Gill's Estate

142 A. 207, 293 Pa. 199, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1928
DocketAppeal, 63
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 142 A. 207 (Gill's 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
Gill's Estate, 142 A. 207, 293 Pa. 199, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 494 (Pa. 1928).

Opinion

Per Curiam,

Testator devised his estate in trust for a son and daughter, “for their maintenance and education,” directing that the trustees named by him, — a trust company and certain individuals, — should invest the fund so that it would “bear sufficient interest” to pay for such “education and maintenance.” He further particularly directed that the trustees should “not deliver over any of the principal......until such time as [they] in their judgment deem[ed] it wise and prudent to deliver over the same,” and that, “when in the best judgment of [such trustees] they deem[ed] it wise and prudent to deliver over to [testator’s two children] or the survivor of them the principal of said trust fund,” they might do so. Finally, he provided that, “in the event of both......children dying without issue,” the property was to go to certain named beneficiaries.

*201 The testator died in 1909 and his son in 1917. The daughter, who is of full age, married and has two children, claiming that the trust should no longer legally continue, demanded that the trustees turn over the fund to her. The trustees answered that they did not deem it wise and prudent, or for the best interest of the petitioner, “to turn over to her said estate other than the interest thereof for her maintenance”’ which they declared was being regularly done. The trustees averred also that, if the corpus were turned over- to the petitioner, “the same would, in every likelihood, he dissipated and lost.”

The court below refused the relief prayed for, stating: “As this record stands, the prayer of the petition should not be granted because the contingent remaindermen have not been made parties to the proceeding; before an order could he made dissolving this trust, the contingent remaindermen are entitled to have their day in court.” For present purposes, it is sufficient to say that, under the principles laid down by this court in Spring’s Est., 216 Pa. 529, the trust here attacked is not an unlawful one, and the conclusion of the court below to the effect that, in the proceedings before it, this trust could not he declared at an end, was undoubtedly right. Before an order such as that prayed for could be judicially considered, or a definitive construction he placed on the property rights of others, possibly here involved, the petitioner would have to bring upon the record of any proceeding instituted for that purpose every person with any possible interest whatsoever in the trust; which would mean petitioner’s minor children (including both those already horn and those who might hereafter he born), through properly appointed representatives (Smith’s Petition, 291 Pa. 129, 132), and likewise all persons possessed of a possible ultimate beneficial interest in case of the death of petitioner without children.

The decree appealed from is affirmed at cost of appellant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 A. 207, 293 Pa. 199, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gills-estate-pa-1928.