Hodgson's Estate

20 A.2d 294, 342 Pa. 250, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 516
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 14, 1941
DocketAppeal, 70
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 20 A.2d 294 (Hodgson'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
Hodgson's Estate, 20 A.2d 294, 342 Pa. 250, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 516 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to remove a substituted trustee of a testamentary trust.

On October 18, 1917, William H. Hodgson died leaving an estate appraised at $184,180 and a last will wherein he set up various trust estates. The principal asset of the largest of these estates 'the. testator described as his “newspaper business" known as the Daily Local News Company of West Chester, Pa.,” (hereinafter referred to as the company), with a capital stock of $100,000, which testator organized himself before his death. He retained 997 shares of the 1,000 shares authorized and outstanding. This estate was on January 16, 1936, when the petition for a substituted, trustee Avas filed, carried on the books of the Chester County Trust Company as “949 shares Daily Local News, appraised 1917: $142,35.0; approximate present worth: $94,900.” The approximate present worth of the whole estate is set down in that petition gs $139,800..

The chief beneficiaries of this testamentary trust estate are the present appellants,. Anne G. Hodgson (the widow of testator’s deceased .son) and her two daughters, Wilhelmina D. Hodgson and Ann Hodgson Thomas, *252 both, ádults.. The income from this trust estate vtas, ■subject to certain substantial payments made to others as hereinafter noted, to be paid as follows: $100.00 a month to Anne G. Hodgson so long as she shall remain his son’s widow, and the remainder of the income was to be paid “for the support, care, education and maintenance” of testator’s grandchildren, Wilhelmina D. Hodgson, and Ann Hodgson Thomas, or the survivor of them. The will also provided for the' creation of a trust fund of $10,000, the net income from which was to be paid to a grandniece of testator, Emma D. Hodgson, for and during her natural life. The dividends from 182 shares óf stock of the company'áre payable under the will to persons occupying certain designated position^ with the “Daily Local News Company”, such as editor, business manager, etc. An annual pension of $800 was provided for the wife of the then editor of-this newspaper, upon the death of the latter. Pensions were also provided for four members of the newspaper staff if they should become unable to “fill properly their respective offices.” The will further provided that upon the death of testator’s daughter-in-law and grandchildren and his grandniece, the whole principal and accumulated income of the estate shall be divided in equal Shares per stirpes among the children and issue of any deceased child of these grandchildren and that if there should be no children or issue “of any deceased children of my said granddaughters or of either of them then living, then in that event” the trustee is ordered to divide the whole of the estate equally between testator’s sisters or their respective heirs. The testator also provided as follows: “It is my purpose to provide for the contihuánce off the business and policy of the Daily Local News Company of West Chester, Pa., as at present'conducted believing that by- so doing my estate will greatly profit thereby; and I, therefore authorize my said trustee to retain all my stock in the said . . . company . . . , as also *253 the shares of the . capital stock of the Chester County Trust Company, which. I may bold .at the time of my death, as part of my, estate during the continuance of said trusts, and at the termination thereof to distribute said stock in kind.”- ■ •

Testator appointed the Chester County Trust Company of West Chester, executor and. trustee. This company administered the trust until the Secretary- of Banking took possession of it for liquidation on February 14, 1933. On January 17, 1936, the court below appointed as substituted trustee, William Kessler, a brother-in-law of the. widow beneficiary; This appointment of Kessler was made at’ the request of the three appellants here, who are .now asking for his removal. After his appointment as .trustee, Kessler consulted with these beneficiaries, with, the result that at the next meeting of the stockholders, he was elected President of -the corporation, Miss Wilhelmina D. Hodgson,, one of the cestui que trustents (the elder granddaughter) was elected Yice-President, Thomas J. Mullany, Esq., of the Philadelphia Bar, was elected Secretary, and Paul K. Guthrie, Esq., of the Chester County Bar, was elected Treasurer. These also constituted the Board of .Directors. , Miss Hodgson served as Vice-President until the middle of the year. 1936, after which, on -account of a disagreement with Kessler she attended no meetings. Mr. Guthrie, later gave up his office as Treasurer. Mr. Mullany has since functioned as both , Secretary and Treasurer. ; . ■

The present proceedings were brought under the Fiduciaries Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 447, section 53(a)9, which provides at page 519: “When .all the cestui que trust, ora majority of them, having the-life estate under any trust, shall desire the removal of the trustee or* trustees upon any substantial ground not hereinbefore enumerated, and the court, upon petition filed by them or any of them, shall be satisfied that such substantial *254 ground for removal exists; in which case the court may remove said trustee or trustees, and appoint another or others as chosen by said parties.”

The grounds on which the removal of the substituted trustee is asked for are grouped as follows: (1) hostile and malicious attitude of the trustee toward the life tenant's ; (2) failure of the trustee to perform his duties, to the disadvantagé of the trust estate and discrimination against the life tenants; and (3) use by the trustee of his office for his personal benefit and that of his counsel. ■-"

This record furnishes ample proof of the charge that the trustee-exhibited a hostile and-malicious attitude toward these life tenants. An example of this was Kessler’s prosecution of Mrs. Ann Hodgson Thomas on a charge of larceny. It had been customary for the appellants to visit the office Of the “Daily Local News” whenever they desired' and to use the stamps and stationery of the company. They had done this when the testator managed the newspaper. The trustee directed the office manager to refuse the appellants any further stamps or stationery. These instructions were not communicated to the appellants. Mrs. Thomas and her mother went to the office and when their request for some stationery was refused, they took 12 sheets of paper and three envelopes from the desk. When Kessler learned-of this, he appeared before a Justice of the Peace, nine miles away from West Chester, and swore out a warrant for the arrest of Mrs. Thomas, charging her with larceny of the stationery. The grand jury ignoréd the bill and placed the costs of prosecution upon Kessler. Shortly after bail had been entered by Mrs. Thomas, an article appeared in the “Daily Local News” with Mr. Kessler’s approval, which carried the heading: “Woman Charged With Serious Larceny”. Later Mrs. Thomas brought an -action against Kessler for malicious prosecution and the'jury at- the second trial brought in a verdict in the sum of $500. (At the *255 first trial plaintiff had been nonsuited. See Thomas v. Kessler et al., 334 Pa. 7, 5 A. 2d 187. *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 A.2d 294, 342 Pa. 250, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgsons-estate-pa-1941.