McManus's Estate

61 A. 892, 212 Pa. 267, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 598
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 24, 1905
DocketAppeal, No. 332
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 61 A. 892 (McManus'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
McManus's Estate, 61 A. 892, 212 Pa. 267, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 598 (Pa. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Brown,

Caroline McManus died September 4, 1903. To her will, executed November 9, 1885, she added five codicils. By the first, dated January 31, 1888, she appointed the Reading Trust Company, the appellant, her executor, and by the second, dated January 27, 1889, she named her son, Francis P. McManus, coexecutor with it. Five days after her death the following note was addressed to the trust company :

“ Reading, Pa., Sept. 9, 1903.

“ To The Reading Trust Company,

“ Dear Sirs : The late Caroline McManus left a will in which her son Francis P. McManus and The Reading Trust [269]*269Company are named as executors. The will was made many years ago, and while the undersigned, being all the children and residuary legatees under the same, recognize the high standing of your company and its entire fitness to execute any trust, yet it is desirable to the parties that both the executors named in the will shall renounce so that letters of administration with the will annexed, may be issued in accordance with the wishes and interests of the family. We therefore respectfully ask that you further the family wishes by formally renouncing the executorship.

“Very respectfully yours,

“ Catharine Archer,

“ Martha McManus, “Joseph McManus, “Francis P. McManus.”

To this a reply was sent that the company declined to accede to the request. On September 18, 1903, the will and codicils of the decedent were admitted to probate and letters testamentary issued to the two executors named. On September 24, tire trust company notified Francis P. McManus that it had duly qualified as executor and was ready and desirous to co-operate with him in advertising the issue of letters testamentary, in making an inventory and appraisement and in performing the other duties devolving upon them as executors. Without notifying the trust company of his intention to do so, the appellee appointed appraisers, had the personal estate of the decedent appraised and filed an inventory in the office of the register on October 5, 1903. On October 24, 1903, the trust company presented its petition to the court below alleging that its coexecutor had taken exclusive possession of all the assets of the estate, had afforded it no access thereto nor inspection thereof, had made an inventory without giving it any opportunity to attend, had appointed appraisers and caused .an appraisement to be taken and filed, had wholly excluded it from any participation in the proceedings to appraise the assets and had asserted his purpose of proceeding to administer the estate to its entire exclusion ; and the prayer was for his removal.

To the petition for the removal of the appellee as one of the [270]*270executors an answer was filed, and, after testimony had been taken by the petitioner and respondent and the case submitted to the court for its decision, it was requested not to dispose of the matter at that time, as negotiations were pending for an adjustment of the differences between the executors. Shortly thereafter the learned, president judge became i'll and was unable from February, 1904, to the following September to attend to .the duties of his office. On September 20, 1904, the appellee filed a second supplemental answer, in which he averred that, a year having expired since the granting of the letters, he had paid the pecuniary legacies given in the will of the testatrix, and, pursuant to a family arrangement between all the residuary legatees and parties in interest, all the personal property, moneys and securities of the estate had been divided in accordance with the provisions of the will of the testatrix, and that all of her debts -and claims against her estate had been paid in full. On September 29 a supplemental petition was presented by the appellant, asking for an order and decree that the appellee forthwith file an account of his acts and doings in the premises, “ in order that the same may be duly advertised and that a proper decree of distribution may be made, considering and allowing all just claims that may be presented against the estate, and particularly considering and allowing the claim of your petitioner for such compensation as under the circumstances your petitioner is justly entitled to receive and reimbursing your petitioner for the costs, counsel fees and expenses expended and incurred in and about its said executorship.” To this an answer was filed, in which the appellee averred that there had been executed to him proper releases from all parties interested in the estate of his mother as beneficiaries or residuary legatees.

In view of the suspension of the proceedings below for nearly a year, during which time the appellee, as one of the executors, paid, as he alleges, all the debts of the decedent and made distribution among the legatees, from whom he received proper releases, we do not now deem it necessary to decide whether he ought to have been removed if the court had promptly disposed of the petition for his removal, and shall, therefore, pass only upon the question as to whether he should be compelled to file an account at the instance of his coexecutor.

[271]*271Before passing upon this question, it is proper for us to say that the appellant’s refusal to renounce its right to letters testamentary on the estate of the deceased, when requested so to do by her children and residuary legatees, is to be commended. Their request is termed a reasonable one by the learned counsel for the appellee. It was unreasonable and inconsistent with proper respect for the memory of the testatrix by her children and beneficiaries. She had not seen fit to make her children her executors, and after naming but one of them as an executor, she joined the appellant with him, manifestly because she was unwilling that the settlement of her estate should be committed to him alone. When, upon the probate of the will, the appellant learned, if it did not know before, that it had been named as one of the executors, it properly recognized what it felt to be a duty which it owed to the deceased and which it' assumed by taking out letters testamentary. Unless it had agreed with the deceased that it would act as one of her executors, and, in reliance upon its promise to do so, she had appointed it, it might for any good reason have declined to act Avithout inviting criticism; but it certainly ought not to have done so for the reason given in the letter addressed to it requesting its renunciation. It is a trust company, not a private individual, and one of its corporate purposes, known to the public, is to act as executor, and, when named as such, a worse reason why it should refuse to act can hardly be conceived than that the children of a testator, to whom he was unwilling to commit the administration of his estate, are opposed to the executor named by him and wish to take the settlement of the estate into their own hands. This is just the situation here, and the example of the appellant’s refusal can well be followed whenever the same reason is given to a trust company why it should not act as executor or trustee.

In refusing to require the appellee to file an account, the court was of the opinion that, as he had authority as one of the executors to pay all of the debts of the estate out of the assets in his hands and to make distribution among the legatees, the appellant had no standing to ask for an account from him after he had thus settled the estate himself. In support of this vieAv the learned president judge of the orphans’ court cited DeHaven v. Williams, 80 Pa. 480; Wood’s Appeal, 92 Pa.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Minder v. Gray
270 P.2d 404 (Montana Supreme Court, 1954)
In Re Minder's Estate
270 P.2d 404 (Montana Supreme Court, 1954)
Stone's Estate
57 Pa. D. & C. 284 (Mercer County Orphans' Court, 1946)
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Security Trust Co.
138 N.E. 97 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1923)
McManus's Estate
63 A. 1074 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A. 892, 212 Pa. 267, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmanuss-estate-pa-1905.