Kaufmann's Estate

8 A.2d 472, 137 Pa. Super. 88, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1939
DocketAppeal, 323
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 472 (Kaufmann's Estate) 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
Kaufmann's Estate, 8 A.2d 472, 137 Pa. Super. 88, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This appeal is from a decree of the orphans’ court dismissing exceptions to the adjudication of an account of a testamentary trustee.

The appellant seeks to surcharge the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting An- *90 unities, hereinafter referred to as the trust company, one of the three trustees under the will of Morris A. Kaufmann, deceased.

The testator died April 19, 1932, and by his will, dated January 30th of that year, set up a trust, naming his wife, Alice G. Kaufmann, Berthold Strauss, and the trust company as trustees. The widow was given the entire income from the residuary estate for life, with the right to use so much of the principal as she desired.

The question before us is whether the trust company is obliged to pay testator’s widow four per cent interest over a certain period on all uninvested trust balances of the estate held by its banking department.

On June 16, 1930, the testator signed and gave to the trust company the following letter: “Dear Sirs: In consideration of my estate being entitled to the protection of the ‘Reserve Fund for Trust Balances’ created by The Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities under and by virtue of the Act of April 3, 1872, securing any uninvested balances of principal and income awaiting distribution, I agree that all uninvested balances of principal and income awaiting distribution in my estate, if any, may be held by The Pennsylvania Company for Insurance on Lives and Granting Annuities on deposit in its Banking Department, upon the understanding that all uninvested balances of principal so on deposit shall bear interest at the rate of four per cent per annum.” This letter was written and delivered before testator made his will. The trust company did nothing more than receive it.

The trust company accepted the trust under the will and received, on July 9,1934, cash totalling $100,541.77 from the estate which had a value of over $600,000. Endeavors were made to invest this money, but on April 30,1935, almost a year after its receipt, $47,702.63 remained uninvested. Interest, however, at the rate of *91 four per cent was paid appellant by the trust company to that date on the uninvested balance.

The appellant, in her exceptions, claims four per cent interest on the uninvested balance of the estate held by the trust company in its banking department between April 30, 1935, and August 25, 1937, which, it is agreed, totals $2,196.76, the amount in dispute.

The orphans’ court dismissed appellant’s exceptions and refused to allow her interest during the period in question, on three grounds, namely: (1) testator’s letter of June 16, 1930, was merely an authorization to the trust company to keep the trust funds on deposit in its own banking department, and was not a contract under which it was to pay four per cent on uninvested balances; (2) even if such a contract did exist between the testator and the trust company, it was against public policy and was rendered inoperative by both federal and state laws forbidding the payment of interest on demand deposits; (3) appellant, by her unwarranted objections to the purchase of securities recommended by the corporate trustee, was primarily responsible for its failure to invest the cash, and, therefore, as principal beneficiary, she should not, in equity, be permitted to recover interest from her cotrustee. This appeal followed.

(1) The appellant contends that there existed a contract between the testator and the trust company, by which the latter was obliged to pay interest at the rate of four per cent per annum on all uninvested balances of principal held by the trust company. The appellee, on the other hand, argues that there was no such contractual obligation, that the letter of June 16, 1930, cannot be construed as a promise upon the part of the trust company to pay interest as it was signed by Kaufmann alone and, therefore, did not constitute a contract. In other words, the letter should be regarded simply as evidence of authorization to the trust company to retain the uninvested funds in its own *92 banking department, subject to a condition to pay four per cent interest, without requiring any contractual performance upon its part; if the interest was not paid, the permission terminated.

In determining this dispute, it is incumbent upon us to try to arrive at the intention of the parties. It is well recognized that if the language used is uncertain or susceptible of more than one construction, “the court may consider the nature and situation of . the subject-matter and the apparent purpose or object in making the contract in the form in which it was made or of using a particular expression or sentence. ‘The situation in which the parties stand, the necessities for which they would naturally provide, the conveniences they would probably seek to secure, and the circumstances and relations of the property in regard to which they have negotiated, are all elements in the interpretation of an ambiguous contract’: Wilson v. Wernwag, 217 Pa. 82, 87 [66 A. 242]”: Bangor Peerless Slate Co. v. Bangorvein Slate Co. et al., 270 Pa. 161, 165, 113 A. 190. To the same effect, see Myers’ Estate, 238 Pa. 195, 211, 86 A. 89; Alcorn Combustion Co. v. Kellogg Co., 311 Pa. 270, 274, 166 A. 862; Calvey v. Coyer, 121 Pa. Superior Ct. 504, 507, 184 A. 279. The general rule governing the interpretation of contracts applies not only where there is an admitted contract under consideration, but also where the controversy is whether there is a contract: Eestatement, Contracts §226 (Comment a). “Whether the parties are merely negotiating a contract, or entering into a present contract, is purely a question of intention”: Windsor Mfg. Co. v. S. Makransky & Sons, 322 Pa. 466, 472, 186 A. 84.

It must be borne in mind that the letter of June 16, 1930, prepared by the trust company, was in accordance with its practice of requiring express permission of each testator to retain uninvested funds in its own hands. We think it is quite obvious that that was its primary purpose. The letter, written more than four *93 years before tbe company received tbe money and began administering the trust, was signed by tbe testator alone; it is wholly unilateral and contains no promise, express or implied, upon tbe part of tbe trust company to pay interest on uninvested balances. In tbe absence of any additional undertaking, the duties of tbe corporate trustee under a trust set up by testator’s will, were only those that tbe law imposed upon it. Here, as in any case where a claim rests upon an alleged contract, tbe appellant bad tbe burden of showing tbe appellee’s promise to pay four per cent interest on uninvested balances held by it, which we think she failed to carry. Tbe only circumstance in tbe record which evidences such an intention of tbe parties is tbe payment of interest for a certain period. This fact alone did not create an obligation upon tbe part of the trust company to pay interest indefinitely.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 472, 137 Pa. Super. 88, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufmanns-estate-pasuperct-1939.