Estate of Bartol

38 A. 527, 182 Pa. 407, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 825
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 421
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 38 A. 527 (Estate of Bartol) 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
Estate of Bartol, 38 A. 527, 182 Pa. 407, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 825 (Pa. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Green,

In the case of Webb’s Appeal, 165 Pa. 330, we reviewed at some length the law as to the liability of trustees to be surcharged for loss arising from alleged negligence or fault in the administration of their trust estates. It ought not to be necessary to restate the law on this subject, as it prevails in Pennsylvania, because it is so perfectly well settled and so entirely free from doubt. But as we are not able to reconcile the decision of the present contention with the law as we understand it, we will be obliged to make reference to some at least of the principal cases. In one of the earliest of these, Calhoun’s Estate, 6 W. 185, the general doctrine was stated in reference to all classes of trustees, in these words, “ Executors and administrators or trustees, acting with good faith and without any wilful default or fraud, will not be responsible for any loss that may arise. All that a court of equity requires is common skill, common prudence and common caution. Executors, administrators or guardians are not liable beyond what they actually receive, unless in case of gross negligence; for when they act as others do with their own goods, and with good faith, and are not guilty of gross negligence, they are not liable. ... A court of equity, as is said in Thompson v. Brown, always treated trustees acting in good faith with great tenderness. In Knight v. The Earl of Plimouth, 3 Atk. 480 ; Dickens 120, Lord Hard-wick observes if there was no mala ñdes, nothing wilful in the conduct of the trustee, the court will always favor him. For as a trust is an affair necessary in the concerns between man and man, and which if faithfully discharged is attended with no small degree of trouble and anxiety, it is an act of great kindness in any one to accept it. To add hazard or risk to that trouble, and to subject a trustee to losses which he could not foresee, would be a manifest hardship, and would be deterring every one from accepting so necessary an office.”

[411]*411These principles have been constantly repeated and applied in very numerous cases from that time to the present. In the following cases it was held that the measure of diligence and care required of a trustee is that which a man of ordinary prudence would practice in the case of his own estate: Witmer’s Appeal, 87 Pa. 120; Eyster’s Appeal, 16 Pa. 372; Fahnestock’s Appeal, 104 Pa. 46. In Chambersburg Saving Fund’s Appeal, 76 Pa. 203, we said: “It is well settled that a trustee shall not be surcharged for a loss which has occurred, in case he has exercised common skill, common prudence and common caution ; but for supine negligence or for wilful default he shall be held responsible.”

In Pleasants’ Appeal, 77 Pa. 356, the executors were authorized to invest “ in some safe and productive stock.” They invested in the stock of the bank of the United States. We said: “ Under the powers given to the executors to invest, and an honest exercise of that power, we think it would be a very harsh application of law to their sound discretion, after this lapse of time, to hold the executors personally liable for the loss of the bank stock. They should nót be held responsible for not possessing a knowledge, and not exercising a forethought, superior to the great body of intelligent and prudent business men.” In that case the bank failed about a year after the investment, but we held that there was no liability for the loss, because the investment was apparently good when it was made. In Cridland’s Estate, 132 Pa. 479, we sustained the adjudication of the orphans’ court for the reasons stated in the opinion, among which was the following: “A trustee is not required to be infallible in his judgment nor to possess the power of anticipating events not generally looked for. Common prudence and common skill are all that is demanded, and if these are exercised, a loss arising must be borne by the estate which the testator, who is supposed to have contemplated such risks, has thought proper to confide to his care.” We have held in a number of cases that an administrator is not chargeable with the consequences of a disastrous exercise of discretion, unless accompanied with such negligence as raises a presumption of wilful default: Dillebaugh’s Est., 4 W. 177; Hughes’ Appeal, 53 Pa. 500; Neff’s Appeal, 57 Pa. 91; Derbyshire’s Est., 81 Pa. 18.

[412]*412Ifc is scarcely necessary to continue the citation of authorities, which are very numerous and all to the same effect. It is only important to determine whether they are applicable to the facts of the present case.

The assignments of error practically raise two questions of surcharge and one of costs. The first question of surcharge relates to the Birkbeck stock. The testator at the time of his death owned 1,600 shares of the stock of a corporation called John Birkbeck Co., Limited, whose business was the boiling of molasses for the manufacture of sugar. B. H. Bartol, the decedent, and John Birkbeck, each, owned one half of the stock and carried on the business with much success. Both the partners died within a short time of each other and a reorganization became necessary. As each of the deceased parties owned exactly one half of the stock, it was deemed highly desirable by the accountants, trustees for George E. Bartol and his children, under the will, to preserve the equality of ownership and run no risk of disadvantage arising from a possible acquisition of a majority of the stock by the other parties in interest. In the distribution of the estate' among the six parties entitled, one sixth, 266 shares, of this stock was taken for the trust estate of George E. Bartol, and these shares were subsequently held as a part of the trust estate. The business had been, and still was, very largely profitable, and heavy dividends were constantly earned and paid until the passage of the tariff bill of 1892, after which the profits were so seriously affected that the business was closed out. In the liquidation which followed there was a loss of $1,583.20 upon the stock held as a part of the trust, and for this the accountants claimed credit in their account. The auditor refused the credit on the ground that the accountants had an opportunity to sell the stock to the cestui que trust for its full appraised value, $8,333.33, and declined to do so, and thus lost on the liquidation the sum of $1,583.20, which the stock realized less than its appraised value. This appraised value was twenty-five per cent in advance of its par value, and was made because of the large profits which had been realized from the business. The court below did not sustain the auditor in his reasoning for the surcharging of the accountants, but held that George E. Bartol should sustain the loss personally, and therefore the accountants, while being [413]*413chargeable with the loss so far as it affected the body of the trust fund, should recoup their loss from the future payments to be made of the income to George E. Bartol. The ground upon which the court below held the trustee accountable was that they had no power to invest any part of the fund in the stock of a private corporation, but, because it was stock held by the testator in his lifetime and at the time of his death, the court further held that the whole of the estate of the testator should sustain the loss, and therefore the one sixth of the aggregate loss should be paid by George E. Bartol, and the other five sixths by the other legatees.

We think the learned court below fell into error in this view of the subject by failing to regard one of the provisions of the will.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A. 527, 182 Pa. 407, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bartol-pa-1897.