Stineman v. Stineman

6 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedJuly 26, 1955
Docketno. 4
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C.2d 527 (Stineman v. Stineman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stineman v. Stineman, 6 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Per Curiam,

On September 30, 1949, the First National Bank of Ebensburg, petitioner, was appointed trustee in partition of the personal property owned by plaintiffs and defendants, heirs of Jacob C. Stineman, deceased, as tenants in common. The complaint in partition also asked for a partition of the real estate devised by the testator including coal and fireclay.

[528]*528Preliminary objections were sustained by the court below as to the real estate which contained coal and fireclay and the bill as to these mineral holdings was dismissed on the ground that a trust had been created by the will with respect to mineral lands and that an absolute gift to the children of the testator had been later cut down by subsequent language in the will. This action of the lower court was reversed in Stineman v. Stineman, 382 Pa. 153, wherein the court below was directed to reinstate plaintiffs’ bill of complaint as to land underlaid with coal and fireclay and .grant such further relief as may be found to be appropriate in accordance with the opinion of the Supreme Court.

The appointment of petitioner as trustee in partition of the personal property was confirmed by this court by decree dated June 7,1952, and again by decree dated June 24, 1954, and no appeal was taken from either decree in respect to the validity of such appointment.

The present petition of the First National Bank of Ebensburg, as trustee in partition of the personal property suggests that certain lessees of the coal made payments to the Prothonotary of Cambria County and to Nettie Stineman Slick, one of the defendants, as administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. of the estate of Jacob C. Stineman, deceased, that the administratrix received certain payments by reason of the sale of timber on the land which is a part of this litigation and that certain other payments on account of the timber sale were made to J. Harrison Westover, Esq., as escrow, that the administratrix also sold “red-dog” or mine refuse from the land involved in these proceedings and has received payments for the same, that lessees of a portion of the coal land ceased making payments of royalty by reason of the present litigation. The peti[529]*529tion asks the court to direct that all parties who received the payments above referred to be required to pay the amounts now in their hands to petitioner and that any amounts due and unpaid likewise be paid to it.

An answer to the petition was filed by but two of the defendants, Nettie Stineman Slick, individually, and as administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. and the Moxham National Bank of Johnstown, trustee for Dorothy S. Cutting and Paul 0. Stineman. However, at the argument counsel for the Moxham National Bank of Johns-town, trustee, stated for the record that he had been instructed by the board of directors of that institution to withdraw the joinder of the bank in such answer. In her answer, the administratrix advances two reasons why the prayer of the petition should not be granted:

First, she contends that the funds referred -to are not personal property of the kind and character as contemplated by the Act of April 27, 1927, P. L. 460, 12 PS §1791. This reason was not pressed at the argument and it is clear that the funds which petitioner seeks to have paid to it consist of personal property which is jointly owned by two or more persons and is, therefore, subject to partition under the Act of 1927.

The second reason suggested by the administratrix is that the personal property with which we are concerned is subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the orphans’ court and that consequently the several funds should be paid to defendant administratrix d.b.n.c.t.a. since legal title to the “personal estate of a decedent” passes at his death to his personal representative as of the date of death: Act of April 18,1949, P. L. 512, sec. 103, 20 PS §320.103, which section is declaratory of the existing case law. See comment thereunder.

The question involved is simply whether the funds on hand should be paid to and distributed by the trustee in partition of the personal property of the parties [530]*530as tenants in common or by the administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a.

The difficulty with defendant’s position is that the funds which are the subject of this petition were at no time a part of the “personal estate of a decedent”. The testator died in the year 1913 and the funds are proceeds of royalties from real estate which has been owned by the parties, the heirs of Jacob C. Stineman, for the past 42 years as tenants in common: Stineman v. Stineman, 382 Pa. 153. The administratrix cited the case of Smith v. Glen Alden Coal Co. et al., 347 Pa. 290. In that case, however, a lease of coal land had been made by the testator in his lifetime “ ‘until such time as all the available merchantable coal shall have been mined and removed’ ”. The court said that such a lease constituted a sale of an estate in fee simple and that the interest remaining in decedent-lessor in the royalties to be paid under the lease was personal property. In that situation the testator’s interest as lessor clearly passed to his personal representative as personal property. In the case before us we are not concerned with the proceeds of a lease entered into by the testator in his lifetime but with the proceeds of leases made by the children of the testator joined with the executor: Stineman v. Stineman, 382 Pa. 153, 160. The funds on hand, therefore, are the proceeds of real estate jointly owned by the parties. As jointly owned personal property they are subject to partition under the Act of 1927, supra.

The administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. further suggests that in the past the parties have permitted the royalties paid under the various leases to be paid to the personal representative and distributed by the personal representative to them and that consequently the funds now on hand should be paid to the present administratrix. Since the Supreme Court has determined [531]*531that the real estate of Jacob C. Stineman, deceased, was clearly devised to the parties to this suit in fee simple the acts of the parties do not create an estoppel. See also Burpee Estate, 367 Pa. 329, 336.

We, therefore, enter the following

Decree

And now, July 26, 1955, after argument, and upon due consideration, it is hereby ordered and decreed as follows:

(a) The order of this court of March 4, 1952, permitting Adams Fuel Corporation to make all royalty payments to Joseph C. Dolan, prothonotary, be and the same is hereby vacated;

(b) the order of this court of May 20, 1953, permitting Fallier Coal Mining Company to make all royalty payments to Joseph C. Dolan, prothonotary, be and the same is hereby vacated;

(c) Joseph C. Dolan, prothonotary, be and he hereby is ordered and directed to pay all money received from Adams Fuel Corporation and Fallier Coal Mining Company as royalty payments now in his hands, to wit, $21,160.64, to the First National Bank of Ebensburg, trustee, and further to pay over to the said First National Bank of Ebensburg, trustee, any amount subsequently paid to him by the Adams Fuel Corporation and Fallier Coal Mining Company by reason of the above mentioned orders;

(d) The Stineman Coal &

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Related

Burpee Estate
80 A.2d 721 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
Perri v. Chiavaroli
88 A.2d 798 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Stineman v. Stineman
114 A.2d 137 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1955)
Smith v. Glen Alden Coal Co.
32 A.2d 227 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Colison Estate
52 A.2d 184 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stineman-v-stineman-pactcomplcambri-1955.