Estate of Mary Lou Hazelbaker

171 A. 619, 113 Pa. Super. 32, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 100
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 1933
DocketAppeal 318
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 171 A. 619 (Estate of Mary Lou Hazelbaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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 Mary Lou Hazelbaker, 171 A. 619, 113 Pa. Super. 32, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 100 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The question- here involved is whether the guardian of a minor should be surcharged, in the adjudication of his account, by reason of the loss of trust funds, resulting from the closing of a bank in which they were deposited. The auditing judge made the surcharge; the court below, in banc, sustained the guardian’s exceptions to this action; and the ward has appealed.

The salient facts are these: The guardian was appointed, by decree of the orphans’ court, on May 28, 1927, to receive the minor’s share of the proceeds of the sale of certain real estate, when sold. He gave a corporate bond under a decree of July 19, 1929, received the fund, amounting to $1,272.80, on February 4,.1030, and deposited it in the Northern Central Trust Company, where it remained until March 25, 1931, when it was deposited in the Savings Fund Department of the County Trust' Company, drawing interest at four per cent. In February, 1931, the minor had to undergo an operation and the guardian, under a decree of court dated June 17, 1931, paid $256.10 to defray the expense thereof. The County Trust Company closed its doors October 9, 1931; it is now in process of liquidation, and has paid one dividend of *34 ten per cent. The ininor married in May, 1930, and came of age on October 27, 1931, twenty months after the funds had been received by the guardian. He testified he had knowledge of the bank’s apparent soundness through its financial statements, and that his personal funds were deposited therein, as well as as those of his ward. When asked why he deposited the money in the savings account, he said, “I thought it was paying four per cent.” When asked why he did not invest in legal securities, his answer was, “I thought that was a better way of handling it. I was getting a good rate of interest and the money was available in two years, and at any time they needed it.”

The auditing judge surcharged the accountant with the balance of the deposit, because, in his opinion, the acts of the guardian amounted to the making of an illegal investment, and he and his surety were therefore required to stand the loss of the ward’s estate. The court in banc, on the other hand, based its opinion primarily upon the theory that it was not an investment, but only a temporary deposit. The following extract from the majority opinion below adequately summarizes the argument for the guardian: “It was not a deposit for a fixed period of time, and not an investment, but, as was said in Law’s Estate, 144 Pa. at p. 508, a ‘temporary, provisional, or precautionary arrangement’, and the time during which the deposit was expected to remain in this bank was only just about seven months. It has been held in ordinary cases that six months is not an unreasonable time to keep cash on hand' to await a suitable investment, and here the guardian knew that he would be expected to make settlement with his ward in about that time. Furthermore, in view of the fact that the fund was in both banks about a year and a half, earning 4%, the minor having married, some of the fund being needed *35 for a surgical operation, and more might in these times, have been required for support or medical services, we cannot say the cash was unreasonably withheld from investment.”

We have given careful consideration to the facts and made an independent examination of the authorities. In view of all the circumstances, we have concluded that the surcharge was properly made by the auditing judge and that the exceptions thereto should have been dismissed. It is undoubtedly true that if the deposit was merely a temporary one, within the meaning of Law’s Estate, 144 Pa. 499, 22 A. 831, the court in banc was justified in sustaining the exceptions. This concession, however, necessitates a careful examination into the facts of that case.

The guardian there received some $3,000 of the money of his ward on January 29, 1890, and immediately deposited it in the Bank of America. The deposit was made in a separate account, in the name of the guardian as such, and was evidenced by an entry of credit upon the books of the bank in the usual form. The guardian was in search of an investment, and the deposit was to remain only until he could find one. He was to receive three per cent interest upon the deposit, and was to give two weeks’ notice before withdrawal. The bank failed on April 30, 1890. In determining whether the guardian was liable for the loss, our Supreme Court said (p. 506): “A trustee will not be liable for the failure of a bank in which trust funds have been deposited, if he has suffered them to remain there only for a reasonable time;, but if he allows them to lie there by way of investment, he will be liable to make good the loss.” It then found, upon examination of the facts, that the deposit there under consideration fell into the category of a temporary deposit, saying (p. 508): “In the present case, the money was placed in the bank, not as an *36 investment for any fixed period, but merely for safekeeping, and at a small rate of interest until a suitable investment could be found. This was the express understanding of both parties at the time. The transaction was entered upon the books of the bank as a deposit merely. It was treated as a temporary, provisional, or precautionary arrangement.”

Finally, it said: “A deposit, as we have said, is a temporary disposition of money for safekeeping; and it is upon this ground alone that the trustee is justified in depositing trust funds in bank, and it is upon the same ground that a deposit is distinguishable from an investment.”

We think it clear, from an analysis of that case, that a deposit by a trustee in a bank is justifiable, under normal circumstances, only when it is a temporary measure, pending investment. We also think the application of this rule to the facts in the case at bar is fatal to the guardian’s contention. It is conceded the deposit was not made as a temporary arrangement to last only until investment. The guardian was considering no other or further investment; he decided that the method which he employed was the best way of holding the fund, particularly in view of the fact that he was receiving the four per cent interest from the bank; to him it seemed a safe form in which to preserve the principal, and at the same time realize a return from it. Under the evidence, this is a fair statement of his position.

Was the deposit justified by the length of time which elapsed between the date the money was received and that upon which the ward attained her majority? We think not. Had the guardian received the money six or seven months before the time he would be compelled to account for it, a different question might have arisen. In such a case, it might be held that as a guardian may keep funds on deposit in a bank for a *37 short period while seeking a suitable investment, he may do the same if any investment otherwise made would have to be immediately liquidated. But such was not the case here, and it is at this point we feel the court below fell into error. Its conclusion was rested upon the fact that the deposit was made in March, 1931, and the minor came of age in October of that year. It overlooked the fact, however, that the fund was originally received in February, 1930, and was kept on deposit for the entire period of twenty months.

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Related

McClain's Estate
34 Pa. D. & C. 542 (Philadelphia County Orphans' Court, 1939)
Braun's Estate
30 Pa. D. & C. 575 (Philadelphia County Orphans' Court, 1937)
Fay v. Fay
193 A. 674 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1937)
Carwithen's Estate
28 Pa. D. & C. 66 (Philadelphia County Orphans' Court, 1937)
Guardianship of Uggen v. Amble
271 N.W. 326 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1937)
Byrnes's Case
188 A. 871 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Grossman's Estate
22 Pa. D. & C. 531 (Philadelphia County Orphans' Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 619, 113 Pa. Super. 32, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mary-lou-hazelbaker-pasuperct-1933.