Dreisbach Estate

121 A.2d 74, 384 Pa. 535, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 582
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 1956
DocketAppeal, 61
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 121 A.2d 74 (Dreisbach 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
Dreisbach Estate, 121 A.2d 74, 384 Pa. 535, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 582 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion

Pee Cueiam,

The decree is affirmed on the following excerpts from the adjudication and opinion of President Judge Geaehaet:

“George Dreisbach, a widower, died testate October 20, 1952. TIis will, dated December 18, 1950, was duly probated. The executors and trustees, Harry F. Lester and The Allentown National Bank of Allentown, Pennsylvania (now ‘The First National Bank of Allentown’ under a bank merger), have filed their Second and final account. ...
“The testator devised his residuary estate to his trustees,'in trust, ‘however, to invest and reinvest the same and to pay the. net income therefrom in seini-annuál installments unto the Evergreen Cemetery Association, East.Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania. This Cemetery Association is directed and instructed to distrib *537 ute this semi-annual income among the three funds I have already established with this Cemetery Association, to-wit: The Dreisbach Maintenance Fund, the Dreisbach Flower Fund and The Dreisbach Monument Fund. The income thus received is to be used only on the plot deeded to George Dreisbach.
“Objections have been filed by E. Claire Valentine to the proposed Schedule of Distribution, wherein the Accountants propose to distribute to Harry F. Lester and The Allentown National Bank, trustees, for the perpetual care and maintenance of the family cemetery plot of the decedent the balance of principal in the amount of $163,765.64, and the balance of income of $5,311.02, or a total of $169,076.66; the income of the fund to be used for the perpetual care and the maintenance of the family burial plot of the decedent.
“The substance of the objections of E. Claire Valentine is that she objects to the distribution of any funds to the trustees in excess of what the Court finds to be reasonable for the purpose of carrying out the testator’s intention with respect to the family plot in the Evergreen Cemetery, Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania, formerly Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania. She claims that such excess should be distributed to her as the only heir and next of kin of the testator. . . .
“A trust for the perpetual care and maintenance of a family plot and for the placing of flowers thereon, has been recognized as a valid trust and not void against perpetuities. This early recognition was made by the Act of 1891, P. L. 119, 9 P.S. 4, now superseded by the Estates Act of 1947, P. L. 100, Sec. 4, 20 P.S. 301.4. The Act of 1891 provided: No disposition of property hereafter made for the maintenance or care of any cemetery, churchyard or other place for the burial of the dead, or of any portion thereof, or grave therein', or monuments or other erections on or about the same, *538 shall fail by reason of such disposition haying been made in perpetuity, but said disposition shall be held to be made for a charitable use.’
“The Estates Act of 1947, 20 P.S. Sec. 301.4, provides: ‘Rule Against Perpetuities. (B) (2) Cemetery Trusts. Interests which are directed to be used for the maintenance, care or adornment of any cemetery, churchyard or other place for the burial of the dead, or any portion thereof, or any grave therein or any improvement on or about the same, and which are subject to no condition precedent at the end of the period described in subsection (B)’.
“In the Commission’s Comment to the Estates Act, as applied to ‘Cemtery Trusts’ with respect to a change in the Act of 1891, it was stated: ‘The only substantial change in wording is that the words “said disposition shall be held to be made for a charitable use” have been omitted as unnecessary and as tending toward confusion.’
“It is now well established that trusts for the maintenance and care of testators’ burial lots and the maintenance of family burial lots are a matter of private personal concern and not of charity. (Estate of Anna M. Deaner, Deceased, 98 Pa. Superior Court 360, 364; 2 Bogart on Trusts, 377; 2 A.L.I. Restatement, Trusts, §374, comment h.)
“In the case before us, both sides admit that this is not a charitable trust and that there is no room for operation of the cy-pres doctrine. (Restatement, Trusts, §399; Essig’s Estate, 167 Pa. Superior Ct. 66, and cases cited; Stephan’s Estate, 129 Pa. Superior Ct. 396). The testator has made it abundantly clear in the language of his will and in letters forwarded to -the Evergreen Cemetéry officials that: the income of - the trust fund is to be used, exclusively for. the maintenance of his own cemetery-plot.. He apparently was not in *539 terested in the approaches to tiie cemetery plot nor in any other part of the cemetery. On this, all parties are agreed. . . .
“The Accountants recognize that in Palethorp’s Estate, 249 Pa. 389, the Supreme Court did actually reduce the principal of a cemetery trust from $150,000 to $10,000. But they insist that the decision reached in that case is not apposite here. In the Palethorp case the testator devised $150,000. in trust, to maintain a family burial lot and to support a ‘proper person to attend to the care of the lot and show people where it is’. Judge Dallett, the auditing judge, struck down the provision for the employment of the caretaker-guide, but upheld the validity of the other provisions. He also held that the sum which the testator set aside for this fund was excessive. In reducing this amount, Judge Dallett in his adjudication in 24 District Reports 215, stated at page 221: ‘As was represented at the audit, the cemetery now holds a fund of $1000 for the care of this lot. Such reasonable amount as should be added for the purpose will be added, and the auditing judge, in the absence of an agreement of the parties, will determine what that amount should be at a subsequent audit. Perhaps so much as $10,000 would be reasonable. Any excess, in his opinion, must fall into residue and be distributed among the testator’s next of kin, and he will, therefore, so award’. . . .
“. . . Likewise, the Supreme Court in Palethorp’s Estate, supra, 411, in dealing with the bequest of $150,-000. for the care of the cemetery lot, stated: ‘The reasoning of the learned auditing judge as to this item is convincing and the equitable disposition made for setting aside a proper sum for this purpose should meet with the commendation of all concerned’....
*540 “In this case the testator has dedicated the income of his entire residuary estate, which residuary amounts to $163,765.64 and will later be augmented by about $50,000 upon the death of Ruth J. Lester, to the perpetual maintenance of his cemetery lot containing approximately 650 to 750 square feet. The annual income derived from the residuary estate amounts to many times the sum necessary to maintain the cemetery plot in the condition desired by the testator. This we regard offends public policy, for reasons which will be hereinafter stated. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
121 A.2d 74, 384 Pa. 535, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreisbach-estate-pa-1956.