Pearson Estate

275 A.2d 336, 442 Pa. 172, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 994
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 18, 1971
DocketAppeals, 1, 3, 13 and 14
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 275 A.2d 336 (Pearson 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
Pearson Estate, 275 A.2d 336, 442 Pa. 172, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 994 (Pa. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Jones,

Robert Pearson (testator) died on July 27, 1967, leaving a holographic instrument dated January 7, 1958, and entitled “Will and Testimony” (will), which was admitted to probate and letters of administration c.t.a. were granted to Dauphin Deposit Trust Company (administrator). 1 Testator, a childless widower, was survived by six brothers and sisters, thirteen nephews and nieces and twenty-nine grandnephews and grandnieces.

The controversial portions of the will prompting these appeals are:

“[2] It is the hope and prayer, that my estate, or the proceeds of my estate, be placed in trust for the benefit of the legal heirs, entitled to succeed to my estate.

“ [3] It is the further instruction that the proceeds of my estate be placed in a Trust Fund, under the management of a reliable Agency or Banking Firm, and administered throughout the life and period of the Estate, as long as there are living legal heirs. The heirs or beneficiary to share the income from the Trust Fund.

“[4] The rate or partition shall be apportioned according to the number of living nephews and neices [sic], and thereafter equally proportioned to the surviving heirs. There shall be an exception provided in the aforestated declaration, in the event of special hardships. The first apportionment of the income from the Trust Fund shall accrue to the benefit of the brothers and sisters, during their life.

“[7] When the Trust Fund has fulfilled its obligation to the heirs, and thereby spent its usefulness of *178 the legal requirements, the estate shall be awarded to benevolent organizations, educational Institutions, and Charities [hereinafter collectively termed ‘Charities’].” 2

The administrator filed its first and partial account and a petition for proposed distribution wherein it posed questions to be determined by the auditing judge and its suggested interpretation of testator’s intent. 3 Thereafter, exceptions to the proposed distribution were advanced by the parties to these appeals. In its order, accompanied by an opinion, the court below rendered the following interpretation of testator’s will: (1) testator created a valid trust; (2) the income from the trust fund is to be distributed among those of the testator’s brothers and sisters who had children surviving at the time of testator’s death with each share to be determined according to their respective number of said children; 4 (3) upon the respective deaths of testator’s brothers and sisters, their shares of income are to be paid in equal proportion to their children for their lives or to the heirs of any deceased child and *179 so forth to testator’s heirs ad infinitum; and (4) testator intended that, upon the death of his last collateral descendant, the corpus of the trust should be paid to charities. However, applying the Rule Against Perpetuities at the time of testator’s death, the lower court voided the gifts to descendants after nephews and nieces as well as the gifts to charities and ordered a distribution of the corpus of the trust under the laws of intestate succession upon the death of testator’s last surviving nephew or niece. Pearson Estate, 48 Pa. D. & C. 2d 607 (O.C. Dauphin, 1968). Various petitions, requests and exceptions were filed by the parties and denied by subsequent orders. These appeals followed.

Enforceability of the Trust

Initially we must determine whether the testator intended to create a trust, and, specifically, whether the possibly precatory quality of the words “hope and prayer” in paragraph two renders the trust invalid because of the lack of enforceable duties. See, e.g., Corbett Estate, 430 Pa. 54, 241 A. 2d 524 (1968). As this Court noted in Brubaker v. Lauver, 322 Pa. 461, 464, 185 Atl. 848, 850 (1936) : “Precatory words as to the disposition of property will not create a trust. Expressions of a wish, desire or recommendation that the transferee of property should use or dispose of it in a specified manner will not give rise to a trust; to do so, they must have the force or meaning of a command: see 49 A.L.R. 10. The primary question is the intention of the declarant: did he mean to control and govern the conduct of the transferee with respect to the property, or to suggest and recommend the manner in which it should be used or disposed of, leaving its ultimate control and disposition entirely within his discretionary power? The test is, whether the precatory expression ivas used in a mandatory sense, though *180 couched in a mild, polite, courteous command, or only as suggestion or loish, falling short of binding and compulsory direction: [citation omitted].” (Emphasis added) See, also, Corbett Estate, supra; Calder’s Estate, 343 Pa. 30, 21 A. 2d 907 (1941) ; Stinson’s Estate (No. 1), 232 Pa. 218, 81 Atl. 207 (1911). An examination of paragraphs three, four and seven reveals an elaborate, albeit confusing, scheme of distribution imposing very definite duties on the trustee and convinces us of the propriety of the conclusion of the court below that a valid trust was created.

Testator’s Intent

Advancing to the next inquiry, we are called upon to construe testator’s intent.

“The law and the legal principles governing the interpretation of wills is well settled, but their application to poorly or ambiguously drawn wills (especially to holographic wills and lengthy testamentary trusts) is often difficult. The pertinent principles may be thus briefly summarized: A testator’s intent, unless unlawful, shall prevail; that intent shall be ascertained from a consideration of (a) all the language contained in his will, and (b) his scheme of distribution, and (c) the circumstances surrounding him at the time he made his will, and (d) the existing facts; and (e) canons of construction will be resorted to only if the language of the will is ambiguous or conflicting or the testator’s intent is for any reason uncertain. [Citations omitted].” Carter Estate, 435 Pa. 492, 496-97, 257 A. 2d 843, 845 (1969). Accord, Matthews Estate, 439 Pa. 69, 264 A. 2d 714 (1970); Derham Estate, 435 Pa. 590, 258 A. 2d 650 (1969).

Bearing in mind these principles concerning the interpretation of wills, we must first decide whether testator, by placing his estate in trust for the “benéfit of *181 the legal heirs” (paragraph two), intended to bequeath and devise life estates to only his brothers and sisters. Such construction is possible under Section 14(4) of the Wills Act of 1947, Act of April 24, 1947, P. L. 89, §14(4), 20 P.S. §180.14(4). Under that section, in the absence of a contrary intent, a devise or bequest to “heirs” shall be interpreted to include only those persons who would take under the intestate laws. 5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 A.2d 336, 442 Pa. 172, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-estate-pa-1971.