to the beneficiaries, doubtless could have been resold without loss; so, such ratification, even if not conclusive, is a circumstance favorable to the trustee.

The exception to the Georgia Railway & Electric Company bonds (No. 4) was properly dismissed. They were, when bought in 1915, and yet are, good bonds. Referring thereto, the auditing judge says, inter alia: “In Moody’s Manual for 1914 these Georgia railway bonds are rated: ‘Security, very high; Salability, good; net rating, “A.’ ” His manual gives the facts from which this conclusion is [347]*347drawn. It appears from the testimony that bonds of this issue were brought out by Drexel & Company and Harrison & Company, both banking houses of this city of the highest reputation. This trust estate purchased them from Harrison & Company. It furthermore appears that they were bought by trust estates, trust companies and insurance companies. The net earnings of the company for 1912 were about three and one-half times the interest charges, and while this was not a first mortgage, bonds of this issue were reserved to retire all prior liens. From 1902 until 1912 the net earnings of the company steadily increased from something under $800,000 to more than two and one-half millions......I find that these bonds, while not of the highest grade, were such as wei'e purchased by conservative investors, and, considering that this trust was not limited to legal investments, and the beneficiaries were anxious to get a return of five per cent, were a proper investment for this estate.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 54, 273 Pa. 341, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detres-estate-pa-1922.