Develon's Estate

26 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedJanuary 29, 1936
Docketno. 39922
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Pa. D. & C. 19 (Develon's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Develon's Estate, 26 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Holland, P. J.,

Thomas Develon,

Jr., died on February 12,1931, having made his last will and testament bearing date May 17,1930, duly probated February 18, 1931, on which the present letters were granted to accountants. . . .

The account shows a balance of principal of personal estate amounting to $703,396.83. From this has been subtracted a deficit of principal of real estate amounting to $186,755.08, leaving a net balance of principal for distribution amounting to $516,641.75, composed of the unconverted investment securities and other assets set forth in the account, carried at $514,252.20, and cash. The summary of the account does not contain a statement of the balance of income for distribution, if any. It shows a balance of income from personal estate amounting to $81,-631.60, out of which was taken a deficit of income from real estate amounting to $63,983.49. Thus the net balance of income from both personal and real estate is $17,-648.11. But the distribution account shows that Agnes R. Develon has received $13,510.47 and that Jane D. Ward has received $6,500, which we presume, although it is not indicated, to be on account of income payable to them as [20]*20beneficiaries of the residuary trust. Since this is being treated as a hybrid executors’-trustees’ account, the total of $20,010.47 so distributed must be deducted from the balance of income, thus leaving an overdraft of income in the amount of $2,362.36, which is due accountants.

Exceptions to the account were filed at the audit nunc pro tunc by consent of all parties concerned. Exceptants are the two individual coexecutors in their capacities as life beneficiaries under the terms of the trust, and Thomas Roden Bromley and Gladys Rebecca Bromley, who are entitled since the death of testator’s sister to the income from the one third of the residuary estate originally held in trust for her.

The exceptions are to credits claimed for disbursements from income to pay the carrying charges on two tracts of unproductive real estate owned by testator at the time of his death:

1. The so-called Whittaker tract, on which accountants paid a total of $21,657.50 in carrying charges. Ex-ceptants deduct therefrom the sum of $4,229.42, being interest on'a mortgage on that tract which exceptants admit to be a proper charge against income, thus leaving a balance of $17,428.08 objected to.

2. The so-called Stenton tract, on which accountants paid a total of $31,023.74 in carrying charges. Exceptants deduct therefrom the sum of $1,363.72, being income produced by said property, thus leaving a balance of $29,660.02 objected to. The third exception is to the failure of accountants to charge both these sums to principal.

The admitted facts concerning these two tracts are that both are totally unimproved and in fact undeveloped, being held for the ultimate purpose of subdivision into building lots. The Whittaker tract has produced no income of any kind; the Stenton tract has produced a slight amount of income resulting from renting part thereof for a billboard and another part thereof for an outdoor golf driving range.

[21]*21The question raised by these exceptions is whether the carrying charges of unproductive real estate forming part of the corpus of a trust should be borne by income or by principal. Again we are met with the confusion resulting from this account being partially an executors’ account and partially a trustees’ account. Were it restricted, as it should be, to items properly accounted for in an executors’ account, no such question could, of course, be presented at this time, and could only be properly raised upon a trustees’ account. However, in accordance with our intention already expressed to overlook the technical defects, we will go into the merits of the question now.

It may be noted at this time that the two tracts of land in question are but a small part of the total real estate owned by testator at his death, which is all a part of the residuary trust. Only two properties among the entire real estate yield an income in excess of their carrying charges, the others all show deficits. Nevertheless the two tracts involved in the exceptions are the only ones which are unimproved and unproductive, and although most of the improved properties also show a deficit, exceptants are confining their objections to the unimproved and unproductive properties and are not objecting to the allocation of the deficits of the other properties to income, for the reason that these properties are improved and producing something.

Of course the first inquiry should be directed to testator’s will. The devise of his residence to his trustees in trust for the widow’s use and occupancy, with the provision that all carrying charges shall be paid by the trustees out of income from the residuary trust, has already been noted. In clause tenth, the residuary trust is set up, the residuary estate being given to the trustees “to hold, invest, reinvest and pay over the same”. Both with respect to the two thirds thereof held for the widow and the one third held for the sister, the directions are to “pay the net income therefrom” to these beneficiaries. [22]*22Likewise, in setting up the further trusts after the deaths of the widow and sister, the directions are to pay the “net income” to the beneficiaries.

The powers given to the executors and trustees in clause thirteenth include the “absolute discretion to hold unconverted ... as part of the corpus of the trusts . . . any and all securities that I may possess at the time of my decease” and the authorization “to sell the whole or any part of any real estate which I may own at the time of my death”. There is also authority given the trustees, “in the exercise of their sole judgment”, to expend such sums out of principal “as in the opinion of my trustees may be proper for the comfort, maintenance and support of any such beneficiary or the members of his or her immediate family, in case of illness, accident, loss by fire or other emergency”.

Thus there are no express provisions in the will covering the carrying charges of real estate in the residuary trust as there are in the trust of the residence.

It is a well-settled general proposition that carrying charges of real estate must be paid by the life tenants, or out of income where it is held in trust. Exceptants freely admit this and they do not quarrel with the accounting insofar as the carrying charges of all real estate other than these two tracts have been charged against the income produced. Yet Jdiey urge that because these two tracts are almost wholly unproductive the expenses of maintaining them should not be charged according to the general rule.

The question seems important, yet there is a surprising want of precedent in Pennsylvania. The only Supreme Court case to be found having any bearing on the problem is Neel’s Estate (No. 2), 207 Pa. 446 (1904). There trustees bought in land, owned by a partnership of which the decedent apparently had been a member, at a receiver’s sale in order to protect the interest of the estate therein. Subsequently the land was sold at a profit which was considered as corpus of the trust. In [23]*23a very brief opinion by Potter, J., it was held that the net gain of the transaction should be treated as corpus, but that interest on money borrowed to make the purchase, and which had been charged to income, should be regarded as part of the expenses and deducted in arriving at the net profit. There is no discussion in the opinion at all.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/develons-estate-paorphctmontgo-1936.