Hill v. Hill

5 Pa. D. & C. 776, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bradford County
DecidedSeptember 1, 1924
DocketNo. 316
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Pa. D. & C. 776 (Hill v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bradford County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Hill, 5 Pa. D. & C. 776, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Potter, P. J.,

17th judicial district, specially presiding,

The proceedings had in the above styled case resulted in a divorce a mensa et thoro being granted to the libellant, which, so far as concerns the matters now in controversy, is mainly a matter of history.

On Peb. 16, 1915, the court decreed that the respondent pay to the libellant the yearly sum of $2000 as alimony, to be paid in equal monthly payments of $166.661 each. So far as we know, these payments were promptly made from that time up to the present.

[777]*777On June 9, 1924, the libellant presented her petition, asking for an increase of alimony, upon which a rule was granted. Other litigation was pending between these two parties, which was set for hearing on June 18, 1924, and the writer was called upon to preside. This litigation was happily settled on that date, and on June 19, 1924, the rule for increase of alimony was taken up. On that day, upon the beginning of the hearing on this rule, the respondent filed an answer, embracing in it a petition for the reduction of the said amount of alimony. At the outset of the hearing, the petition for the increase of alimony was withdrawn and the rule was abandoned. The proceedings for the reduction of the alimony were then taken up, and these are what we have before us for disposition.

It is recognized as the law of the land, so enacted by statute, that the alimony awarded to the wife shall not “exceed the third part of his annual profit or income of his estate, or of his occupation and labor,” and, in our disposition of the petition, we are bound by this legislative enactment.

George R. Hill, the respondent, is a son of General Jonathan A. Hill, who died Oct. 24, 1905, leaving to survive him his wife, Lucy M. Hill, the mother of the respondent, and five children, of whom George R. Hill is one. By his will he gave the bulk of his estate to George R. Hill and to Hon. William W. Clark, as trustees, to pay the entire income thereof to his widow, Lucy M. Hill, during her life, and after her death, to use the income, and, if necessary, the principal, for the liberal education of such of his grandchildren as, in the opinion of his said trustees, may prove worthy of it; giving his grandsons a collegiate education and his granddaughters a liberal education in the best seminaries in the land. He further provided that any of the income not expended as hereinbefore mentioned be paid over annually to his said five children in equal portions, and at the death of any of them, the share of the parent to pass to his or her children, share and share alike.

Lucy M. Hill, the mother of the respondent, died Jan. 7, 1914, leaving her will, wherein, inter alia, she provides “that no portion whatsoever of my property, ever, under any circumstance, directly or indirectly, shall go to her (Mabel Snow Hill), either in satisfaction of any decree or order for alimony or support against George R. Hill in his lifetime, or as his widow or otherwise, for I consider she has voluntarily forfeited every consideration and recognition whatsoever by me or out of my estate.” She appoints William P. Wilson and William Little, of Towanda, Penna., as trustees, creates a spendthrift trust for the benefit of George R. Hill, and places in their hands for that purpose certain property enumerated in her will.

It is clearly to be seen that no funds derived from the estate of Lucy M. Hill can be used with which to pay alimony to Mabel Snow Hill, so we must eliminate that source of income, if any, from any further consideration in these proceedings.

We then come to the consideration of the income of George R. Hill from the estate of his father, as well as any earnings he may have.

We are informed that the income of George R. Hill from this source is annually about $5521.25. We are also informed that he owes his father’s estate the sum of $3300 for money borrowed, and for which he gave his note; that this amount was originally $4400, $1100 of which belonged to D. H. Douglas, a grandson, for which he gave to said Douglas a note.

It seems that a few years ago these trustees of the General Hill estate loaned to J. A. Hill the sum of $15,000, with which to go into business, he giving his note for the same, which was signed by J. A. Hill, George R. Hill, [778]*778Mabel Snow Hill and the other children of George R. Hill, J. A. Hill being one of them. It seems the business venture of J. A. Hill went up in flames and smoke, leaving him with nothing in the way of worldly possessions. He cannot pay back to the said trustees the principal or any part of the interest. His signature to this note is worthless. Mabel Snow Hill has no worldly possessions, and neither have any of the others who signed the note, nor any income above what is requisite for a livelihood, so that the burden and responsibility of the payment of either the principal or interest of this loan falls upon George R. Hill. The other heirs of General Hill have a legal right to expect their share of the $900 yearly interest due on this note, and they can legally require these two trustees to collect it from any of the makers or sureties on the note.

The share of the income of the General Hill estate due to George R. Hill comes from the trustees of General Hill, who divide this yearly income amongst those thereunto entitled. At the same time George R. Hill is liable to the estate of his father for the yearly interest on the sum of $8800 on his own account, on the sum of $1100 due D. H. Douglas, and on the sum of $15,000, loaned by the trustees to J. A. Hill. There is no other person from whom these three items of interest can be collected, and the trustees of the General Hill estate withhold from George R. Hill the yearly interest on these three sums before paying over to him his share of the income from the estate of his deceased father. The other heirs can require the trustees to do so, and, having the interest on these three sums in their hands, should they permit it to slip away from them, we think the other heirs of General Hill could compel the said trustees to make good to them each of their respective shares of it.

Therefore, George R. Hill does not get these sums into his hands; they are paid into the estate for the other heirs, and must be deducted from his share as follows:

Yearly distributive share of Geo. R. Hill.................$5521.25
Interest on $3300 owed by Geo. R. Hill............$165.00
Interest on $1100 due Douglas by G. R. H.......... 55.00
Interest on $15,000 owing by J. A. Hill............ 900.00
- 1120.00
Balance due George R. Hill.........................$4401.25

By the terms of the will of General Hill, the amounts expended by the said trustees for the education of his grandchildren was to be deducted from the share of the income due each of his children, or, in other words, the amounts paid for the education of the children of George R. Hill are to be deducted from his share of the income from his father’s estate, and we are acting on the belief that the sum of $5521.25 is his share of the income for the present year, and that the sums as hereinafter set out are the sums paid for the education of his children for the present year, viz.:

Balance due Geo. R. Hill from last computation...........$4401.25
Paid for education for Geo. S.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. D. & C. 776, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-hill-pactcomplbradfo-1924.