Lare Estate

84 A.2d 334, 368 Pa. 570, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 508
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1951
DocketAppeal, 100
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 84 A.2d 334 (Lare Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lare Estate, 84 A.2d 334, 368 Pa. 570, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 508 (Pa. 1951).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Ladner,

The Fidelity Trust Company of Pittsburgh filed its first and partial account as administrator d.b.n. of the *571 Estate of Gertrude K Lare, deceased. Marcellus R. Lare, Jr., surviving spouse, filed certain objections to tbe confirmation of the account which were dismissed by the auditing judge and exceptions to the auditing judge’s adjudication were later dismissed by the court en banc, from which we have this appeal by Marcellus R. Lare, Jr.

From the learned auditing judge’s adjudication we take the following statement of preliminary facts concerning this estate. “Gertrude K. Lare died on June 25th, 1942. On July 31, 1942, Marcellus R. Lare, Jr., the surviving husband, caused to be probated as her will a typewritten writing on the face of a bank check. On the same date letters of administration c.t.a. on the estate were granted to Mr. Lare, the exceptant in the present proceeding. As administrator c.t.a. Mr. Lare came into possession of the assets of the estate consisting of personal effects, furniture, an automobile, jewelry, cash, and securities. In December of 1942 the brothers and sister of the decedent appealed from the probate of the will, charging it to be a forgery. After a long hearing a decree nisi was entered in November, 1943, sustaining the appeal and revoking the letters of administration granted to Mr. Lare. On December 30, 1943, the decree nisi was made absolute by a decree of the Orphans’ Court in banc.

“The final decree of December 30, 1943, terminated Mr. Lare’s right to administer the estate. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania reversed so much of the decree of the Orphans’ Court as refused an issue devisavit vel non. The portion of the decree removing Mr. Lare as administrator c.t.a. was not disturbed.

“During the seventeen-month period that he was administrator of the estate, Mr. Lare filed no inventory or account nor was anything done by him towards the settlement or payment of State or Federal taxes.

*572 “The Fidelity Trust Company was appointed administrator d.b.n. 1 of Mrs. Fare’s estate on January 6, 1944, one week after the letters of administration c.t.a. issued to Mr. Fare had been revoked. The administrator d.b.n. has filed a First and Partial Account on December 2nd, 1949, covering its administration of the estate from January 6th, 1944, to October 28, 1949. A final accounting in this estate must abide the final disposition of the pending will contest.’ ’

At the audit of the account the principal objections were to the items of credit taken as compensation of the administrator and to fees of its counsel. The account shows a gross estate of principal $78,381.22, on which the accountant claimed credit for compensation at the rate of 5%, or $3,919.06. The account also shows income collected in the sum of $90,354.67, against which credit is claimed also at 5% or $4,517.73. The credit claimed for counsel fees of administrator’s counsel was for the sum of $12,500. Much testimony was taken by the learned auditing judge during four days of hearings, all of which had his careful consideration.

In the appeal before us learned counsel for the appellant objects to the amount of commissions allowed on principal because it included commissions calculated on an item of $9,179.13, being a surcharge obtained against the appellant, Mareellus R. Fare, Jr., who had been removed as administrator c.t.a. It seems this surcharge was not actually paid to the accountant because it was agreed to be charged against Fare’s ultimate share as an advance in distribution. It is also contended *573 the total amount of commission claimed on principal is excessive. We see no need to pass on these questions now because the whole credit item of commission on principal is prematurely taken. We have here only a first and partial account. It is not a proper practice for an executor or administrator to claim his commissions on undistributed principal until the final account is filed and his duties terminated (Williamson Estate, 368 Pa. 343, 82 A. 2d 49 [1951]) though he may claim on such part of principal as is distributed: Scull’s Estate, 249 Pa. 57, 94 A. 476 (1915). The credit item of $3,-919.06 for compensation of executor on principal must thus be stricken out, without prejudice however to accountant’s right to claim the same in its final account.

Commissions on income however are properly chargeable now because commissions on income are ordinarily considered earned when the income is collected: L. E. Horwitz’s Estate, 7 Pa. Dist. (1898) ( Penrose, J.). The only objection made to the credit item of commissions on income is to that calculated on that part of the income received as dividends on the stock of the United Pocahontas Coal Co., which appellant states represents depletion of that corporation’s assets. The record is barren of any proof that that corporation’s assets were depleted in producing the earnings from which the dividends were paid. At the audit the appellant’s counsel asked administrator’s trust officer how much of the Pocahontas Stock income ($80,712.00) constituted depletion of the $46,020.00 included in the principal account as the value of the stock. The witness was unable to answer. We understand the appellant’s point to be, if part of the income of $80,712.00 received as dividends was in fact a return of part of the value of the capital stock included in the principal account then there would be duplication of commissions if 5% were charged on both items. This, however, must be =hown and we cannot pass on that question now because *574 of absence of proof. In any event there is no need to pass on the question now in view of the fact that we have stricken out all commissions on principal. Appellant will have ample opportunity to prove such duplication if he can when commissions on principal come again before the court for approval on final accounting.

Concerning appellant’s contention that the sum of $12,500 paid to the administrator’s counsel for services rendered to date was excessive, the learned auditing judge found: .“The services rendered by counsel to the administrator d.b.n. were extensive and varied. There is in evidence Exhibit No. 4, setting forth on twenty-nine pages of legal-size paper a detailed statement of the services rendered by counsel to the administrator d.b.n. of this estate. This statement, as well as the testimony in the record, has been considered in measuring the value of the services rendered. Counsel successfully resisted the effort of Mr. Lare to prevent the grant of letters of administration d.b.n. to the Fidelity Trust Company and, thereafter, his effort to have the letters revoked. It became necessary to proceed against Mr. Lare for possession of the personal property of the estate. This matter was conducted by counsel with satisfactory results. Exceptions on behalf of the administrator d.b.n. to the inventory and appraisement and the account filed by Mr. Lare as administrator c.t.a. of the estate were prepared and filed by counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
84 A.2d 334, 368 Pa. 570, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lare-estate-pa-1951.