Estate of Pew

655 A.2d 521, 440 Pa. Super. 195
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 28, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 655 A.2d 521 (Estate of Pew) 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 Pew, 655 A.2d 521, 440 Pa. Super. 195 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

KELLY, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, we are called to determine whether the trial court properly upheld the distribution of ordinary and extraordinary stock dividends to a life beneficiary between 1948 and 1963 pursuant to the Pennsylvania Rule of Apportionment in a trust created in 1932 or whether the *202 trustees were compelled by the terms of the 1945 and 1947 Principal and Income Acts to distribute all stock dividends received after the date of the passages of these Acts to the trust principal for the benefit of the remaindermen. We are also called upon to determine whether the trustees are subject to surcharge for failing to dispose of the common stocks that the settlor initially used, to fund the trust principal and diversify the trust investments in a manner that would equally benefit the life beneficiary and the remaindermen. We are further asked to determine whether the co-successor trustees are liable for a surcharge for failing to sell these same stocks during a period when the market price of the stocks declined. Additionally, we are asked to determine whether the trial court properly dismissed the appellants’ objections regarding the disqualification of opposing counsel due to various alleged conflicts of interest. Finally, we are requested to determine whether the trial court properly barred as untimely the appellants’ objections to distributions to be made pursuant to a 1986 agreement of trust which, while incorporated by reference in a probated will, was not offered for probate together with the will. We affirm the trial court’s decree in part, reverse in part and direct the admission to probate of the 1986 agreement of trust.

The relevant facts and procedural history of these consolidated appeals are as follows. On June 2, 1932, the settlor, Mary C. Pew, the wife of the founder of Sun Oil Company, Joseph N. Pew, created an inter vivos trust for the benefit of her two grandsons, Arthur E. Pew, Jr. and Walter C. Pew using identical language and making identical provisions for each grandson and the remainder of the trust. The trust principal was funded with 40,000 shares of the common stock of the Sun Oil Company. Under the terms of the trust, 20,000 shares of Sun Oil Company common stock were to be set aside for each grandson, with the net income from each grandson’s 20,000 share portion of the trust to be paid to that grandson for life. Upon each grandson’s death, the settlor instructed that the net income from the deceased grandson’s portion of the trust be paid “in equal shares for the support, mainte *203 nance and education” of his children until each child reaches the age of twenty-four. After reaching age twenty-four, the settlor instructed that each child is to be given twenty percent of their respective share of the trust principal, “per stirpes,” absolutely. The settlor further instructed that at age twenty-eight, each child was to be paid thirty percent of his or her share of the trust principal. Finally, the settlor instructed that upon reaching the age of thirty-two, each child was to received the remaining fifty percent balance of his or her respective share of the trust principal, per stirpes, absolutely.

The trust deed also contained a proviso that should either Arthur E. Pew or Walter C. Pew die childless, the remainder interests in the childless brother’s share of the trust should go to the other brother’s children. The trust deed named J. Howard Pew, J.N. Pew, Jr. and Mary Ethel Pew as trustees and empowered them with absolute discretionary power either to retain or sell the shares of Sun Oil Company stock, forming the trust principal. The “intact value” of each twenty thousand share portion of the trust principal on the date the trust’s creation was $816,140.00.

When the trust was created in 1932, there was no statutory law addressing the issue of the distribution of stock dividends. The trust, itself, contained no explicit instructions regarding whether stock dividends should be paid over to the income beneficiaries, Arthur E. Pew and Walter C. Pew, or made part of the trust principal to be paid over to the remaindermen at the death of the income beneficiaries. Therefore, the trustees followed the long standing Pennsylvania Rule of Apportionment as set out in Earp’s Appeal, 28 Pa. 368 (1857), that the life tenant was entitled to all stock dividends except where necessary to preserve the intact value of the trust principal, in which case the stock dividends were to be apportioned between the life tenant and the principal. This rule had been reaffirmed by our Supreme Court on May 26,1932, seven days before the creation of the Mary C. Pew Trust in In re Waterhouse’s Estate, 308 Pa. 422, 428, 162 A. 295, 296 (1932).

On December 1, 1947, the trustees filed the First Account for the Mary C. Pew Trust, Sur Trust for Arthur E. Pew, Jr. *204 and Walter C. Pew. The time period included in the trustees’ First Account ran from the date of the trust’s creation, June 2, 1932 to October, 1947. The First Account was filed to determine whether the Principal and Income Act of 1945 which was repealed and substantially re-enacted as the Principal and Income Act of 1947 should be retroactively applied to a trust that had been created thirteen years before the adoption of this statute by the legislature..

The Principal and Income Acts of 1945 and 1947 abrogated the Pennsylvania Rule of Apportionment and adopted the Massachusetts Rule which held that “all dividends on shares of a corporation forming a part of the principal which are payable in the shares of the corporation shall be deemed principal.” The trustees took the position that the Principal and Income Acts of 1945 and 1947 did not apply retroactively and that to apply these acts to trusts created before their passage would be unconstitutional. The trustees proposed that distributions of the stock dividends continue to be made in accordance with the Pennsylvania Rule of Apportionment which was in effect at the time the trust was created. A guardian ad litem and trustee ad litem, Lloyd H. Wood, Esquire was appointed to represent the interests of the unborn, unascertained persons. Mr. Wood filed objections to the trustees’ First Account challenging the trustees’ practice of distributing all of the stock dividends to the life tenants and income beneficiaries, Arthur É. Pew, Jr. and Walter C. Pew.

In his initial adjudication of December 15, 1948, President Judge Holland held that while the Principal and Income Acts of 1945 and 1947 could not be applied retroactively to stock dividends paid to the income beneficiaries by the trustees from 1932 to the date of the passage of the Acts, the Acts could be applied to the stock dividends received after the date of their passage and such stock dividends should be paid over to the trust principal in compliance with the Acts. Pew Estate, 65 Montg.Co.L.R. 94, 98 (1948). In his initial adjudication, President Judge Holland also suggested that the trustees seriously consider dividing the trust into two separate trusts, one for Arthur E. Pew, Jr. and one for Walter C. Pew. Id. at 97.

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Bluebook (online)
655 A.2d 521, 440 Pa. Super. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-pew-pasuperct-1994.