Huff Estate

31 A.2d 507, 347 Pa. 53, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 23, 1943
DocketAppeals, 64, 65 and 66
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 A.2d 507 (Huff 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
Huff Estate, 31 A.2d 507, 347 Pa. 53, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 394 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion bat

Mr. Justice Linn,

This appeal is from a decree, dated December 29, 1942, dismissing exceptions to the first and final account of Safe Deposit and Trust Company and Kate E. Huff, executors of the estate of William A. Huff, and ordering distribution of undivided interests in certain real property. As the only assignment is to the final decree, Ave accept the facts as stated by the learned court below and limit our inquiry to whether, on a proper application of the law, they support the decree: Stephen’s Estate, 320 Pa. 97, 181 A. 559; Edirose Silk Mfg. Co. v. First National Bank and Trust Co., 338 Pa. 139, 12 A. 2d 40. Three of testator’s five children have appealed, complaining that a desired surcharge Avas refused.

The exceptions related to transactions concerning improved real estate in Green sburg, known in the record as the Huff-Adrian-Dorzuk property, which, by the decree, goes to the children in undivided fifths. While the case presents unusual features, there is no difficulty in applying controlling equitable principles.

William A. Huff died March 26, 1928, leaving property to his wife, Kate E. Huff for life or widowhood, then to five named children in equal shares, the share of one of them to be held in trust for life with remainder to her children. The sixth paragraph of his will is:

*55 “In the management of my estate, my executors shall submit quarterly to my wife, a statement in detail and make a settlement with her, of all the incomes, proceeds and profits arising from my estate, both real and personal, during her natural life or widowhood.
“And I hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my wife, Kate E. Huff, and the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Greensburg, Pennsylvania, Executors of this my last will and testament.”

The executors qualified and entered on the performance of their duties. The fund on which Mrs. Huff received income was approximately $218,750, and from the death of the testator until June 19, 1939, the date of the account, she received $111,129.66 income. She died January 14, 1942. The executors’ account, which, according to the Docket Entry, had been filed July 22, 1939, was confirmed absolutely August 2, 1939. With respect to the Huff-Adrian-Dorzuk property, the account showed an investment of $45,693.21 as of that date.

After it had been confirmed absolutely, one of testator’s children asked leave to file exceptions, nunc pro tunc, challenging the administration of the Huff-AdrianDorzuk property. Exceptant sought to surcharge the corporate executor 1 but not the executrix, Mrs. Huff, although she received as income the amounts charged by exceptants to have been wrongfully paid out of principal in conserving the investment in the property. It was stated in argument that the same five children sharing in testator’s estate, share in the same proportions the residuary estate of their mother. Obviously, if she joined in paying herself out of the wrong fund, and if her estate is now required to restore to capital the amount wrongfully received by her as income, her children will receive just that much less from her estate as would be gained by surcharging her in their father’s *56 estate. We all agree that there is no merit in the appeal and that the final decree is required by the equities of the case.

Testator, Huff, was President of the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Greensburg; Adrian was the Treasurer of the company and, in 1930, defaulted and absconded. In April, 1926, Dorzuk bought the property and gave his bond and purchase money mortgage for $9,000, apparently the full value; the bond and mortgage were assigned to Safe Deposit. Dorzuk then conveyed to Huff and Adrian undivided two-thirds interest in the property, the grantees agreeing to pay two-thirds of the $9,000 mortgage. Improvements were made and the property was appraised at $40,000. In August, 1927, the then owners, Huff, Adrian and Dorzuk, executed a second mortgage and gave their joint and several bond to Safe Deposit in the sum of $23,000. Safe Deposit then owned the two mortgages aggregating $32,000; the title to the land was in Huff, Adrian and Dorzuk. In the Inheritance Tax Appraisement, Huff’s undivided one-third interest in the property was appraised at $15,000. On September 24, 1928, the executors paid one-third of each of the mortgages with interest to that date, a payment which did not discharge Huff’s estate of contingent obligation resulting from the covenant assuming personal responsibility in the case of the $9,000 mortgage and the joint and several liability on the second mortgage bond.

On December 6,1930, which was shortly after Adrian, the Treasurer of Safe Deposit, absconded, that company assigned its commercial assets, including the two mortgages in question, to Barclay-Westmoreland Trust Company of Greensburg. On May 2, 1931, Safe Deposit assigned to Barclay the assets held by it in its trust department. The agreement provided:

“Barclay hereby assumes, and hereby agrees to pay and discharge all of the liabilities and obligations of the Safe Deposit — principal and interest — which may *57 have accrued, to all of the beneficiaries, of and under the Trust Department of Safe Deposit, in the aggregate amounts as shown by the books of the Safe Deposit as of May 2nd, 1931, except such stock, bonds and other securities which are held in kind,” etc. and that,
“Under the direction of Barclay, partial or final accounts shall be filed in the several estates, constituting said Trust Department of said Safe Deposit, in the different Courts in which it may be necessary and essential so to do, and Barclay shall fully pay and discharge to the person or persons entitled to receive the same, the balances which may be shown by said accounts to be due and payable in the different trust estates, and other matters in which Safe Deposit has heretofore acted in a fiduciary capacity.”

The opinion of the learned judge states that with the approval of the Commissioner of Banking the agreement continued in effect until May 1, 1940, and that Safe Deposit’s corporate powers for liquidation purposes were terminated July 3,1940. He also stated that from May 3, 1931, until the account of the executors was filed in 1939, the “. . . estate was actually administered under the direction and at the discretion of the Barclay-Westmoreland Trust Company.”

In 1938, Barclay, having acquired both mortgages from Safe Deposit, as has been stated, entered judgment on the bond accompanying the second mortgage and issued execution. February 2, 1939, Barclay assigned both mortgages and the bond accompanying the first mortgage, and the judgment on the bond accompanying the second mortgage, to the testator’s executors and, next day, at the sheriff’s sale, the undivided two-thirds interest of Adrian and Dorzuk was bought for $1.00 by the executors. No interest on the mortgages had been paid since September 21,1929, the income from the property having been “consumed” as the learned judge found, “. . . by repairs, insurance, ete., without *58

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Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 507, 347 Pa. 53, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-estate-pa-1943.