Noonan Estate

63 A.2d 80, 361 Pa. 26, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 8, 1948
DocketAppeal, 33
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 80 (Noonan 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
Noonan Estate, 63 A.2d 80, 361 Pa. 26, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 281 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

We approve both the reasoning and the conclusions upon which the Superior Court based its decision in this case. There are, however, certain corrections which need be made in the final order. In no event is there any occasion to reiterate the facts. Save for one exception, they fully appear in the opinion for the Superior Court: see Noonan Estate, 163 Pa. Superior Ct. 70, 60 A. 2d 374. As the omitted matter also goes to confirm the merit of *29 the decision, we shall relate it before entering upon a review of the legal principles pertinent to the questions involved.

The excerpts from the correspondence between the beneficiary and the executor set forth in the opinion of the Superior Court reveal ample basis for that Court’s conclusion that the executor breached his duty to the beneficiary by withholding from him material information which he sought and to which he was entitled: see C. J. S., Vol. 34, § 554, p. 502. Executors, as well as other fiduciaries, are under an obligation to make full disclosure to beneficiaries respecting their rights and to deal with them with utmost fairness: see Rogers v. Benz, 136 Minn. 83, 161 N. W. 395, 397, aff’d. on rehearing 161 N. W. 1056; Schouler on Wills, Executors and Administrators, Sixth Ed., Vol. 4, § 3219.

While the derelictions of the executor in the instant case, as indicated by the correspondence already referred to, consisted of acts of omission, e.g., failure to disclose or to fulfill relevant promises, the executor’s letter of April 8, 1946, to the beneficiary contained what constituted in the circumstances a positive misfeasance. Therein he-expressly assigned, as an urgent reason for a speedy sale of the decedent’s realty, the estate’s possible escapement thereby from a claim upon a judgment against the testatrix’s deceased husband (a former owner of the realty in controversy). The fact is that the lien of that judgment was then, and for years had been, extinct. Indeed, as the executor (an attorney at law) must have well known, it was, and had been, actually impossible, because of the time elapsed, to revive the lien of the judgment so as to bind the réalty either in the hands of the testatrix; while yet alive, or as a part of her estate after her' death: Shareff v. Wolf, 120 Pa. Superior Ct. 227, 229-231, 182 A. 115; Rankin v. Rinehart, 66 Pa. Superior Ct. 385, 391-393; see also Henry’s Estate, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 597, 600-601. Yet, without the slightest effort to correct this material misrepresentation, the *30 executor hastily went ahead with a sale of the property to his private secretary, Mrs. Beryl Blakely. The latter, on her part, was not only cognizant of the contents of the executor’s misleading letter to-the beneficiary (as well as of all other correspondence between them)' but, as she was,an experienced-title: examiner, she is chargeable with actual,-find not merely constructive; knowledge of the patent error of law which - the letter contained.

Reversal of the lower court’s action does not depend upon-any-disregard of competent findings made below. None of the operative facts in the case is in dispute. The decision rests upon, the ultimate inferences and conclusions correctly to be drawn from the uncontroverted evidence,— a function, which an appellate court is fully qualified to, and does, perform in appropriate circumstances: see Dorrance’s Estate, 309 Pa. 151, 156, 163 A. 303; Hamilton v. Fay, 283 Pa. 175, 179, 128 A. 837; Miller’s Estate, 279 Pa. 30, 38, 123 A. 646; Gongaware’s Estate, 265 Pa. 512, 514; 109 A. 276. In the situation here presented, the lower court’s -findings of adequacy of price and absence of fraud in-fact’are imihaterial. The record reveals a plain and unmistakable case of an executor’s breach of his fiduciary duty with full knowledge of the circumstances. on the part of' the improperly favored‘third party.

An executor is a fiduciary no less than is. a trustee (Restatement, Trusts, § 6, Comment i.) and, as such, primarily owes a duty of loyalty to a beneficiary of his trust: Restatement, Trusts, §170 (1). Under Comment p. of the latter section’of the Restatement; the rule is given presently pertinent- specification fin. the following language : “The trustee is under á duty to the beneficiary in administering the trust not toTe guided by‘the interest of any third person.’ Thus, it. is improper for-the trustee to sell trust próperty-tó a'third person for the:purpose of benefiting the third person rather than the trust estate.” Here, the facts support ho other reasonable' conclusion than that the executor, in selling the testatrix’s, residence *31 property to his private secretary, was motivated by the latter’s convenience and benefit without regard for the rights of the beneficiary whose desire to pay the decedent’s debts and retain the realty (whereof he was the sole devisee) was arbitrarily and even deceptively ignored by the executor. “He that is intrusted with thé interest of others, cannot, be allowed to make the business an object of interest to himself; because, from the frailty of nature, one who has the power, will be too readily seized with the inclination to use the opportunity for serving his own interest at the expense of those for whom he is intrusted”: Beeson v. Beeson, 9 Pa. 279, 284.

The executor was, moreover, guilty of self-dealing, as the circumstances Attending the sale disclose. Such a transgression does, not lie exclusively in a fiduciary’s sale of trust property to, himself. Cf. Downing Estate, 162 Pa. Superior Ct. 354, 57 A. 2d 710, affirmed per curiam by this Court: 359 Pa. 534, 535, 59 A. 2d 903. The test of forbidden self-dealing is whether the'fiduciary'had a personal interest in the subject transaction of such a substantial nature that it might have affected his judgment in material connection: Downing Estate, supra, at p, 359, citing Scott on Trusts, Vol. 2, § 170.12, p.‘ 877, and Restatement, Trusts, §170 (1), Comment h. See also Comment c. of thé same section of the Restatement which declares that “Thé trustee violates his duty to the beneficiary not, only, whére he púrchasés' trust property for himself individually, but also where he has apersonal interest in the purchase of such a substantial nature that it might affect Ms judgment in making the sale.” It will be noted that the extent of the fiduciary’s disqualifying interest need not be such as “did afféct' his judgment” but merely such as “might affect Ms judgmént”: Downing Estate, supra, at. p. 360.

In the instant case, the executór’s interest in selling the property to his. secretary was sufficiently súbstantiál to convict him .of a violation of the rule against self-dealing. It was by the executor’s personal loan to Mrs. *32 Blakely of four-fifths of the sale price for the real estate that she was enabled to buy the property; and, as security for her indebtedness to the fiduciary so incurred, she and her husband gave to him, personally, a first mortgage of the purchased realty.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 80, 361 Pa. 26, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noonan-estate-pa-1948.