Loew's Estate

139 A. 582, 291 Pa. 22, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1927
DocketAppeal, 144
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 139 A. 582 (Loew's 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
Loew's Estate, 139 A. 582, 291 Pa. 22, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 354 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Bertha, Albert and Alice Loew, the three surviving children of John A. Loew, deceased, presented their petition to the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County, December 23, 1926, praying an inquest to make partition of three pieces of real estate of which their father died seized. The Braddock Trust Company, trustee under the will of decedent, was properly brought in as a party to the proceeding. The prayer of the petition was granted over the objection of Mary A. Loew, widow of decedent, who filed this appeal.

John A. Loew died January 23, 1925, leaving a will, under the twelfth clause of which he devised and bequeathed “all the rest, residue find remainder” of his estate, “real, personal and mixed,” to the Braddock Trust Company, in trust, “to invest......in good, safe and sound securities,” and to pay the net income in four *25 equal parts to his widow and three children (the petitioners ), during the life of the widow. He directed that, “upon the death” of the widow, the trust should “cease and terminate,” and “the corpus thereof” should be “divided into three equal parts,” one “to be paid” to each child, absolutely. Immediately following, in the same clause, testator, “for the purposes of this trust,” authorized the trustee, “if it so desires,” to take his residuary estate “in kind,” as existing “at the time of [his] decease.” He further empowered the trustee, “at its discretion,” and “when and as it may deem advisable and expedient,” to sell any or all real estate.

Testator’s widow, on August 3, 1925, elected in writing to take against his will, which election was duly recorded. On April 26,1926, upon the adjudication of the final account of decedent’s executors, a decree was made distributing so much of the residuary estate as was in the form of personalty, one-third being awarded to the widow and the balance to the three children absolutely. The remainder of the residuary estate consisted of the three pieces of real estate here involved, and one other piece, this being the homestead of decedent, which was not included in the petition for partition, because, in October, 1926, the widow and three children, each claiming as owners of their respective interests, conveyed that property to a purchaser thereof by two separate deeds. The Braddock Trust Company, trustee under decedent’s will, was not asked to and did not join in either of these conveyances, nor did it execute a separate deed to the purchaser. In other words, those concerned treated that real estate as real estate.

The petition for partition was filed by the three children of testator, appellees in this case, on the ground that, as a result of the widow’s election to take against the will, the purpose of the trust had failed, it had become passive, and was executed, whereby they were seized of a two-thirds undivided interest'in the real estate of their father, in fee simple, free from all trusts, *26 the widow of decedent being entitled to the other one-third. A citation was awarded to the widow and to the trustee under the will, to show cause why an inquest to make partition should not be awarded; thereafter, a writ of partition issued and this appeal followed.

The trustee filed no answer, but the widow replied, objecting to the proceedings on the ground that the will directed the Braddock Trust Company, as trustee, to sell and convert into cash, prior to the termination of the trust, all real estate constituting a part of the residuary estate placed in its charge. She denied that, by reason of her election, the purpose of the trust had failed, or that the trust had become passive or was executed, but claimed that the trust was still active, and that the full legal title to the undivided two-thirds interest in the real estate described in the petition was vested in the Braddock Trust Company, as trustee, and would remain thus vested until the terms of decedent’s will had been fulfilled by a proper distribution at its hands; or, to quote from the answer, appellant averred that “decedent, by his......will......directed the sale and conversion by the Braddock Trust Company, as trustee, of all the real estate constituting a part of his residuary estate, into cash, prior to the final termination of the trust, and the payment and distribution of the trust estate to his three children in equal shares.” These, and other above-recited provisions of the will, appellant contends, worked a conversion of the real estate into personalty, subject to distribution by the testamentary trustee alone. In short, the widow contends that the petitioners had no interest in the real estate as such which would entitle them to an inquest for partition; therefore, that this proceeding was “a mere nullity and void ab initio.”

The law does not favor conversions; they are the result of a fiction of equity and are dependent, in a case like the present, entirely upon the intention of the testator. The controlling rules in relation thereto are well *27 stated by Mr. Justice Brown (afterward Chief Justice) in Cooper’s Est., 206 Pa. 628, 630, where he said: “In order to work a conversion of a testator’s land into money, from the time of his death, there must be either, (1st) a positive direction to sell; or (2d) an absolute necessity to sell in order to execute the will; or (3d) such a blending of real and personal estate by the testator in his will, as to clearly show that he intended to create a fund out of both real and personal estate and to bequeath the said fund as money. The direction to sell must be absolute......[for]......to establish a conversion, the will must direct it absolutely, or out and out, irrespective of all contingencies;......unless there be an imperative direction to.sell, irrespective of contingencies and independent of discretion, conversion will not take place until the sale is actually made.”

Here the trustee was authorized “at its discretion ......to sell any or all of the real estate,” there being no absolute direction to sell independent of discretion. “A bare power of sale, such as a discretionary power, will not work a conversion till exercised” (Chamberlain’s Est., 257 Pa. 113, 116; Davidson v. Bright, 267 Pa. 580, 583), and the present trustee made no attempt to use the power in question. No necessity exists for a sale, or conversion into money, of this real estate, in order to carry out the provisions '-of the will; with the ending of the trust, brought about by the widow’s elec-' tion to take against the will, the duty of the trustee to pay out income ceased, and the only thing left to be done is the division of the corpus, represented by this real estate, into equal parts, one of such parts, after deducting the widow’s share, to go to each child. Again, so far as the question of conversion is concerned, even if the trust was not executed, and if it was necessary for the trustee to act in making a division of the real estate, we have held that a general testamentary direction to divide and pay, used in connection with both real and pergonal estate, does not necessarily work a conversion of *28 the former into the latter: Seeds v. Burk, 181 Pa. 281, 290; Martin v. Provident, etc., Co., 235 Pa. 281, 286. See also cases from other jurisdictions on this point under the word “Pay” in Words and Phrases, old and new editions. In Martin v.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A. 582, 291 Pa. 22, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loews-estate-pa-1927.