Palermo Estate

34 Pa. D. & C.2d 581, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 1, 1963
Docketno. 755
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. D. & C.2d 581 (Palermo 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
Palermo Estate, 34 Pa. D. & C.2d 581, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Shoyer, J.,

This trust arises under the deed of trust dated October 8, 1960, a copy of which is hereto annexed, whereby Rosemary Lukosevicz Palermo, settlor, transferred her therein itemized assets to her trustees, in trust, to pay over the net income to the settlor during her life, and upon her death to transfer the trust estate to her executor. In Item Second the trustees are authorized to apply any portions of the principal “for her comfortable maintenance and support; for education requirements, illness, operations, or for any reason whatsoever which shall, to the trustees in their discretion, seem sufficient.” In two separate paragraphs, the fifth and the [582]*582fifteenth, the trust agreement is expressly made irrevocable, and there is a full and complete spendthrift clause as to both income and principal in the fourth paragraph, reading as follows:

“FOURTH: The Settlor directs that neither the income from said Trust Estate hereby provided for nor the principal thereof shall be liable for her debts, present or future, and shall not be subject to the right on the part of any creditor to seize or reach the same under any writ or by any proceeding at law or in equity. And the Settlor shall not have any power to give, grant, sell, convey, mortgage, pledge or otherwise dispose of, encumber or anticipate the income or any installment thereof or any share in the principal thereof, it being her will that no right of disposition of any such property shall vest in her until the same shall have been actually transferred or paid over to her.
“The Trustees shall hold income or principal of said fund free from all claims, attachments, judgments, executions and liens of every nature, by creditors against the Settlor, and the Settlor shall not have any power to anticipate, charge or encumber the fund or any part thereof or the interest or income thereof, or in any way defeat the intent of this Agreement as herein expressed, which is to make provision for the support, maintenance and personal comfort of the Settlor free from liens and claims of creditors.” (Italics supplied.)

Rosemary Lukosevicz Palermo, now Sharkey, is living, and the trust continues for her benefit.

This, the “First and Final” account of the trust, was filed because of the desire of the settlor to terminate the trust. The accountants request that the entire balance of principal, real and personal, shown in the account, amounting to $131,862.81, and undistributed income of approximately $200 be awarded to the set-tlor.

[583]*583Subsequent to the filing of the account the settlor presented a petition to terminate the trust and to recapture the entire trust res. The petition recites that the settlor-petitioner is 23 years of age and presently resides in Florida, with her husband, William F. Shar-key; that she created the trust under deed dated October 8, 1960; that in March of 1961, “subsequent to the termination of a very unhappy first marriage and after the creation of the aforesaid trust your petitioner married her present husband, William F. Sharkey”; that in August of 1961, petitioner and her husband moved “to the State of Florida, permanently and at that time intended to and did change their domicile to and became residents of the State of Florida, that the Florida climate is beneficial to her health and well being and she intends that to be her permanent residence; that she has executed a last will and testament as a resident of Florida and therein named the Miami Beach First National Bank of Miami Beach, Florida, as her executor; that her husband “is gainfully employed in the State of Florida and is assisting in defraying current living expenses”; that she approves the account filed by her trustees and requests its confirmation; that she is the sole party in interest under the Trust Agreement, she is sui juris, and she retains a “complete and general power of disposition over the entire remainder interest,” that “the Trustees have consented to the termination of the trust and to the distribution thereof to her.”

Attached to the petition to terminate is the agreement of the parties dated May , 1962, wherein it is stated, inter alia:

“3. The parties hereto are all the parties in interest in the trust, being the Settlor, the Trustees, and the sole beneficiary thereunder.
“4. It is agreed by the parties hereto that the trust be terminated and that the principal held in trust to[584]*584gether with any accumulated income be transferred free of trust to Rosemary Lukosevicz Palermo Shar-key, in kind or cash as presently constituted.”

At a hearing specially fixed for May 16, 1962, at the request of counsel for the petitioner, counsel for the trustees appeared together with Floridian and local counsel for the petitioner, all joining in the request to the court to terminate the trust. No one appeared to defend the trust. Counsel for the trustees asserted “that there are no parties other than the settlor to protect in the matter. The trust agreement makes no provision for any other parties . . . Secondly, we feel that this settlor has a very limited life expectancy. She is a paraplegic as a result of trauma suffered in an accident at the age of seventeen . . .” In urging termination of the trust counsel cited Stafford Estate, 258 Pa. 595; Chase Trust, 7 D. & C. 2d 519; Bowers’ Trust, 346 Pa. 85; and Restatement, Trusts §339.

No evidence was submitted in support of the aver-ments of the petition. Counsel stated that “settlor . . . is incapable of appearing. She will not be able to appear because she is not in fact ambulatory.”

In view of the circumstances recited above, the hearing was continued generally. Subsequently, pursuant to a petition filed on behalf of the settlor, the court, by decree dated June 8, 1962, appointed Joseph C. Bruno, Esq., trustee ad litem to represent unborn and unas-certained persons in the proceeding.

Thereafter, pursuant to the convenience of the petitioner and her counsel, the court fixed December 5, 1962, for further hearing. Petitioner appeared in person with her counsel and witnesses.

Jerome E. Ornsteen, a member of the bar of this court since 1956, testified that at the request of other counsel he met the settlor for the first time in March or April 1960, at the Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia, where she had been confined for eight months, after he [585]*585had been informed that in February of 1958 she had received a settlement of a damage case against the Pennsylvania Railroad as a result of an accident which occurred October 4, 1956, and that in May of 1960 she would attain her majority and she was seeking legal advice as to what she should do with the fund then held by the guardian of her estate during minority. Mr. Ornsteen further testified that she was then in a Stryker frame, unable to be moved but mechanically, for eight months, and with 24 hour a day nursing care; he testified that thereafter he was apprised of the fact that her estate approximated $165,000 of which $30,000 was invested in the purchase of a home for her in King of Prussia, Montgomery County, and that her parents and younger sister were living there, rent free; that her parents and her sister constantly pressured her, demanding money; and that the petitioner was then the wife of one Frank Palermo, who had been sentenced to a term in excess of two years for violation of a Federal statute, involving a fraud, and who was otherwise an undesirable spouse.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. D. & C.2d 581, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palermo-estate-paorphctphilad-1963.