Tower Estate

34 Pa. D. & C.2d 321
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedDecember 18, 1964
DocketNo. 2; no. 199
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. D. & C.2d 321 (Tower Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tower Estate, 34 Pa. D. & C.2d 321 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinions

Lefever, J.,

The question before the court is whether the trustees, in view of the investment powers contained in the will and the prior interpretation thereof by this court, acted properly in investing in stocks and bonds which are legal investments under The Fiduciaries Investment Act of 1949, as amended.

Testator died July 4, 1889, leaving a will dated May 21, 1889. By his will testator gave his residuary estate to his trustees, in trust, to pay the income to his wife, his children and their descendants until “the expiration of twenty-one years from and after the death of the last survivor of my children and grandchildren who may be born in my lifetime;” and at that time to distribute the [322]*322principal among his “lineal descendants then living.” One such descendant, Grace Tower Bright, aged 78, still survives. Hence, the trust will continue for upwards of twenty-one years.

The trustees’ investment powers appear in Item Five of testator’s will, viz:

“. . . to take possession of, hold, manage and appropriate the same and to collect, receive, obtain and recover all the rents, issues, profits, dividends and gains thereof and all the proceeds and avails thereof, and to invest and keep invested the same and every part of the capital thereof so as to make the same as productive as reasonably can be,... hereby directing them to preserve such investments and securities as I shall leave standing in my name so long as they my said Trustees or their successors in the Trust shall deem prudent, and making such new investments as they in their best judgment and discretion shall deem advisable and advantageous to my Estate without confining themselves to such investments as the law directs for the investment of trust funds, hereby allowing them full power to select any investments or securities they may approve except the Capital Stocks of Corporations and obligations not accompanied with reasonable securities, with full power also to the said Trustees to change any such investments whether left by me or made by them, and to convert and reinvest the proceeds whenever and as often as they in their judgment and discretion may think most to the advantage of my Estate.” (Italics supplied.)

Section 18 of The Fiduciaries Investment Act of 1949, provides as follows:

“The testator or settlor in the instrument establishing a trust may prescribe the powers, duties and liabilities of the fiduciary regarding the investment or noninvestment of principal and income and the acquisition, by purchase or otherwise, retention and disposi[323]*323tion, by sale or otherwise, of any property which, at any time or by reason of any circumstance, shall come into his control; and whenever any such provision shall conflict with this act, such provision shall control notwithstanding this act. In the absence, however, of an express restriction to the contrary in the trust instrument, the fiduciary may invest in any investment authorized by this act .” (Italics supplied.)

Do the quoted investment provisions of the will constitute such “an express restriction to the contrary?”

Judge Bolger, in his adjudication of February 19, 1954, in re the trustees’ nineteenth account, interpreted the disputed investment clause to authorize the then questioned legal investments, viz.:

“A careful consideration and review of the investment clause in the present case in the light of the above decided cases, the Act of Legislature and the changes, which have occurred since this testator died in the methods of financing, indicate to me that a reasonable interpretation of the clause must lead to the conclusion that the testator intended his trustees to be unfettered in their selection of securities for investments within the category of proper investments for trusts in Pennsylvania and that the express prohibition against investment in capital stocks and obligations not accompanied with reasonable securities was intended to be a curb on the trustees in relation to investments which were not legal investments.
“This testator has given unusually liberal powers of investment to his trustees. He initially extends it beyond those authorized by law as proper for trust funds as he incorporates into his will the expanding authority provided by later legislation including the Act of 1949 (supra). The fact that the latter Act authorizes as legal what the later phrase in the will, ‘except capital stocks of corporations and obligations not accompanied with reasonable securities’, appar[324]*324ently forbids, at first blush creates an apparent ambiguity. To resolve this ambiguity by applying only the latter clause would require that we strike from the will the first one, something we cannot do. However, they can be reconciled by holding that the second clause shall apply not in elimination of, but consistent with the first whereby the trustees are allowed to invest in stocks and securities authorized by the Act of 1949, but forbidden to buy stocks and debentures not so authorized. The phrase ‘obligations not accompanied with reasonable securities’ must be given a fluid connotation, not one that is limited to the date of the testator’s death. The testimony clearly indicates that present-day debentures are accompanied with reasonable securities.”

Judge Saylor, speaking for our unanimous court, dismissed the exceptions to that adjudication, stating in 87 D. & C. 447, 450:

“Item 5 of the will discloses that testator wanted his trustees to collect and distribute dividends and to make his trust estate ‘as productive as reasonably can be’. This indicates that he did not object to corporate stocks (his estate was in fact comprised of them at his death) and that he recognized that great income productivity might more likely result from such investments than from bonds or mortgages, both of which provide for a fixed return. See Gillingham Estate, 353 Pa. 493 (1946). Moreover, the use of the phrase ‘investments and securities’ surely contemplates corporate stocks. The word ‘securities’ has been defined as including common stocks: Gillingham Estate, 353 Pa. 493 (1946); McGraw’s Estate, 337 Pa. 93 (1940); Wood’s Estate, 130 Pa. Superior Ct. 397 (1938) (investment authorized ‘in any securities or investments’ without restriction to legal investments).
“Furthermore, there is no word of prohibition on unsecured obligations and common stocks in the clause [325]*325excusing the trustees from confining themselves to ‘such investments as the law directs for the investment of trust funds’. It is only when that clause is passed and the reader goes on to the language creating an extension of the power to include the right to invest in so-called ‘non-legals’ that he comes upon the language which constitutes a prohibition on certain investments in that category.
“From the above it is our conclusion that testator’s intention was not to prohibit in any way the purchase by the trustees of ‘investments and securities’ authorized by law as legal for trust funds. There is in the will no language amounting to ‘an express restriction to the contrary’ as required by the Act of 1949, supra.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kelsey Estate
143 A.2d 42 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1958)
Saunders Estate
143 A.2d 367 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1958)
Jeffries Estate
143 A.2d 391 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1958)
Cannistra Estate
121 A.2d 157 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Walker Estate
101 A.2d 652 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Henry Estate
198 A.2d 585 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1964)
Brown Estate
183 A.2d 307 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1962)
Britt Estate
87 A.2d 243 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Sowers Estate
119 A.2d 60 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Maroney's Estate
166 A. 914 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Gillingham Estate
46 A.2d 269 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
McGraw's Estate
10 A.2d 377 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
Nirdlinger's Estate (No. 2)
193 A. 30 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Wood's Estate
197 A. 638 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Commonwealth v. McConnell
75 A. 367 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. D. & C.2d 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tower-estate-paorphctphilad-1964.