Henry's Estate

19 A.2d 66, 341 Pa. 439, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1941
DocketAppeals, 72-74
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 66 (Henry'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
Henry's Estate, 19 A.2d 66, 341 Pa. 439, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 447 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Parker,

These are appeals by wards who are now of full age from an order of an orphans’ court dismissing exceptions to a decree of an auditing judge confirming nisi accounts of a guardian of minors and confirming the accounts absolutely. The appellants ask that the accountant be surcharged with a shrinkage in the principal of the estate and that certain credits claimed by accountant be disallowed.

*441 There are certain underlying facts found hy the auditing judge from the evidence that are not disputed. Daniel L. Henry, on the death of his wife on January 20, 1919, was left with four small daughters born between March, 1913, and February, 1918. He secured the services of an unmarried woman, Mary Lodge, the accountant, then 51 years of age, and placed her in charge of their home, agreeing to pay her ten dollars per week with room and board. She was in sole charge of the children from the early part of 1921 until the end of 1936, performing the services of a housekeeper and also doing the cooking, washing, and cleaning without the help of a maid. She received the cash wages promised her for only tliree weeks and, until the filing of these accounts, she did not receive any further compensation from the father or the minors’ estates except her board and lodging. In fact, she spent $500 of her own meager estate in maintaining the household at times when the income was reduced and made an investment of her own for the purpose of providing a home for the children, so that they would not be moving constantly.

On July 25, 1921, the father petitioned the Orphans’ Court of Philadelphia to appoint Miss Lodge as guardian of the children although he knew she was without any business experience. She was appointed without being required to enter security, the decree providing: “But no funds to be received by the guardian without an application to this court and security being first entered.” The father died on September 13, 1921. Shortly after her appointment, the guardian applied to the orphans’ court, under the provisions of the Revised Price Act, for permission to sell three different parcels of land which the children had inherited from their paternal grandparents. * The sales were approved and she *442 gave the required corporate security in each case before receiving the consideration, totalling $42,369.44, consisting in part of a purchase money mortgage of $22,500. The cash was invested from time to time in mortgages. There were defaults and foreclosures, and in some cases the guardian was required to take over the real estate covered by the liens in order to protect the investments. The principal at the time of the accounting had been reduced to $35,826.50, represented by mortgages, real estate, and $400 in Federal Land Bank Bonds. Of the sum of $24,800 expended for the maintenance and education of the minors over a period of sixteen years, $2,450 was taken from principal, the withdrawal being made necessary by a heavy reduction in income from mortgages and real estate. The remaining loss of principal was due to the prevailing depreciation in real estate values. It is not contended that this shrinkage resulted from any negligence, bad faith, or mismanagement upon the part of the guardian.

It is not suggested that the guardian used any of the funds of the estate for her own benefit. Miss Lodge, being without business experience, relied to a considerable extent, in the management of the estate, upon the advice of Michael J. Donoghue, Esq., now deceased, who had been attorney for the wards’ father. She entrusted the bookkeeping to him. He collected the income from the investments, usually depositing the funds in bank to her credit as guardian, and gave her a monthly check for rent and maintenance of the household, including food, clothing, street car fare, etc. The method of keeping the accounts was not as complete as it should have been. Each month, when a check signed by Miss Lodge and countersigned by the surety was delivered to her, she divided it into equal sums representing the number of weeks in the month so that the expenses could be equally budgeted.

One of the girls who is still living with Miss Lodge asks that the accounts be confirmed. The other three, *443 who are now married, have appealed. The appellants havin'gi presented their objections under four heads, we will treat the exceptions in the same manner.

(l,) fThe main assignments of error deal with the courts rejection of the appellants’ contention that the guardian should be surcharged to the full extent of the proceeds' of the sales of real estate because she failed to secure an authorization from the orphans’ court before investing such proceeds or expending any part of the principal or income for maintenance and education. Sections 10 and 11 of the Revised Price Act (Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 388; 20 PS §§ 1644,1645) provide in part as follows: “The court shall make such order or orders, from.time to time, as to the distribution or investment of such funds, as may be requisite to protect the interest of all persons who are or may become entitled thereto, or to any part thereof. . . . The court having jurisdiction may direct the application of such proceeds, or part thereof, for the maintenance and education of minor parties whose personal estate shall be insufficient for such purposes. ... No principal moneys raised by sale or mortgage, as aforesaid, shall be expended for any other purpose than for the payment of liens upon or the improvement of the same real estate when mortgaged, or other real estate when held for the same uses and persons, except as provided in section ten of this act.”-

Appellants contend that the foregoing statute is mandatory and makes it necessary for the guardian to apply to the court for an order authorizing the investment of proceeds from sale of real estate, arguing that in making the sale she was acting as trustee of the court and should therefore have secured a formal court order directing her as trustee to turn over the funds to herself as guardian with proper directions authorizing specific investments. In interpreting this section it must be remembered that the Revised Price Act, as was its predecessor, was intended to cover a variety of situations, *444 some simple and some complex. Where there are involved life tenants, vested or contingent remaindermen, or executory devisees, it may become important for the court to retain complete supervision of the investment of the proceeds of sales of real estate, as, for example, the factual situation presented in the case of Moorhead v. Wolff, 123 Pa. 365, 16 A. 520. In a simple situation like the present one, where the interests of the minors are unrestricted and absolute, it cannot be said that the legislature intended all the provisions of that act to be mandatory with the resulting consequences which the appellants would visit on this accountant. Our decisions do not support an interpretation which would require meaningless formalities before making a transfer of funds or investing the proceeds: Com. v. Messenger, 237 Pa. 1, 85 A. 26. The interpretation we place on the act works neither unjustly nor severely.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 66, 341 Pa. 439, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henrys-estate-pa-1941.