Giese's Estate

180 A. 711, 119 Pa. Super. 232, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 7, 1935
DocketAppeal, 253
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 A. 711 (Giese's Estate) 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
Giese's Estate, 180 A. 711, 119 Pa. Super. 232, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

The appellant, Potter Title and Trust Company, was appointed guardian of the estate of Richard Paynter Giese, a minor, on May 8, 1919. The funds comprising the estate of the minor were invested by the guardian *234 in a mortgage pool maintained by it. Tbe minor became of age on December 9, 1930. No account was filed by tbe guardian until it filed its first and final account on November 2, 1934, almost four years after tbe ward became of age. Tbe account showed a balance of $30.60 in cash, and $1,455 invested in tbe mortgage pool. Tbe ward filed exceptions to tbe account, and objected to taking a participation certificate in tbe mortgage pool. He claimed that be was entitled to an amount in cash equal to tbe balance on band, as of December 9, 1930, with interest at 6%. Tbe guardian admitted it could have paid over tbe balance due tbe ward in cash on December 9,1930, when be became of age, or at any time until July 17, 1933. On July 17, 1933, tbe Orphans’ Oourt of Allegheny County stated that it would thereafter disapprove tbe investment of funds under its supervision in any existing general mortgage pool. Tbe guardian was thereupon unable to convert tbe ward’s investment at tbe date of tbe filing of tbe first and final account. The guardian gave no reason for its failure to file its account for four years after tbe ward became of age, other than that it has been tbe practice of trust companies in Pittsburgh not to file an account as guardian until requested to do so.

Richard Paynter Griese, tbe ward and appellee, testified that be was not aware, previous to a week before November 30, 1934, that be had an estate in tbe bands of tbe Potter Title and Trust Company.

Tbe fund invested in tbe mortgage pool by tbe guardian in this case earned interest, from tbe time of its original investment in 1920 to December 31, 1931, at tbe rate of 6%. Prom January 1, 1932, until December 31, 1932, tbe interest was reduced to 5%, and after January 1,1933, to 4%.

Tbe court below, after bearing on tbe exceptions to tbe account, made a decree on January 2, 1935, award *235 ing the balance in the hands of the accountant to the ward, in cash; but it did not add interest at the rate of 6% from the date on which the ward became of age. The Potter Title and Trust Company filed exceptions to this decree of the court below. The decree was opened, and the guardian was permitted to offer further testimony. On February 19, 1935, the court dismissed the exceptions of the guardian to the decree, and affirmed the decree entered January 2, 1935. The Potter Title and Trust Company appealed.

Appellant now contends that it should not be obliged to pay, in cash, the amount of the ward’s estate, for two reasons: (1) Section 59 (j) 8 of the Fiduciaries Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 447, does not impose any penalty for failure of the guardian to file an account when the ward becomes of age and does not show an intention to hold the guardian responsible for depreciation occurring in assets after that event; (2) failure of the appellant to file its account as guardian when the ward became of age was not the proximate cause of the inability to convert the interest in the mortgage pool into cash.

Depreciation in the assets of the estate is not here involved; and we see no merit in appellant’s second proposition.

The assignments of error are to the court’s decree.

The Potter Title and Trust Company was appointed guardian of the estate of Richard Paynter Giese under the Fiduciaries Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 447 (20 PS §321 et seq.). Section 59 (j) 8 (20 PS §1050) of this act provides: “Every such guardian, unless previously discharged or removed, shall, on the arrival of his ward at full age, file in the register’s office a full and complete account of his management of the minor’s property under his care, including all the matters embraced in each partial account; except where an examination or audit, and final decree of confirmation, has taken place *236 as hereinbefore provided, in which case said final account shall include only such matters as were not included in such former accounts and decrees aforesaid. And the decree of the orphans’ court upon such final account shall, like other decrees of the court, be conclusive upon all parties, unless reversed, modified, or altered on appeal.” This section is the same as part of section 10 of the Act of March 29, 1832, P. L. 191, 1 Pur don 1086, as amended by the Act of June 9, 1911, P. L. 744, 5 Purdon 5887.

It is the plain intent and purpose of this section of the Fiduciaries Act that a statutory guardian shall, unless previously discharged or removed, on arrival of his ward at full age, file in the register’s office a full and complete account of his management of the minor’s property under his care. This provision is not discretionary; it is mandatory. Walls’ Appeal, 104 Pa. 14; Dushole’s Estate, 71 Pitts. L. J. 433. When the ward attained his majority it was the duty of the guardian to render its final account and obtain its discharge, unless the parties entered into other legal arrangements. It has frequently been held that, where a ward makes a settlement with his guardian, after becoming of age, he cannot later compel the guardian to account in the absence of a showing of mistake or fraud in the settlement. See Alexander’s Estate, 156 Pa. 368, 27 A. 18; Note L. R. A. 1916E, 867; Roth’s Estate, 150 Pa. 261, 24 A. 685; Marr’s Appeal, 78 Pa. 66; Ex parte Cress, 2 Wharton 494. However, informal settlements out of court by guardians with their wards, when they become of age, are not to be encouraged. Lukens’s Appeal, 7 W. & S. 48. There was no settlement of any kind between the parties to this action; hence the duty was on the appellant to make an accounting and settlement, and not on the ward to first demand such accounting and settlement. Certainly, if the guardian *237 fails to comply with the provisions of the act, the ward may, upon arriving at majority, require the filing of a final account and settlement. See Alexander’s Estate, supra; Ex parte Cress, supra; Walls’ Appeal, supra.

In the case before us, the testimony shows that the guardian never filed any account until four years after the ward became of age; that the ward did not know of his estate in the possession of the guardian until about three weeks after it filed its first and final account on November 2, 1934; that the trust funds were invested in a mortgage pool; that the guardian could have settled in cash with the ward at the time he became of age, or at any time prior to July 17, 1933; that after July 17, 1933, cash settlement could not be made because of the action of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County relative to investments of trust funds in general mortgage pools; that the interest received was added to the corpus of the estate and invested in the mortgage pool from time to time; and that the account of the guardian showed for distribution a mortgage pool certificate of $1,455, and cash in the amount of $30.60, being the balance in the hands of the accountant.

Under the circumstances, it was the right of the ward to refuse to accept in settlement a mortgage pool certificate from his guardian, the appellant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A. 711, 119 Pa. Super. 232, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gieses-estate-pasuperct-1935.