Shaffer Estate

61 A.2d 872, 360 Pa. 390, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1948
DocketAppeals, 158, 159 and 160
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 A.2d 872 (Shaffer 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
Shaffer Estate, 61 A.2d 872, 360 Pa. 390, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 513 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This appeal involves the will of George Shaffer, deceased, which was here before on an appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County refusing partition of the testator’s real estate sought by three of his five named residuary devisees. See Shaffer v. Shaffer, 354 Pa. 517, 47 A. 2d 702. We there reversed, holding that the testamentary power of sale was discretionary and not mandatory; that, consequently, the will did not work a conversion of the decedent’s realty; and that partition properly lay.

The appellants are the same persons as before, but they now appeal from a decree of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County dismissing their exceptions to the executors’ second and final account in respect of the proceeds from sales of realty and the rents therein accounted for and denying the exceptants a bill of review of the executors’ first and partial account.

Prior to the argument of the first appeal, the executors had sold three of the five separate parcels of realty *392 whereof the testator had died' seized. One of such sales (6601 Rowan Street, Pittsburgh), was made in fulfillment of an .exercised option to purchase contained in a written lease from the decedent in his lifetime to a lessee of the premises. The other two sales (viz., 810 Arch Street, Pittsburgh, and a Youngstown, Ohio, property) were made by the executors in reliance upon their testamentary authority to sell all or any part of the decedent’s realty. 1 All of these sales, including the Youngstown property, which manifestly had been erroneously included in the partition proceeding (see Shaffer v. Shaffer, cit. supra), were effected prior to our decision on the former appeal and all are accounted for in the executors’ second and final account to which the appellants have excepted in respect of the sales of 810 Arch Street, Pittsburgh, and the Youngstown property and the executors’ management, control and administration of the testator’s realty in general.

Relyihg upon our former decision that the will did not effect an equitable conversion of the testator’s real estate, the appellants contend that the executors were, therefore, without power to sell any of the decedent’s real estate and they further assert that the authority to collect and account for rents,. issues and profits of the realty was limited to the power of sale and, consequently, fell with it. Accordingly, the appellants argue that thé‘ proceeds óf the now disputed sales and the rents, issues and profits included in the executors’ accounts should be extracted therefrom and distributed directly to the residuary devisees without diminution for'commissions claimed by the accountants or fees to their counsel in respect of the executors’ management, *393 control and sale of the real estate. They also urge, in such connection, that the court below further erred in dismissing their petition for a bill of review 'Of the executors’ first and partial account wherein rents were accounted for without complaint from anyone.

The fallacy of the appellants’ contention lies primarily in their mistaken assumption that our ruling on the former appeal vitiated the executors’ sales and management of the realty. No such result was either intended or effected. And, in passing, it should not be overlooked that the questions now raised by the appellants concern distribution and not title.

It is true that the implication of the decision in Eberly v. Koller, 209 Pa. 298, 299, 58 A. 558, is that an executor may not convey real- estate under a testamentary discretionary power where the will does not also work a conversion. It is to be noted, however, that this Court’s opinion in that case was but a one line per curiam affirmance of the lower court’s arbitrary choice of a supposedly more expeditious' means (i. e., partition) of carrying out the provisions of the particular will. In the Eberly case, the lower court was concerned with the efficacy of partition in the circumstances and not with any power of sale as its one citation (Reid v. Clendenning, 193 Pa. 106, 44 A. 500) plainly indicates. Other and more recent decisions confirm the correct rule to be that, even though a will does not effect an equitable conversion, a discretionary power of sale thereunder is sufficient to authorize the executor to convey the decedent’s real estate: see Kemerer v. Johnstone, 318 Pa. 526, 179 A. 67, quoting with approval from Lantz v. Boyer, 81 Pa. 325, 327-328; Davidson v. Bright, 267 Pa. 580, 110 A. 301; Cooper’s Estate, 206 Pa. 628, 56 A. 67; and Livingood v. Heffner, 9 Sadler (Pa.) 526, 530-531, where this Court held that, although there is no equitable conversion, a discretionary power of sale empowers the executor to sell and convey the *394 testator’s realty; see also Sec. 30 of the Fiduciaries Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 447 (20 PS §716). 2

It so happens that the exercise of such a power has, at times, been justified on the ground that the sale of realty was essential to making distribution or paying debts of the decedent. But, then too, there is a conclusive presumption that a general power of sale is for the payment of debts: see opinion of Mr. Justice Sharswood at Nisi Prius in Evans v. Chew, 71 Pa. 47, 51, affirmed per curiam by this Court. So that, in any case, the exercise of a discretionary power of sale can be supported on the basis of the purpose constructively furnished by the presumption. And, in no event, is there any compelling • need for . the factual presence of a distributional or debt-paying purpose as a prerequisite to an executor’s exercise of a discretionary power of sale: see, e.g., Kemerer v. Johnstone, supra, where all debts of the testator , had been paid and distribution was postponed by the will until the death of the life tenant; see also Cooper’s Estate, supra, where the executor’s right to sell realty under a discretionary power was confirmed without reference to any distribution or payment of debts. Indeed, in that case, the sale was not made until the statutory period for the entry of suits to preserve the lien of debts not of record had expired. As a legal incident, creditors who had not preserved their liens were denied the right to participate in the distribution of the fund derived from the executor’s sales of realty. Where the power of sale is discretionary, conversion occurs when the property is sold and not at. the death of the testator: see also Davidson v. Bright and Cooper’s Estate, supra. And, as was said in Taylor v. Haskell, 178 Pa. 106, 111, 35 A. 732, ". . . until the exercise of the power . . . the estate. remained land.” But, the *395 interests of the devisees therein may be subjected nonetheless to an exercise of the power by the executor in furtherance of the proper administration of the estate: cf. Kemerer v. Johnstone, supra, at p. 528.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.2d 872, 360 Pa. 390, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-estate-pa-1948.