In Re: Jackson, J. Appeal of: Townsend, P.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 7, 2017
Docket61 WDA 2017
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Jackson, J. Appeal of: Townsend, P. (In Re: Jackson, J. Appeal of: Townsend, P.) 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: Jackson, J. Appeal of: Townsend, P., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-A24024-17

2017 PA Super 350

IN RE: JOHN E. JACKSON AND SUE M. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF JACKSON CHARITABLE TRUST PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: POLLY J. TOWNSEND AND WILLIAM R. JACKSON, JR.

No. 61 WDA 2017

Appeal from the Order Dated December 7, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Orphans' Court at No(s): 3999 of 1988

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., SOLANO, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

OPINION BY SOLANO, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 07, 2017

This case arises out of a dispute between the individual trustees

(Appellants Polly J. Townsend and William R. Jackson, Jr.) and the corporate

trustee (Appellee PNC Bank, N.A.) of the John E. Jackson and Sue M.

Jackson Charitable Trust (“Trust”). Townsend and Jackson (hereinafter,

“Individual Trustees”) appeal from a December 7, 2016 Orphans’ Court order

entered under Section 7763(a.1) of the Uniform Trust Act (“UTA”), 1 that

resolved that dispute by limiting the amount that could be distributed by the

Trust to charities in 2016 and by designating which charities could receive

distributions from the Trust that year. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

____________________________________________ 1 20 Pa. C.S. § 7763(a.1). J-A24024-17

The settlors, John E. Jackson and Sue M. Jackson (referenced in the

Trust Agreement — and hence in this opinion — as “Grantors”) established

the Trust on February 6, 1950. John Jackson lived until April of 1971, and

Sue Jackson lived until January of 1994. The Trust Agreement named two

trustees, W.R. Jackson (John E. Jackson’s brother) and Commonwealth Trust

Company of Pittsburgh.

The Trust Agreement provided, in part:

4. This trust is created solely for charitable purposes, and the income and principal of the trust estate is to be used for the sole benefit of public charities in the manner hereinafter set forth. ....

6. The Trustees shall distribute the income of the trust fund among such public charities created for religious, educational or other charitable purposes as they in their sole discretion may deem proper. The Grantors may from time to time suggest to the Trustees specific charitable institutions or charitable causes to which they would like contributions made by the Trustees but the Trustees are in no manner obligated to follow the requests of the Grantors but, on the contrary, may distribute the income and principal of the trust fund for such charitable purposes as they in their sole discretion may determine.

The Trustees shall from year to year determine what amounts of both income and principal of the trust fund shall be distributed to charitable institutions or for charitable purposes, and it is understood that there is to be no limitation placed on the discretion of the Trustees with respect to the amount of principal or income paid at any one time or to any one charity.

7. This charitable trust shall continue until the expiration of three years after the date when its assets have been entirely depleted. The Grantors may add additional assets to the trust at any time within three years after all of the assets of the trust have been exhausted; but if after a period of three years from the exhaustion of the trust fund no assets have been contributed to the trust fund by the Grantors, then at the end of such three -2- J-A24024-17

year period this Agreement shall be considered as having been cancelled by the parties hereto and the trust thereupon finally terminated.

Upon the death or resignation of W.R. Jackson, the Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh will select another in his place from the officers of the Pittsburgh-Des Moines Company; and if said Commonwealth Trust Company shall merge with another trust institution, the merged institution together with W.R. Jackson, or his successor, shall continue to act as Trustee.

Trust Agreement at ¶¶ 4, 6-7.

Trustee W.R. Jackson resigned in 1989. At that time, none of the

officers of the Pittsburgh-Des Moines Company was willing to act as the

individual trustee. The Orphans’ Court appointed Appellant Polly J.

Townsend, W.R.’s daughter, as the next individual trustee.2 In connection

with the resignation of Jackson and the appointment of Townsend, the

trustees filed their First and Partial Account, which the Orphans’ Court

confirmed.

On May 25, 1994, Townsend resigned as the individual trustee. The

trustees then filed a Second and Partial Account. No new individual trustee

was appointed at that time.

On January 29, 1998, the Orphans’ Court re-appointed Townsend as

the individual trustee. The court also modified the succession provision of

the Trust Agreement to state:

____________________________________________ 2 Although she was not at that time an officer of the Pittsburgh-Des Moines Company, Townsend was on the board of directors of the company, and had previously been an officer of the company.

-3- J-A24024-17

There shall always be two trustees acting hereunder, National City Bank of Pennsylvania and its successors and an individual trustee who is a member of the Jackson family. Upon the death, resignation or inability to serve of any individual co-trustee, the corporate trustee shall select as his or her successor a member of the Jackson family, subject to the approval of a court of competent jurisdiction.

Order, 1/29/98. National City Bank of Pennsylvania was a successor in

interest to Commonwealth Trust Company.

On or about April 1, 2005, Townsend and National City Bank filed a

Third and Partial Account in the Orphans’ Court. They also filed a petition to

reform the Trust to provide for two individual trustees and to appoint

Townsend’s brother, William R. Jackson, Jr., as the second individual

trustee. On May 24, 2005, the Orphans’ Court approved the Third and

Partial Account and entered an order reforming the Trust’s appointment

provision to state:

There shall always be three trustees acting hereunder, National City Bank of Pennsylvania and its successors, which shall possess at all times one-half of the voting power of the trustees, and two individual trustees who are members of the Jackson family, each of whom shall possess at all times one- fourth of the voting power of the trustees. Upon the death, resignation or inability to serve of any of then serving individual co-trustee, his or her successor shall be such member of the Jackson family designated as such by said co-trustee at or before the time he or she ceases to so serve. In the event that an individual co-trustee ceases to serve without designating his or her successor, the other then serving individual co-trustee shall designate a member of the Jackson family to fill such vacancy, or if no such designation has been made, the successor individual co-trustee shall be such member of the Jackson family designated to serve by the oldest living grandchild of William R. Jackson competent to make such designation. . . .

-4- J-A24024-17

Order, 5/24/05. The court also approved the appointment of William R.

Jackson, Jr. as the second individual trustee.

In 2006, Individual Trustees decided that they wanted to terminate the

Trust. When National City Bank opposed the termination, Individual

Trustees filed a petition in the Orphans’ Court seeking to remove and replace

National City Bank with a corporate trustee that would cooperate in

terminating the Trust or, in the alternative, to terminate the Trust

immediately. Individual Trustees explained:

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