Stewart's Estate

5 A.2d 910, 334 Pa. 356, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 644
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 30, 1939
DocketAppeals, 34, 148, 149 and 151
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 910 (Stewart's 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
Stewart's Estate, 5 A.2d 910, 334 Pa. 356, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 644 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of

Mr. Justice Drew,

The Fidelity Trust Company, as Trustee, filed in the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County two separate accounts: one, under a deed of trust created by Henry S. A. Stewart, Sr., and the other, under a trust created by his will. The accounts were audited together, but separate decrees of distribution were entered, to which four appeals were taken, two of which were by Bertie Jeannette Stewart, wife of the cestui que trust under both trusts, Henry S. A. Stewart, Jr.; one by P. L. S. Corporation, an assignee of a certain portion of the income of Stewart, Jr., under the testamentary trust; and the other, by Stewart, Jr., himself. The questions raised by these appeals are interwoven one with the other, for which reason they were argued together; we will dispose of them in one opinion.

*359 The deed of trust of Henry S. A. Stewart, Sr., dated October 10, 1921, provided, among other things, that the net income from the trust be paid “in monthly payments to my son, Henry S. A. Stewart, Jr., for and during the term of his natural life”; and that: “Said trust fund and the income therefrom shall not be liable for the payment of any debts of my said son, nor shall the same be liable to anticipation, execution or attachment in the hands of the said trustee.” Henry S. A. Stewart, Sr., died September 12, 1922, leaving a last will, creating the other trust estate here involved, wherein he devised and bequeathed unto his trustee his residuary estate, after the payment of certain legacies, in trust, “for the following uses and purposes: (a) To pay the net income therefrom unto my son, H. S. A. Stewart, Jr., for and during the term of his natural life in monthly or quarterly instalments, as he ma,y elect.”

It appears from the testimony offered at the audit that prior to May 16, 1933, Stewart, Jr., had married Cecelia H. Stewart, and then Anita Quinby Stewart, both of which marriages terminated in divorce. Stewart, Jr., entered into written agreements to pay substantial monthly sums to each of these women, to be paid out 'of the income due him under the testamentary trust. On May 16, 1933, Stewart, Jr., entered into his third marital venture with Bertie Jeannette Stewart, a resident of the State of Florida and one of the appellants herein, and he separated from her on April 14, 1934. Three days prior to their parting he started a divorce proceeding in the State of Florida. The Master, on September 5, 1935, filed his report recommending that the divorce be refused, and on January 3, 1936, the Court, in its final decree, refused the divorce and directed that Stewart, Jr., pay to his wife, Bertie Jeanette Stewart, the sum of $325 monthly as permanent alimony for maintenance and support, and $4,750 as counsel fees, payable at the rate of $250 per month. Apparently realizing that the Court would reject his divorce application *360 on the Master’s findings, Mr. Stewart left the jurisdiction of that Court, never has complied with its decree, removed his assets from Florida, has not returned thereto, and his ■ whereabouts at the time of the audit were unknown.

On January 6, 1936, Stewart, Jr., in consideration of the sum of $5,000 assigned all his right, title and interest, for a period of ten years, or until his death, whichever may come first, in seventy-five per cent of the income which he was entitled to receive from the testa"mentary trust unto P. L. S. Corporation. This assignment was served upon the trustee on January 7, 1936. Stewart, Jr., although his divorce application was refused by the Florida Court, proceeded to Yucatan, Mexico, and there went through a marriage ceremony with the sister-in-law of the President of P. L. S. Corporation.

Bertie Jeanette Stewart, after reducing to judgment, on five occasions, the accrued payments due her for the period from January 3, 1936, to July 19, 1937, under the decree for alimony and counsel fees, issued thereon in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, five foreign attachments in assumpsit for a total amount in excess of $9,000, against Stewart, Jr., and summoned the trustee as garnishee. The first of these attachments was served March 7, 1936, and the last on August 9, 1937. An attachment against the income of the testamentary trust was also served on January 6, 1938, in favor of Thomas N. Griggs, Esq., and another on February 5,1938, in favor of A. F. DeXreiges, Esq., attorneys for Stewart, Jr., for counsel fees.

The learned judge who audited the two accounts found that the assignment to P. L. S. Corporation was not fraudulent; and that Bertie Jeanette Stewart was entitled to fifty per cent, and Thomas N. Griggs, Esq., to the other fifty per cent in partial liquidation of his’ claim, of the income of the testamentary trast remaining in the hands of the trustee, after payment of claims of J. M. Stoner & Sons, Esqs., for counsel fees, the *361 amounts due under the agreements with Cecelia H. Stewart and Anita Quinby Stewart, the two former wives of Stewart, Jr., and the claim of P. L. S. Corporation under its assignment. The auditing judge also decreed that Bertie Jeanette Stewart was entitled to fifty per cent of the income of the spendthrift trust remaining in the hands of the trustee, less the sum of $2,250 which she admitted receiving on account of her claim; and that Stewart, Jr., was entitled to the other fifty per cent. Decrees of distribution were entered, and Bertie Jeanette Stewart and Stewart, Jr., filed exceptions. After argument, the court en banc dismissed the exceptions and affirmed the decree entered on the audit of the spendthrift trust; but sustained the exceptions to the decree entered in the testamentary trust as to P. L. S. Corporation assignment, and found that it was fraudulent. An amended decree was accordingly entered allowing Bertie Jeanette Stewart an additional fifty per cent of the amount previously decreed to P. L. S. Corporation, and the remaining fifty per cent was ordered to be applied, first, in full payment of the attachment of Thomas N. Griggs, Esq., and the balance in partial liquidation of the attachment of A. F. De-Kreiges, Esq. The amount allowed to Bertie Jeanette Stewart under the decree and amended decree in both trusts lacks over $4,000 of the total sum due her under her five attachments. From these decrees, four appeals were taken.

The first objection is to the finding that the assignment made by Stewart, Jr., to P. L. S. Corporation was fraudulent as to his creditors. The lower court en banc found that “a few days after Stewart knew or had reason to believe judgment would be rendered against him in Florida in this suit by his wife he executed an assignment of seventy-five per cent of his income to the P. L. S., a corporation which had been shortly prior thereto organized under the laws of the State of Delaware and whose officers reside in New York City. It was further *362 shown that close relations existed between the President of that Corporation and Stewart; that the latter, although refused a divorce from Bertie Jeanette Stewart, his wife, by the Courts of Florida, entered into a marriage in Mexico with a woman who was a sister of the wife of the President of the P. L. S.; that the consideration for the assignment to the P. L. S. was $5,000, which may be considered a small amount considering the possibilities of realization of a large sum on the part of the assignee.

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 910, 334 Pa. 356, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewarts-estate-pa-1939.