LIBERTY TRUST COMPANY v. Weber

90 A.2d 194, 200 Md. 491, 1952 Md. LEXIS 432
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 8, 1952
Docket[No. 212, October Term, 1951.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 194 (LIBERTY TRUST COMPANY v. Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LIBERTY TRUST COMPANY v. Weber, 90 A.2d 194, 200 Md. 491, 1952 Md. LEXIS 432 (Md. 1952).

Opinion

Markell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal, by the trustee and the guardian ad litem for infants and possible future parties not in esse, from a decree terminating the trusts created by two trust instruments, dated October 30, 1929 and December 14, 1936, respectively, to The Liberty Trust Company, trustee.

Harry E. Weber died on May 14, 1929. He had been married in 1902. He was then president of the Third National Bank, which later was merged with other banks into The Liberty Trust Company, of which he became, and continued to be, a director until his death. He was also, and had been for some years, president of the George’s Creek Coal Company.

Mr. Weber died intestate, leaving as his heirs-at-law and next of kin, his widow, Mary G. Weber, three sons, William W., John and James E. Weber, and one daughter, Mary V. Weber, then nineteen years old. James was then fourteen, John twenty-three, and William twenty-five. All the children except William were unmarried and were living with their mother at Mr. Weber’s residence in Cumberland. ' William was then married to Frances Weber and was living in Pittsburgh. At dates not shown William was divorced from Frances and is now married to Adele B. Weber, who is forty-one and with whom he is living in Pittsburgh. He has no children by. his present wife and three by first wife, Lois, who is twenty-two, Joan nineteen and Ronald twelve. John is married, his wife is forty-one, they have five children, all. under twenty-one, the youngest five, and they live in Hyattsville, Md. Mary Virginia Weber in 1934 married Roy Thomas Bootman. They have three children and live at Steubenville, Ohio. James is married, has one child and lives at New Hyde Park, New York.

*497 Mr. Weber’s estate was very small. His widow and The Liberty Trust Company were administrators. The net estate, after payment of debts, consisted principally of (1) his house and (2) 5,870 shares of stock (par $50) of the George’s Creek Coal Company, which constitute 39.1 per cent of the corporation’s outstanding stock, and which had paid no dividends for some years. In the Orphans Court the stock was appraised at one dollar per share. The widow’s one-third of the estate was too small to yield her a living income.

On October 30, 1929 Mrs. Weber and her three adult children executed a trust deed and agreement with The Liberty Trust Company, which recited that it was the desire of the parties so far as possible to conserve the property and estate of Harry E. Weber and “to establish and create a trust fund of their interests in and distributive shares of the same for the use and benefit of Mrs. Weber” in accordance with the terms, conditions and provisions hereinafter set forth, and by which they conveyed to the trustee, forever in fee simple as to real estate and absolutely as to personal property, all their right, title and interest and all the right, title and interest of each of them in and to any and all the property and estate of Harry E. Weber and any and all real estate or personal property owned by him at the time of his death, and any distributive share therein which they had or might or could in the future have, in trust, to hold and manage the trust property and estate, collect all income, pay all necessary charges and expenses and taxes, and to borrow money on mortgage (which power was exercised to convert the house into apartments and thereby increase the trust income before the George’s Creek Coal Stock began paying dividends) and to pay the entire net income from the trust estate to Mrs. Weber for life, upon her death the trust to cease and terminate, and the trustee to pay or transfer the corpus to the said three children, to be divided equally, and if either then shall be dead, leaving issue, such issue to receive the parent’s share, and if either then shall be dead, *498 without leaving issue, then the deceased child’s share to be divided equally among the survivors, “or their * * * issue, per stirpes and not per capita”, if at Mrs. Weber’s death neither of the three shall be alive, and no children or descendants, the corpus to be paid or transferred to the persons then entitled to receive it as next of kin of Harry E. Weber. The trust agreement contains a spendthrift trust provision as to principal and income of the trust fund, which provides inter alia that no beneficiary shall have any power to sell, assign, transfer or in any manner to dispose of his or her interest in the trust fund or the income. When the trust agreement was executed it was understood among the family that when James became of age he would be asked to execute a similar agreement covering his interest.

On December 14, 1936 James (then twenty-one), and his wife and The Liberty Trust Company executed a similar trust deed and agreement, covering James’ interest, on substantially the same terms except that (1) Mrs. Weber’s one-third of the estate had already been conveyed by the 1929 deed and (2) if at Mrs. Weber’s death James shall be dead, leaving a widow, then the widow shall receive the share James would have been entitled to receive, and if then there is no widow but there is issue of James living, then the share he would have received if living shall be divided equally among such issue, children to stand in the place of their deceased parents and to take per stirpes and not per capita, and if then there is no widow, issue or descendants then the share James would have received shall be divided equally among his surviving brothers and sisters, children of deceased brothers and sisters to stand in the place of their deceased parents and to take per stirpes and not per capita.

The George’s Creek Coal Company stock paid no dividends until 1944. The net income received by Mrs. Weber from the trust was, in 1931 $433.83; in 1932 $1,225.08, in 1933 $860.22, in 1934 $1,498.54, in 1935 *499 $1,300.00, in 1936 $1,325.00, in 1937 $1,294.31, in 1938 $1,300.00, in 1939 $1,300.00, in 1940 $1,300.00, in 1941 $1,325.00, in 1942 $1,300.00 and in 1943 $1,300.00. In 1944 a dividend of fifty cents per share was paid on the George’s Creek Coal Company stock, in 1945 the same, in 1946 dividends amounting to three dollars per share, in 1947 seven dollars, in 1948 ten dollars, in 1949 fourteen dollars, in 1950 fifteen dollars and in 1951 fourteen dollars. From 1944 to 1951, inclusive, Mrs. Weber’s income received from the trust estate was, in 1944 $1,875.00, in 1945 $2,500.00, in 1946 $2,800.00, in 1947 $22,600.10, in 1948 $55,970.21, in 1949 $62,428.23, in 1950 $101,127.33, and in 1951 $78,203.47. For 1950 her federal income tax return shows total investment income, $107,841.; taxable income after deductions, $101,690.; and income tax payable, $59,063.; for 1951 total income, investment income, $84,698.; net taxable income, $79,379.; income tax payable, $44,920. The value of the shares of stock now held in trust is said to be “in excess of $750,000.”

On December 31, 1951 Mrs. Weber and her three children who executed the first trust agreement, and their respective wives and husband, delivered to The Liberty Trust Company a notice that they “hereby revoke and terminate said Agreement of Trust executed October 30, 1929.” The notice stated, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 194, 200 Md. 491, 1952 Md. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-trust-company-v-weber-md-1952.