Liberty Title and Trust Co. v. Stevens

171 A. 531, 115 N.J. Eq. 506, 14 Backes 506, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 123
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 24, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 171 A. 531 (Liberty Title and Trust Co. v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Title and Trust Co. v. Stevens, 171 A. 531, 115 N.J. Eq. 506, 14 Backes 506, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 123 (N.J. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

This bill is filed by the executors of the estate of George K. Breintnall, deceased, to have their rights and duties declared under a will and four codicils thereto, and complainants have made parties defendants, ten individuals who are pecuniary legatees under the eleventh clause of the will (hereinafter, for convenience, referred to as individual legatees), and also six charitable institutions also mentioned in said eleventh clause (hereinafter, for convenience, referred to as ultimate legatees), as well as six annuitants mentioned in the third codicil annexed to the will (hereinafter, for convenience, referred to as annuitants).

A construction of the eleventh paragraph aforesaid is necessary in order to give to complainant the advice sought for. It reads as follows:

"Eleventh: I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my Estate, real, personal and mixed, whatsoever and wheresoever situate, in possession or in expectancy, unto the said Frank Disston (my wife's son) and the Girard Trust Company, their Heirs, Executors, Administrators, Assigns and Successors, in trust nevertheless, to collect, receive and recover the rents, income and profits thereof, and to pay the net income thereof unto my said wife, Kate Ella Breintnall, for and during the term of her natural life for her sole and separate use, free from her debts, contracts, engagements or assignments, and free from anticipation, attachment, or execution; and from and immediately after the decease of my said wife, Kate Ella Breintnall, to distribute and pay over out of the said residue of the principal and any unexpended *Page 508 income, as follows: to my intimate friends, Ella Frances Hart, the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; to Margaret Wellwood Holmes, wife of Gerald Holmes, the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; and to Emma May Anderson the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; and, in addition to what I have given before, to pay over to the children of my said uncle, General R. Heber Breintnall, as follows: To Lillie Nelson Dane the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; to Sophia Augusta Sanderson the sum of Fifteen thousand dollars; to Eugene Herbert Breintnall the sum of Five thousand Dollars; and to Llewellyn Breintnall the sum of Five thousand Dollars; and to my said cousins, Louisa F. Heffern the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; to Louise Heffern the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; to Anna Constance Groton the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars; and to Philip Powell Wagner the sum of Five thousand Dollars; and after the death of my said wife, Kate Ella Breintnall, and the above mentioned payments made out of the residue of my Estate, which are in addition to what I have previously given, I order and direct that the remaining residue of principal and unexpended income be distributed and paid over to certain of the beneficiaries before named, to wit: the `Children's Seashore House at Atlantic City for Invalid Children,' the `Home for Aged Couples,' `The Masonic Home of Pennsylvania,' the `Sanitarium Association of Philadelphia,' the `Philadelphia Home for Incurables,' and the `Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind,' in even and equal shares."

The wife of the testator predeceased him, her demise occurring in January of 1920 and that of testator in September of 1927.

After the death of Mrs. Breintnall, testator, on April of 1926, executed a codicil to his will, creating six annuities, to be paid to the annuitants in varying sums for the terms of their respective lives.

After the death of the testator, the will and codicils having been duly probated, the executors proceeded to convert the assets of the estate into cash, with the exception of a $10,000 mortgage on property situate in Margate City, New Jersey, and real estate in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

In September of 1929 the executors filed their first account, which was allowed by decree of the orphans court of Atlantic county, and the executors, in October of 1929, paid the pecuniary legacies given by the eleventh clause of the will aforesaid, having previously paid, satisfied or turned over the specific and general devises and legacies mentioned *Page 509 in the will and codicils, and in November of 1929, the executors also made a partial distribution to the six charitable institutions, the ultimate residuary legatees named in the eleventh clause of the will aforesaid; this partial payment consisting of the sum of $10,000 in cash to each of said ultimate legatees, and at the same time, the executors assigned to a trustee for said ultimate legatees a mortgage of $150,000 covering property on the southeast corner of Twelfth and Sansom streets in Philadelphia.

The executors reserved the remaining assets for the payment of annuities given by the codicil of April, 1926, as well as for contingent expenses in operating the remaining real estate. These remaining assets had an approximate value of over $1,100,000, of which $110,000 was in cash; $10,000 on the Margate City mortgage aforesaid; $298,500 ground rents on the Eleventh and Chestnut streets property aforesaid and the balance in real estate situate at Thirteenth and Arch streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Park Place and Pacific avenues in Atlantic City. This real estate was appraised at $940,000 and was, as to the Philadelphia property, subject to a mortgage of $250,000.

It will be observed that the remaining estate in the hands of the executors was in excellent condition, both as to liquidity and amount, and that the executors had assets out of which to pay the annuities, which annuities then amounted to practically $11,000 a year, as well as an excellent reserve. The executors set up on their books a participation in the ground rents on the Chestnut street property for the payment of the annuities and paid them in full up to and including January 1st, 1933, totaling $59,350, but there is now due the annuitants, as of February 1st, 1934, the sum of $10,920 for arrearages.

Going back into the events which succeeded the distribution to legatees, made in October and November of 1929, shortly thereafter, we find the executors confronted with the national depression which ensued, with the consequent and unforseeable shrinkage of assets. They were compelled to take back the Eleventh and Chestnut streets property by *Page 510 reason of the bankruptcy of Whelan Company, and there was a consequent loss of ground rents out of which the annuities were to be paid. The real estate did not bring in sufficient income to pay carrying charges and it is anticipated that for the current year the shortage on this item will be $3,000.

The annuitants demand that they be paid, the ultimate legatees have refused to make refunds, the executors ask for and are entitled to the aid of this court in order that they may be advised what to do.

The ultimate residuary legatees say that the executors had no right, in October of 1929, to pay to the ten individual legatees the $135,000 covering their pecuniary bequests as set forth in the Eleventh paragraph aforesaid, and that if such payment had not been made, the executors would have had the income therefrom to apply to the payment of annuities and that the ultimate residuary estate to which the six charities will succeed would have been enhanced, and that the executors should be surcharged.

This reasoning does not appeal to the conscience of a court of equity under the circumstances, particularly in view of the fact that the six charities, at the time of that distribution, received on account of their ultimate legacies, $60,000 in cash and participation in a $150,000 mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 A. 531, 115 N.J. Eq. 506, 14 Backes 506, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-title-and-trust-co-v-stevens-njch-1934.