Kates's Estate

5 Pa. D. & C. 569, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 187
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Chester County
DecidedAugust 25, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Pa. D. & C. 569 (Kates's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kates's Estate, 5 Pa. D. & C. 569, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 187 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Hause, J.,

The father of the present decedent died testate in 1895 and gave the residue of his estate to his executors in trust for investment and payment of income to his two children, this decedent and a daughter, for life. Each child was given unlimited power, by the father’s will, to dispose of half of the corpus of that residue “for the use and benefit of such person or persons and for such estates and uses as said child by his or her last will and testament may direct, limit and appoint.”

The son died testate in 1922, leaving to survive him a widow and two sons. The opening clause of his will is this: “I make this will to dispose of as well my own property as the property over which I have a power of appointment under the will of my father.” His own estate amounted, approximately, to $19,000 and the estate over which he had power of appointment to $180,000.

Without any reference to the corpus of the trust estate under his father’s will, except the clause quoted, he blended that estate with his individual estate and disposed of both without distinction and without any effort at separation. He gave legacies to and for certain individuals, directed the payment of his debts out of his personal estate and the residue he gave to his executors in trust for the benefit of his wife as to the income of half of it during her life and the other half to his two sons when they respectively reached the age of twenty-five. The legacies he gave are far in excess of his individual estate.

The widow elected to take against the will, and the auditor held that the estate over which he had power to appoint was not part of her deceased husband’s estate and that a widow’s share thereof could not be awarded to her.

So far as we are aware, the precise question here presented has not been decided by either of our appellate courts, but, in view of the trend of recent judicial expressions, and in view of the language of the will and the manner in which the testator dealt with the estate over which he had the power of appointment, our conclusion must be that that estate is also subject to the claim of the widow.

[570]*570Many years ago, Chief Justice Gibson, in speaking of an estate over which a power of appointment may be exercised, said: “An appointee derives title immediately from the donor of the power by the instrument in which it was created, and, consequently, not under but paramount to the appointor by whom it was executed. ... It is the bounty of the testator and not the property of his steward that is to be dispensed:” Com. v. Duffield, 12 Pa. 277. In this case the Chief Justice repudiated the doctrine of the English courts to the effect that such property was liable for the debts of the person having the power, and said of a recent decision upholding that view: “The learned and excellent Master of the Rolls had forgotten, for the moment, the broad line of distinction between property and power.”

Prior to the passage of the Act of June 4, 1879, P. L. 88, questions frequently arose as to whether, by general language in a will, testators who had power to appoint had exercised the power. To avoid these controversies, that act provides, in substance, that a general devise of realty or bequest of personalty shall operate as an execution of such power, unless a contrary intention appear in the will.

The doctrine stated by Chief Justice Gibson continued in force and has been consistently applied to the effect that “the appointees do not take through the donee, but by virtue of the original will creating the power:” Huddy’s Estate, 236 Pa. 276. Hence, in the case just cited, where a testatrix had power of appointment over a fund and made a will disposing of property without any mention, directly or indirectly, of the power or directing the payment of her debts, it was held that the general language used included both her own property and that over which she had power of appointment, and that, in the latter property, her husband could not share when he elected to take against her will, for the reason stated in the opinion, that “when her will, the instrument exercising the power, went into effect, the property vested in them (her legatees) under and by virtue of the original will creating the power.” The court, speaking by Justice Moschzisker, added these significant words: “This is not an instance where the donee of the power, either expressly or by implication, appointed the fund for the payment of her debts, nor did she so blend the fund with her own assets that it is impracticable to pay directly to her appointees. . . . Since there are sufficient funds in the estate of the donee to pay her pecuniary legacies in full, there is no necessity for applying the Act of 1879 so as to throw them upon the trust fund, and the law will not assume that the donee of the power intended to so exercise it; therefore, those to whom she left pecuniary and specific legacies have no interest in this fund, nor, under the facts of the case, have the donee’s creditors. It is not necessary to decide what the result would be under other circumstances.”

It follows from the language just quoted that a testator might so blend his individual estate with that over which he had power to appoint as to properly conclude that he had made the latter his own. This suggested situation was presented in McCord’s Estate, 276 Pa. 459, where a testatrix, with power to dispose by will of the corpus of a trust estate under her father’s will, declared, in the opening clause of her will, as follows: “It is my intention by this my will to dispose not only of all estate and property which I own or hold in' my own right, but also all over which I have any power of appointment, and especially that devised or bequeathed to me by the will of my father, and it is my further intention that the entire estate and property shall be administered by my executors for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of my will.” She then directed the payment of her debts and funeral expenses and gave [571]*571legacies totaling $55,000, and directed that the inheritance or succession taxes thereon should he paid out of the residuary estate. Her individual estate amounted to $23,500 and the trust estate under her father’s will to $77,000. All of the legatees were collateral to her, but many were lineal descendants of her father, and in the settlement of the estate her executors blended the two funds and the Commonwealth claimed collateral tax on the aggregate, notwithstanding that numerous legatees were her father’s lineals, to whom, by the power of appointment, she had given the corpus of her father’s estate. If, therefore, the well-established doctrine that these lineals, as appointees, took their legacies from the donor through the donee as the “steward” of the fund, and not as parts of the donee’s estate, applied, the tax was not collectible. But the Supreme Court, speaking by Justice Walling, in sustaining the Commonwealth’s claim, said: “The general rule undoubtedly is that an estate given under a power of appointment passes to the appointee from the donor and forms no part of the estate of the donee. ... In such case, where the appointee is a lineal descendant of the donor, the legacy is not subject to collateral inheritance tax.” With the old rule thus recognized, it was not possible to subject the legacies of the lineals to tax unless the entire blended estates were to be treated as the individual estate of the donee of the power, and so they were treated.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Duffield
12 Pa. 277 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1849)
Huddy's Estate
84 A. 909 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)
McCord's Estate
120 A. 413 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1923)
Forney's Estate
124 A. 424 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. D. & C. 569, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katess-estate-paorphctcheste-1924.