In re Schwartz

34 A.2d 275, 27 Del. Ch. 223, 1943 Del. Ch. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 30, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 A.2d 275 (In re Schwartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Schwartz, 34 A.2d 275, 27 Del. Ch. 223, 1943 Del. Ch. LEXIS 50 (Del. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Pearson, Vice-Chancellor:

The accounting period involved is from the date of the appointment of the former trustee, May 9, 1928, to July 31, 1929. Only the intervenor United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company filed briefs in opposition to the exceptions, but the contentions urged were concurred in by the former trustee and the other intervenor. Hence, arguments referred to in this opinion as made by the intervenor should be understood as having been made by the former trustee as well as both intervenors. The exceptions will be taken up separately.

Second Amended Exception 1—A:

“l-A. Exception is taken to the item entitled ‘Income Over-Expended’, appearing on Schedule K, captioned ‘Income Expended,’ of said Account, totaling $8,781.18, because there resulted therefrom a loss to the trust estate from this invasion of the trust corpus which the Trustee was neither empowered nor authorized to incur, and the Trustee was neither empowered nor authorized to make any of the disbursements appearing in Schedule K out of the trust corpus, all of which disbursements resulted in loss to the trust estate.”

To enable a better understanding of the exception, most of Schedule K of the account will be quoted:

Income Expended
Expenses on Real Estate (Schedule 8) ........................................ $24,005.70
Interest on notes payable (schedule 10) ........................................ 387.90
Recording fees (schedule 11) .......................................................... 137.25
Legal fees (schedule 12) .................................................................... 1,806.64
Accountant fees (schedule 13) ........................................................ 1,314.45
Inspection fees—incident to Liberty Bldg. & Loan Assn. mortgage ........................................................................................ 65.00
Fidelity bond for Trustee (schedule 14) .................................... 1,129.65
Collector of Internal Revenue—Federal Income Tax— Sarah Schwartz ............................................................................ 20.99
Office expenses (schedule 15) ...................................................... 1,533.47
[226]*226Miscellaneous expenses (schedule 9) ............................................ 1,553.55
Allowances:
Sarah K. Schwartz .................................................... $2,800.00
Mollie Schwartz ........................................................ 3,100.00
Goldie Schwartz ........................................................ 3,100.00
Dora Schwartz .......................................................... 3,100.00 12,100.00
Loss of Income: * * * [Involved in collection of rents] ............ 50.00
Commission paid to Wm. Schwartz, Trustee representing 7.34% of the income received (7.34% of $38,124.56) ........ 2,801.14
46,905.74
Income Over-expended.......................................... [Red figures] 8,781.18
$38,124.56

The successor trustee takes the position that “the disbursements in Schedule K, except the allowances to the children [Mollie, Goldie and Dora Schwartz, daughters of the insane person], represent the necessary expenses of administering the trust and consequently had a claim on available income which was prior to the claim of the grown children to such income”; that “no authority can be found in the pleadings which authorized the accountant to charge any of the disbursements in Schedule K to disbursements from the trust corpus”; that the income for the period covered “was more than sufficient to pay all the disbursements therefrom except the allowances to the children”; that “at least $8,781.18 of the allowances to the children was paid from the trust corpus”; that the former trustee was not authorized to make the allowances out of the trust corpus; that “having shown an unauthorized invasion of the trust corpus with the consequent loss to the trust estate, the exceptant has shown a breach of trust and resultant damage to the trust estate sufficient to sustain the burden of proof imposed upon him.” The exceptant relies upon the well recognized principle, stated in 2 Scott on Trusts, § 245, as follows:

[227]*227“If the trustee exceeds his powers in incurring an expense, and no benefit is conferred thereby upon the trust estate, he is not entitled to indemnity for the expense thus incurred. * * *”

At the hearing, the intervenor moved that the exception be dismissed. A ruling was deferred, with the understanding that additional evidence might be offered if the motion should be denied.

There can be no question that, in Delaware, the powers impliedly conferred by the appointment of a trustee for an insane person do not include authority to distribute any of the property of the lunatic, principal or income, to adult children. An allowance of items of such disbursements, upon an accounting by the trustee, must depend upon special authorization prior to the payments, or subsequent approval and ratification by the court.

By a petition filed on May 23, 1928, the former trustee prayed for authority “to expend from the net income received by him as Trustee,” for the support and maintenance of the insane person and her three daughters, Mollie, Goldie and Dora Schwartz, the sum of $50 a week for each. He averred in the petition that “the net income from the Estate of the said Sarah K. Schwartz from real estate rentals alone is in excess of Fifteen Thousand Dollars ($15,000.00) per annum; that interest on mortgages held by the said Trustee and other securities belonging to the said Sarah K. Schwartz will increase the annual income of said Estate to a sum in excess of Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000.00).” It appears from the petition that the three daughters had attained majority, but had been supported by their mother prior to the adjudication of incompetency. Annexed to the petition are affidavits of the daughters in which each stated that she was “personally acquainted with the income” of her mother’s estate and that she knew and averred “that the income from said estate is ample to provide a weekly payment of One hundred and fifty ($150.) dollars for the support of” herself, her two sisters and one Dorothy [228]*228Schwartz, described as an infant and a ward of the insane person.

An order upon the petition was entered on May 23, 1928. It recites, among other things, the following:

“* * * it appearing that all of the persons who would be entitled to the Estate of the said Sarah K. Schwartz in the event of her death consent to the granting of the prayers of said petition * * * and it further appearing that the said Sarah K. Schwartz would make similar provision for the support and maintenance of said daughters were she not of unsound mind, * f (Italics supplied)

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Bluebook (online)
34 A.2d 275, 27 Del. Ch. 223, 1943 Del. Ch. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schwartz-delch-1943.