Magee Estate

1 Pa. D. & C.2d 447, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 212
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedNovember 4, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C.2d 447 (Magee Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magee Estate, 1 Pa. D. & C.2d 447, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 212 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Bolger, J.,

Anna J. Magee died December 12, 1923, leaving a will and several codicils probated February 20, 1924, by the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County. She appointed the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities (now the Pennsylvania Company for Banking and Trusts) executor and trustee. The first account'of the executor was audited and adjudicated by Thompson, J., on January 21, 1925, wherein he awarded the residue of $285,154, together with pecuniary legacies of $600,000 and $400,000 making a total of $1,285,154 to the trustee for the purposes of the trust. This fund, as well as the income therefrom, has been invested by the trustee and now exceeds $6,100,000.

This is the first account of the trustee. In addition to the necessity of auditing the account, the auditing judge is asked to pass upon a petition by the trustee, joined in by the board of trustees of the Magee Memorial Hospital, to approve a claimed credit in the account of $5,000 advanced by the trustee to the board to start the performance of the latter’s duty of establishing and maintaining the hospital. The trustee’s request is most unusual. It evidences the lengthy and careful consideration given over a period of years by the board to the delicate problem of fulfilling their great responsibilities in the most proper and effective manner. The trustee and the board might well have accepted sole responsibility of embarking upon these duties without consultation or authority of the court, [449]*449but they seek approval of the court acting in its capacity as visitor of all charitable trusts: Wilson v. Board of City Trusts, 324 Pa. 545.

The auditing judge is reluctant to accept the petition because in large part the court’s province is one of review and not of advising preliminarily. Ordinarily, the only procedure to obtain advance court approval in such instances is by seeking a declaratory judgment. Here the facts apparently do not constitute grounds for a declaratory judgment, because there is no imminence of litigation Or any of the other requisite factors present: Lifter Estate, 377 Pa. 227. However, because the problem involves an expenditure by the trustee, however minute (and largely a matter of form), for which it claims credit, and the auditing judge believes the requirements of the exercise of our visitorial responsibility over charitable trusts calls for the court’s action, he accepts jurisdiction of the petition.

The auditing judge observes that the policies, plans and programs suggested in the petition are largely an outline with some specifics included. It is not his purpose in passing upon the merits of this petition to impinge upon the prerogatives of the board, but to express his conclusions and reasons in support thereof as to the construction of Miss Magee’s testamentary intention. It is Miss Magee’s will that must be carried out. Therefore, neither the board nor the auditing judge should be controlled in formulating judgments as to what Miss Magee wanted by extraneous considerations such as the existing conditions generally, National, State or local, which can be served by this benefaction. Such factors must all be solved within the framework of Miss Magee’s will. As an illustration, it would be gravely doubtful if patients sent by the Bureau of Rehabilitation of the Pennsylvania Board of Vocational Education could be accepted by Magee [450]*450Hospital unless they were poor Philadelphians discharged from Philadelphia hospitals. This is not a public trust nor does it emanate from a National, State or city authority. It is a private benefaction whose objects and subjects are clearly stated and they must be fulfilled since they are legal and practicable.

In her codicil dated February 1, 1917, testatrix set forth the purposes of the trust as follows:

“It is my desire to commemorate my family name by rendering lasting service to the poor and by increasing the usefulness of the hospitals in my native city, Philadelphia.
“In order that my purpose may be accomplished, I desire to found and endow an institution to be called ‘The Magee Memorial Hospital for Convalescents,’ whose object shall be the relief of the general hospitals of the City of Philadelphia from the burden of the support of patients who have passed through the active stages of acute illness or have recovered from injuries or operations, during a portion of that time which must necessarily elapse before they are able to resume their accustomed occupations or duties. In furnishing this relief, relief will also be furnished the families of such persons from the burden of their support during such period.”

She then provided that the institution shall receive patients without regard to sex, color, nativity or religion, excluding, however, children under the age of 14 years. She also excluded patients suffering from contagious or from incurable diseases and provided that when patients in Magee Hospital develop relapses or other signs of acute illness, they must be returned to the hospital from which they came to be treated by such hospital under the terms under which they- were originally admitted.

The sum of $600,000 in- the codicil of February 1, 1917, was directed to be held and used for the procure[451]*451ment of a proper site which “I desire to be an inexpensive one and not on the Main Line, and to erect a building and to add to, enlarge and extend the same.” Provision is made for the preparation of plans and construction to insure the highest degree of reasonable comfort and healthfulness of the inmates and in accordance with every modern requirement. The building shall be stately and dignified, but no money shall be misused for architectural ornament. Over the principal portal there shall be placed in letters of gold the inscription, “Ad Dei Gloriam”, and that the portraits of Miss Magee’s parents will be hung in the place indicated by the will.

To manage the institution she named a board of 12 trustees to be selected, respectively, by the following hospitals: Protestant Episcopal, Presbyterian, Methodist, Episcopal, Pennsylvania, German (now Lankenau), Jefferson Medical College, University of Pennsylvania, Woman’s, Samaritan (now Temple University), Hahnemann and Germantown Dispensary and Hospital. As the twelfth member of the board she named Dr. James Cornelius Wilson, professor emeritus of the practice of medicine and clinical medicine in the Jefferson Medical College, or his successor, at Jefferson. Vacancies are to be filled as provided in the will. The income of the trust is to be paid to the treasurer of the board of trustees, to be disbursed under the direction of the board in and about the management, care and maintenance of the hospital. The treasurer shall also receive all principal sums required from time to time for the purchase of the site and erection of buildings or improvements or extensions of the same and to be disbursed by him under the order of the board.

At the audit of the present account the corporate trustee, joined in by the board of trustees, presented a petition to the court to approve the plans and projects [452]*452enumerated in the petition for the fulfillment of testatrix’s purposes. From that petition, the averments of which the court accepts without question, it appears that following the adjudication of the executor’s account and the award of the fund to the corporate trustee, the board of trustees provided for in the will was duly appointed and convened first on June 2, 1925.

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Related

Charlotte Hungerford Hospital v. Mulvey
225 A.2d 495 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C.2d 447, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magee-estate-paorphctphilad-1954.