Mogridge's Estate

20 A.2d 307, 342 Pa. 308, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 1941
DocketAppeals, 178 and 182
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 20 A.2d 307 (Mogridge'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
Mogridge's Estate, 20 A.2d 307, 342 Pa. 308, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 524 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

On April 8, 1926, Frank P. Mogridge executed a deed of trust whereby he assigned certain securities, then valued at $115,000, to The Berks County Trust Company in trust to pay $5,000 per annum out of income thereof to Iva S. Mogridge, his wife, during the period *310 of her life, any excess income to be paid to the settlor. It was further provided that upon her death, the principal of the trust fund be paid to him, or, in the event of his prior decease, to such person as he should direct by his last will and in the absence of such direction to those entitled under the intestaté laws. The deed also contained a spendthrift trust provision with respect to all payments to any beneficiary. *

On December 30, 1930, as collateral security for various debts and obligations, Mogridge gave an assignment of all his right, title and interest in the principal of the trust fund to the Berks County Trust Company. A similar assignment, expressly subject to the rights of the Berks County Trust Company, was made, by the settlor to Hyde-Rakestraw Company for thé samé purpose on April 17, 1934. Mogridge died on January 29, 1936, predeceasing the life tenant, from whom he had previously been divorced at á date undisclosed by thé record. He left a will wherein he recited the provisions of the deed of trust and bequeathed the principal and all undistributed income thereof to his former' wife, Iva S. Mogridge.

After her death on February 28, 1939, the trustee stated and filed an accounting of its administration of the trust, the principal of which, after deducting all credits and administration expenses, amounted to $4'ti,335.49. The auditing judge, on the theory that the spendthrift trust provisions were invalid as to the settlor’s creditors and hence the entire principal should go *311 to them, leaving nothing upon which the power of appointment could be exercised, awarded $27,787.62 to the Berks County Trust Company in full satisfaction of its undisputed claim, and the balance, $12,547.87 to HydeRakestraw Company on account of its undisputed claim of $36,790.33. The adjudication was expressly made on the basis that these sums were awarded to the claimants as creditors and not as assignees. After a final decree was entered dismissing all exceptions to the adjudication, an appeal therefrom was taken by the executor of the estate of Iva ¡8. Mogridge. Berks County Trust Company, one of the distributees, also filed a cross-appeal as a precautionary measure, assigning as error the conclusion of law of the learned court below that it was entitled to share in the fund as creditor, but not as assignee.

Since Mackason’s Appeal, 42 Pa. 330, it has been the settled law of this State that, as to creditors whether present or subsequent, it is against public policy for one so to limit his property in trust that he retains to himself the beneficial incidents of ownership therein and yet places it beyond the reach of those to whom he is or may become indebted: Benedict v. Benedict, 261 Pa. 117; Rienzi v. Goodin, 249 Pa. 546; Nolan v. Nolan, 218 Pa. 135; Ghormley v. Smith, 139 Pa. 584. Egbert v. de Solms, 218 Pa. 207, relied, upon by the executor, detracts nothing from this salutary principle. There the settlors assigned their property in trust, the income to be paid to them for life with remainders to their children. The only control which the settlors retained over the remainders was that of appointing the shares in which the children should take, and it was therefore properly held that creditors of one of the life tenants could not attach the corpus of the trust in the hands of the trustee. The remainders had been limited to third persons and could not be divested by the act of the settlors who, to that extent, had parted with their rights of ownership therein. This Court, moreover, *312 pointed out that under Machas oris Appeal, supra, the income accruing' to the life tenant could be attached for his debts despite the spendthrift provision.

It is apparent that the settlor’s rights in the trust fund were subject to those of his creditors under the above cases, regardless of his attempt, by the spendthrift clause, to achieve a contrary result.' He had retained, except for the $5,000 annuity, which went to his wife, all the advantageous attributes of property in the fund. constituting the trust. He had the right to receive the excess income. He liad the entire beneficial interest in the corpus after the death of the annuitant. He had the uncontrolled right to exercise a general power of appointment thereof in favor of any person he might choose. In the absence of such appointment, the. fund passed to his estate for distribution under the intestate laws. He is not permitted to have these benefits of ownership and yet deprive creditors of their right to have payment of his debts out of his property. Whether he was solvent or insolvent at the time of' the creation of the trust is totally immaterial to the question. His- relationship to creditors was not changed by the creation of the trust.

■Since, therefore, the present case must be considered •just as though there were no spendthrift clause in so far as creditors of the settlor are concerned, the assignments to creditors of his interest in the trust were valid. They not only transferred whatever interest he might have enjoyed had he survived the annuitant, but they also extinguished his géneral power ofappointment: Lyon v. Alexander, 304 Pa. 288. As the present Chief Justice there pointed out (p. 291) : “Maude Byers Lyón could release and extinguish the general [testamentary] power of appointment given to her by- the will, and by the deed tendered to defendant she did so. No one has any interest in a; general power of appointment except the donee of the power. The donee could appoint to any one, to her own estate if she pleased. She was vested *313 with an absolutely unlimited discretion as to whom she should appoint to receive the property. That she extinguished the power to appoint for a consideration makes no difference.” Therefore,' in the present case, sincé the assignments more'than consumed the entire amount of the corpus of the trust fund* there remained nothing upon which the attempted exercise of the power of appointment by Mogridge’s wilt could operate and his former wife took nothing thereby.

The learned court below did not err in holding that Berks County Trust Company and Hyde-Rakestraw Company, who were creditors as well as assignees, were entitled to the fund as against the executor of Mrs.Mogridge, appointee under the settlor’s will. Howévér, since the money was awarded to them as creditors only, the executors of the estate of Mogridge, who appear in the case for the first time in this Court and allege the estate to be insolvent, claim the fund on behalf of all creditors. They contend that the provisions in the deed of trust against anticipation, or assignment by .any beneficiary were binding against the settlor and that therefore he was powerless to create a voluntary preference and all creditors, including the successful claimants below, must stand on the same footing. With this argument we cannot agree.

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Bluebook (online)
20 A.2d 307, 342 Pa. 308, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mogridges-estate-pa-1941.