In re the Estate of Pelcyger

157 Misc. 913, 285 N.Y.S. 723, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 957
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 157 Misc. 913 (In re the Estate of Pelcyger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Pelcyger, 157 Misc. 913, 285 N.Y.S. 723, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 957 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

Whereas the financial results to any party to this contested accounting proceeding will vary only to a comparatively insignificant degree, no matter what result is achieved in the determination of the presently Utigated issues, the underlying principles involved are of vast significance, not merely to the present adversaries, but to a preponderant proportion of persons, whether trustees or beneficiaries, who have to do with trust estates.

The questions involved concern the relative rights and obligations of trustees, fife tenants and remaindermen where mortgages, which were a part of the trust corpus, have defaulted, and where the trustees have attempted salvage operations, either by [915]*915foreclosure or other means. This is a situation which has occurred with ever-increasing frequency since the financial debacle of the fall of 1929 overturned existing standards of values, and happy, indeed, is the trust estate which has not in the interval encountered an experience of this variety.

Unfortunately, as will hereinafter appear, the rules of conduct in such situations, heretofore formulated by the courts, are in somewhat serious conflict, with the result that the legion of affected interests has been compelled to flounder in semi-darkness with no adequate judicial guidance to illuminate the path which they should pursue.

The affairs of the present estate present such a varied series of diverse situations that it is to be hoped that their solution may afford material aid in most of the problems of this variety which have already arisen and whose solution will be required with increasing frequency during the next few years.

The present decedent died on September 25, 1929, leaving a will executed on November 15, 1926. By its terms, after the deduction of a specific bequest of his personal belongings and two general legacies, aggregating $10,000, his entire estate was devised and bequeathed to his testamentary fiduciaries in trust: “ To invest the principal thereof and reinvest the same and pay the income thereof as and when the same accrues, to my beloved wife, Fannie, during the term of her natural life.”

Upon her death the remainder of the trust was given to others.

At the time of the death of the testator his estate was valued at approximately $143,000, consisting of one parcel of improved and income-producing realty, valued at $27,500, $1,447.40 in cash, other miscellaneous personal property appraised at $1,383, and thirty-five bonds secured by second mortgages on real property, possessing an aggregate estimated worth of $111,371.86.

The will contained no express authorization to the fiduciaries to hold other than legally authorized investments and its ninth item expressly limited their investments to securities of this type. By reason of the promptness after the death of the testator of the incidence of the general financial downfall, the executor-trustees were, no doubt, prevented from effecting a voluntary liquidation of these non-legal securities in the usual course. No one complains of this fact, however, and it is, therefore, not a present issue.

The situation in this regard, therefore, is that the present accountants have properly continued to hold as the investments of the trust an improved parcel of real property and a considerable number of bonds secured by second mortgages. In the process [916]*916they have encountered many of the vicissitudes attending such assets during the-intervening period. That they have acted with diligence and judgment in solving the problems which have arisen, is best attested by the fact that no objections have been interposed to their acts in this regard, the sole points of difference asserted concerning the proposed method of allocation of the proceeds of the salvage operations which have been made necessary by reason of defaults upon some of the properties and securities held.

In their advocacy of applicable principles of allocation of proceeds, the parties are divided into four camps: First, the two individual trustees; second, the corporate trustee (hereinafter designated “ the bank ”); third, the adult remaindermen, and fourth, the special guardian for infant remaindermen. No two of these wholly agree respecting the principles properly applicable. The life tenant is not separately represented, but her interests appear to be fully protected by the first two parties named.

The briefs of all of the litigants are lucid and helpful to an unusual degree. Each states its premises and arguments clearly and with as great brevity as the circumstances will permit, and to each of the four able arrays of counsel the court gladly pays its debt of gratitude for their constructive assistance in the solution of the problems presented for decision.

The properties in relation to the affairs of which issues have arisen are eleven in number, and since the events which have transpired in respect to each differ in some respect, it becomes necessary at the outset to define the salient points in respect to each case.

The first is designated “ K-ll.” This was a bond of Eva and Anna Gutkovitz secured by second mortgage on premises 2030 East Twelfth street, Brooklyn. It was originally in the sum of $2,500, but was, prior to default, reduced to $1,550 by amortization payments. Interest at the reserved rate of six per cent was paid to February 14, 1934, but not thereafter. On June 23, 1934, an arrangement was made for an exchange for Home Owners’ Loan Corporation three per cent bonds, and on that date the trustees received:

Authorization for three per cent H. O. L. C. bonds of
a face value of................................... $1,150 00
Accrued interest on said bonds...................... 4 97
Cash adjustment.................................. 20 03
Total......................................$1,175 00

[917]*917The bonds themselves were received on August 16, 1934, and were promptly sold on the open market, yielding $1,141.02, and thus showing the following gross receipts:

Proceeds of bonds.................................$1,141 02
Accrued interest to sale............................ 10 06
Cash adjustment.................................. 20 03
Total......................................$1,171 11

The individual trustees propose to allocate $1,139.88 to principal and $31.23 to income, basing their allowance on an income computation at six per cent to June twenty-third and at four per cent thereafter, giving a total earned income of $42.46 which is added to the unpaid principal, giving a total investment of $1,592.46. The ultimate sum realized is then prorated on the basis of 42.46/1592.46 to income and the balance to principal.

The bank adopts the same general method of allocation but figures income at six per cent from the date of default to the date of receipt and sale of the bonds, which results in giving principal $1,136.44 and income $34.67.

The remaindermen and guardian adopt the position that no income should be paid the life tenant except that which was actually received, apparently, therefore, assigning $5.09 to income and $1,166.02 to principal.

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Bluebook (online)
157 Misc. 913, 285 N.Y.S. 723, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-pelcyger-nysurct-1936.