Guthrie's Estate

182 A. 248, 320 Pa. 530, 103 A.L.R. 1186, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 26, 1935
DocketAppeals, 239-241
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 182 A. 248 (Guthrie'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
Guthrie's Estate, 182 A. 248, 320 Pa. 530, 103 A.L.R. 1186, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 628 (Pa. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

Under the will of Florence H. Guthrie, a trust was ireated wherein George H. Howe and Clara H. Brown, brother and sister of testatrix, were made life tenants. It was directed that at their death the corpus of the trust should be divided among testatrix’s nephews and nieces per capita. The Fidelity Trust Company (formerly The Fidelity Title & Trust Company), T. Howe Nimick and Francis S. Guthrie were named trustees in the will. Exceptions to their first and final account and to the decree nisi confirming that account were filed by two nieces *532 and a grandnephew of testatrix. The appeal is from the final decree dismissing the exceptions. The breach of trust alleged in the exceptions is that certain trust mortgages were held in the name of the corporate trustee without designation of the trust either upon the face of the mortgage or upon the public record thereof or in any other public manner. The question presented, therefore, is whether and to what extent any such breach of trust was committed, and whether or not these beneficiaries may require the trustees to account in cash for the money invested in the mortgages complained of.

The investments are of two kinds: (1) so-called “straight” mortgages — mortgages which were separately allotted to the Guthrie estate, and each of which was held wholly for the benefit of that estate; (2) mortgages in each of which a fractional interest was allotted to the Guthrie estate and other fractional interests were allotted to other estates. The latter type of investment is like the familiar mortgage pool, except that in this case the “pool,” in which participation is allotted to several estates, consists of a single mortgage instead of a number of mortgages. It appears from the evidence offered in behalf of accountants that these mortgages were acquired by the trust company for the purpose of investing trust funds in them, and that the allotments to the Guthrie estate were ordinarily made within a few days after their acquisition — in some instances the date of allotment was the same as the date of the mortgage. Declarations of trust with respect to each mortgage were entered in at least three places in the books of the company’s trust department: (1) in the “trust mortgage investment ledger,” each sheet of which describes a particular mortgage held in trust by the company and shows the estate or estates for which the mortgage is held; (2) in the “individual trust ledger” sheets of the Guthrie estate, which record the various investments and other dispositions of funds of that estate; (3) in the “mortgage memorandum ledger,” which shows all the mort *533 gages held for the Guthrie estate. No designation of the company’s trusteeship or of the existence of the other trustees appeared either on the face of the mortgages or on the public record thereof, the company being described therein as the mortgagee. The practice followed by the company in thus carrying these mortgages has been followed for oyer 40 years by trust companies generally in Allegheny County and elsewhere throughout the state, with the exception of Philadelphia County. It has been approved by the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County and by the Department of Banking of the Commonwealth. Inquiries by that department through the state have ascertained that trust mortgages aggregating approximately $138,000,000, at least, are carried without disclosure of the trusteeship on the public record, while other mortgages amounting to over $78,000,000 are designated upon the public record as trust mortgages.

In Yost’s Est., 316 Pa. 463, it was pointed out that, in holding a straight mortgage in its own name with no other designation of the trust than a declaration upon its own books, a corporate trustee violated a well-settled rule of law, and that the Act of April 6, 1925, P. L. 152 (amending the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 159, which in turn amended the Act of April 29, 1874, P. L. 73), afforded no justification for its so doing. We held that, under the facts of that case, the beneficiary could require the trustee to account in cash for the money thus invested. Promptly after the petition for reargument in that case was refused, the straight mortgages held for the Guthrie estate were assigned of record to the trustees of the estate, thereby designating on the face of the instruments and on the public record the fact that the mortgages were held in trust for the estate. Endorsements to the same effect were made on the bonds accompanying the mortgages. No assignment of record was made of the mortgages in which the estate’s interest was one of participation.

*534 Semiannual statements, showing the mortgages held for the estate and the income therefrom, were prepared by the company and sent to the surviving life tenant and the two cotrustees. On the basis of these statements, numerous discussions were had with several of the beneficiaries, including two of the present exceptants, and analyses of the various mortgages for the information of the beneficiaries were made at the direction of the company’s trust officer. Exceptant Charles M. Brown, Jr., testified that he had not examined any of the statements or consulted with any trust officer of the company concerning the mortgages in question. It appeared, however, that he was of full age, that he lived with his mother, who was likewise a beneficiary, and one of those who had had discussions about the mortgages, and that he knew his mother received statements. If he was as ignorant of the condition of his investments as he stated, it was only because of his own neglect to inquire. It does not appear that any of the exceptants had notice of the manner in which the mortgages were carried by the company before the account was filed. Most of the mortgages were in default when the account was filed, and have continued so. Each of the exceptants has elected to take in cash the money invested in mortgages carried by the company in its own name.

With regard to the mortgages of the participating type (with which we were not concerned in Yost’s Estate), we think the Act of 1925, supra, provides sufficient warrant for the practice followed by the company. That act provides that trust companies may assign to various trust estates “participation in a general trust fund of mortgages ... in which case it shall be a sufficient compliance with the provisions of this section for the company to designate clearly on its records” the mortgages, the names of the participating trust estates, and the amounts of their respective participations. It is further provided that the company may repurchase mortgages from the fund and substitute other mort *535 gages therefor, and that no participating estate shall he deemed to have individual ownership in any mortgage in the fund. If designation on the company’s records is sufficient in the case of a participation pool consisting of a number of mortgages, it must likewise he sufficient where the participation is by a number of estates in but a single mortgage. It is plain that the legislature saw fit to permit an exception to the rule in the case of participation in a pool of a number of mortgages because such pools could not he successfully operated otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
182 A. 248, 320 Pa. 530, 103 A.L.R. 1186, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guthries-estate-pa-1935.