Petty's Estate (No. 1)

166 A. 857, 311 Pa. 362, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 552
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 1933
Docket1; Appeal, 39
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 A. 857 (Petty's Estate (No. 1)) 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
Petty's Estate (No. 1), 166 A. 857, 311 Pa. 362, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 552 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

David F. Petty entered into an insurance trust agreement with the Union Trust Company of Pittsburgh, wherein it was agreed the net proceeds of policies of insurance on his life should be collected at his death and held by the trust company, as trustee, under the terms thereof. Petty died November 30, 1930, and pursuant to the agreement the trustee collected $257,500. Petty by his will directed that the residue of his estate should be added to this fund and held upon the same trust. He believed his estate to be of greater value than it proved to be. There were not sufficient funds to pay the legacies given in the will with the result that no residue remained.

*365 The trustee of the insurance trust filed in the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County an account which set forth that, after paying certain sums to relatives and employees as therein provided, satisfying a mortgage and setting up a fund of $100,000 for his daughter, there was a deficiency of assets in the residue of the trust fund to meet the remaining charges fixed by the settlor thereon. The beneficiaries of this residue were settlor’s mother and wife. A contest arose as to which of the two was entitled to preference in distribution. The court below held settlor’s mother was and this appeal by his wife followed.

The first question to be answered is whether, by the trust instrument, the settlor intended to create one trust fund of the residue of the trust estate, or whether a separate 'trust fund for the benefit of each of them was established. The court below held that a separate trust was created of such an amount as would produce a net income of $200 per month for the mother. As the entire residue was necessary to do this, no fund remained for the widow.

Article V of the trust agreement is the only one that needs to be considered, and in this the seventh and eighth paragraphs control. They are as follows: “The Trustee shall pay from the net income of this trust then remaining, the sum of Two Hundred [$200] Dollars per month to Minessota Petty, mother of the insured, for and during the full term of her natural life. The Trustee is authorized to use so much of the corpus hereof as it may deem necessary for the benefit of the mother of the Insured.”

“The Trustee shall pay the balance of the income hereof to Lola M. Petty, wife of the Insured in monthly installments, for her own use for and during the full term of her natural life or so long as she shall remain the widow of the Insured. Should such remaining income be insufficient to provide payments of Five Hundred [$500] Dollars per month to the said wife of the Insured, *366 the Trustee is authorized to use so much of the corpus hereof as may be necessary to make the said payments. In the event of the remarriage of Lola M. Petty, wife of the Insured, she shall thereafter be paid no more than the sum of Twenty-five Hundred [$2500] Dollars per year for the remainder of her natural life from this trust.”

It will be noticed that the first sentence of the seventh paragraph begins with “The Trustee shall pay from the net income of this trust then remaining.” The phrase “then remaining” presupposes something has been carved from the original corpus of the trust estate, as the preceding paragraphs show, and considers what is left the residue. There is no direction in this paragraph to set up from this fund remaining an amount sufficient to yield $200 per month. There is no disposition of the income that would accrue from such a fund should the mother predecease the widow.

In the second sentence of the paragraph, the words “the corpus hereof” refer to the “trust then remaining,” mentioned in the first sentence of the paragraph. In the next, the eighth paragraph, the words, “The Trustee shall pay the balance of the income hereof to Lola M. Petty,” speak of the same income indicated in the preceding paragraph, — that is, the income from the trust “then remaining.” The same “corpus” is to produce all the income. Still further the instrument reads: “Should such remaining income be insufficient” to provide $500, —still the same income, — then “the Trustee is authorized to use so much of the corpus hereof as may be necessary to make the said' payments.” The “corpus hereof” is the same “corpus hereof” referred to in the preceding paragraph from which all the income is to be derived.

If separate trusts had been intended, the direction would have been to pay income from the balcmce of the corpus hereof. Throughout the rest of the agreement, in the disposition of the income from this residue for the *367 support, maintenance and education during minority, of Helen, Ms daughter, with directions that the income from the corpus be paid directly to her for life after she became of age, and with remainders over of the corpus, Mr. Petty, the settlor, was disposing of the same corpus and its income. The general plan of article V does not manifest a design to divide the residue of the fund into two distinct funds, the income from each of which is to be for the benefit of each beneficiary named. The gift of the entire residue to the trustee is most comprehensive. It is the persons named, the widow and mother, who are to receive the income from it as directed by the trust agreement. We conclude it is a single fund.

Appellant urges that the payments to the widow are for her maintenance and support and as no other adequate provision is made therefor, the widow’s rights are superior to those of the mother; and particularly is this so since the court below finds that this order, depriving the widow of any payment, works a great hardship on her.

Appellant relies on Lewin v. Lewin, 2 Ves. Sr. 415, 28 Eng. Reports 265, decided in 1752, although, as pointed out by the learned counsel for appellee, this doctrine was repudiated in Blower v. Morret (see page 420 of that volume), which was written four days after Lewin v. Lewin, by the same Chancellor. In Blower v. Morret, Lord Hardwicke refused to prefer the widow to other legatees. It was followed by Miller v. Huddlestone, 3 McN. & G. 513, 42 Eng. Rep. 358, where the court refused to prefer annuities to the testator’s daughter and brother over legacies to collaterals. He held that close family relationship of annuitants and their dependency on testator did not entitle them to priority. Chancellor Truro therein said: “I think it may be safely affirmed that, in the absence of all indications to the contrary, it is generally to be assumed that the testator considered that his estate may be sufficient to answer all purposes to which he has devoted it and consequently makes no *368 provision against a deficiency; such being the general rule, the Court would not be right in saying, without clear and conclusive reasons, that he intended to provide against an event, which in general it is not to be supposed that he ever contemplated.......If we must speculate on the presumable intention of the testator, I do not consider it by any means clear that the testator must be presumed to have intended a preference of his child, which might operate to the exclusion of others, for whom he has manifested an intention to make some provision.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 857, 311 Pa. 362, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettys-estate-no-1-pa-1933.