In Re Estate of Stevenson

648 A.2d 559, 436 Pa. Super. 576, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2903
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 648 A.2d 559 (In Re Estate of Stevenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Stevenson, 648 A.2d 559, 436 Pa. Super. 576, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2903 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

FORD ELLIOTT, Judge:

Appellant comes before us challenging the Decree of the Orphans’ Court Division of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County. The Decree, dated September 3,1993, and entered September 7, 1993, dismissed appellant’s excep *577 tions to an earlier Opinion and Decree Nisi. The earlier Opinion and Decree Nisi was dated July 1, 1993, and was entered July 2, 1993. The Decree of September 1993 fully incorporated by reference the Decree Nisi of July 1993. The Decree Nisi of July 1993 held that the corpus of a tentative trust of which appellant was the beneficiary was liable to pay those estate expenses that exceeded the estate assets. We affirm.

The factual background is neither complex nor contested. Mark T. Stevenson died intestate August 11, 1991, survived by his wife and administratrix, Karen M. Stevenson, and by his mother, Elizabeth Stevenson, appellant herein. During his lifetime the decedent created several trust bank accounts naming appellant as beneficiary. The sum of these accounts totalled approximately $70,000. Upon the decedent’s death, appellant closed these trust accounts, taking the funds. Appellant filed Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax returns and paid the sums owed.

On October 1, 1992, the administratrix petitioned the court, pursuant to which the court ordered appellant to show cause why the trust accounts should not be made available for the payment of estate expenses. The court eventually issued the decrees now before us ordering that the trust accounts be made available.

Appellant raises a single issue for our review:

Are the proceeds of a settlor decedent’s ‘in trust for’ accounts liable for the payment of the decedent’s estate’s administrative expenses to the extent that they exceed estate assets?

Preliminarily, we must dispose of an issue raised by appellee that the orders appealed from are not final and appealable. Appellee’s theory here is that the lower court’s orders were not sufficiently explicit in stating which estate expenses, and in what amounts, could be charged against the trust accounts. Thus, appellee argues, if we uphold the decrees, the case may again be appealed on the issues of whether certain expenses *578 and amounts were properly charged against the trust accounts. We disagree.

Contrary to appellee’s assertion, the record below indicates to us which expenses may be charged against the trust accounts. Appellee’s Petition for Citation, at paragraph 6, specifically referenced the estate expenses involved here as being those listed on Schedule H of the Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax Return as filed. We note that Schedule H lists aggregate expenses of $17,357.30. These, then, are the expenses that the court allowed to be charged against the trust accounts. The decrees clearly indicate also that these expenses are to be charged to their full amount, to the extent that $17,357.30 exceeds the other assets of the estate. We see no uncertainty as to what expenses or in what amounts may be charged against the trust accounts. We now proceed with our analysis of the main issue presented.

Initially, we note our standard of review:

Our standard of review from a final order of the Orphans’ Court Division requires that we accord the findings of an Orphans’ Court, sitting without a jury, the same weight and effect as the verdict of a jury; we will not disturb those findings absent manifest error; as an appellate court we can modify an Orphans’ Court decree only if the findings upon which the decree rests are not supported by competent or adequate evidence or if there has been an error of law, an abuse of discretion, or a capricious disbelief of competent evidence. Estate of Keefauver, 359 Pa.Super. 336, 518 A.2d 1263 (1986); Estate of Kovalchick, 345 Pa.Super. 229, 498 A.2d 374 (1985); Estate of Gilbert, 343 [342] Pa.Super. 82, 492 A.2d 401 (1985).

In Re Benson, 419 Pa.Super. 582, 584, 615 A.2d 792, 793 (1992). Presently, appellant is not challenging findings of facts, but rather only conclusions of law. In particular, appellant objects to the trial court’s application of § 58 Restatement of Trusts, Second, comment (d) to the instant case. Appellant also argues that the statutory scheme enacted by the legislature to regulate trust accounts, 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 6301 et seq., applies certain aspects of § 58 of the Restatement, but *579 not the matter covered by comment (d), implying that the legislature has rejected comment (d) in so doing.

Since the Restatement of Trusts is so much at issue here, we should iterate the pertinent section, especially as it provides us with a definition of a tentative trust:

[§] 58. TENTATIVE TRUST OF SAVINGS DEPOSIT

Where a person makes a deposit in a savings account in a bank or other savings organization in his own name as trustee for another person intending to reserve a power to withdraw the whole or any part of the deposit at any time during his lifetime and to use as his own whatever he may withdraw, or otherwise to revoke the trust, the intended trust is enforceable by the beneficiary upon the death of the depositor as to any part remaining on deposit on his death if he has not revoked the trust.

d. Creditors of depositor. Although creditors of the settlor cannot reach the trust property merely because he has reserved a power of revocation (see § 330, Comment o), creditors of a person who makes a savings deposit upon a tentative trust can reach his interest, since he has such extensive powers over the deposit as to justify treating him as in substance the unrestricted owner of the deposit. So also, on the death of the depositor if the deposit is needed for the payment of his debts, his creditors can reach it. So also, if it is needed it can be applied to the payment of his funeral expenses and the expenses of the administration of his estate, if he has not sufficient other property which can be applied for these purposes.

Restatement of the Law, Second, Trusts, § 58 and comment (d) (emphasis added).

Initially, we disagree with appellant’s statement at page 11 of her brief that no appellate court in this Commonwealth has ever adopted § 58 of the Restatement of Trusts, Second, as the law of this Commonwealth. Our appellate courts have recognized § 58 as controlling in the Commonwealth on numerous occasions. Our cases generally trace the adoption of *580 the principle enunciated in § 58 to Scanlon’s Estate, 313 Pa. 424, 169 A. 106 (1933). Scanlon’s Estate does not specifically mention § 58, but rather embraces the concept of the tentative trust as espoused by the seminal case, In re Totten, 179 N.Y. 112, 71 N.E. 748 (1904). The earliest recitation to § 58 as authority which we have found occurred in Banca D'Italia & Trust Company v. Giordano,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
648 A.2d 559, 436 Pa. Super. 576, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-stevenson-pasuperct-1994.