Tull's Estate

1 Pa. D. & C. 292, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 99
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedJune 28, 1921
DocketNo. 415
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 292 (Tull's 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
Tull's Estate, 1 Pa. D. & C. 292, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 99 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Gest, J.,

Levi S. Tull died on Oct. 10, 1908, leaving a will, the typewritten copy whereof is not certified by counsel, as required by the rule of court, by which, after a bequest to his wife of household furniture and the occupation of No. 112 Price Street for her life, and an annuity of $600 per year, he devised and bequeathed his residuary estate, real and personal, to his executors in trust to divide the remainder into four equal parts and pay the same to his four children, Ida V. Beale, Francis D. Tull, Maurice L. Tull and Ernest B. Tull, in equal shares; and the testator further directed his executors or their successors, immediately after the death of his wife, or as soon as possible for the benefit of the estate, to sell all his real estate and personal property at public or private sale, and to divide the proceeds into four equal parts, which he devised to his four children. He further provided that if any of his children should be dead at the decease of his wife, leaving legal issue him or her surviving, that said issue should take the same share that his, her or their father or mother would have taken if then living; but if he or she should leave no legal issue surviving, then the share should be divided in the same manner between his surviving children and the legal issue of those who were dead.

Francis D. Tull, Ida V. Beale and Charles J. Schaefer were appointed executors, and the will provided there should be always two executors or trustees. Ida V. Beale died in Juñe, 1917, unmarried and without issue, and [293]*293on June 17, 1919, the Chelten Trust Company was appointed co-trustee, Francis D. Tull having been previously discharged. Sarah Tull, the widow of the testator, died June 8, 1919, so that the estate is distributable in equal parts or shares among Francis D. Tull, Maurice L. Tull and Ernest B. Tull.

The accountants charge themselves with the balance of the residuary estate appearing by the executors’ account, $19,249.60, and also with the proceeds of real estate sold, the debits aggregating $45,038.50, and credit is taken for commissions to the two trustees, Charles J. Schaefer and Chelten Trust Company, at the rate of 3 per cent., or $1351.16. It appears, however, that the real estate sold for an aggregate of $46,500, the amounts debited in the account being the net amounts after deducting certain costs attending the conveyances, and also the sum of $1395, being 3 per cent, on $46,500, as having been paid to and received by Winfield S. N. Knopf. Of course, this method of stating the account is irregular. It was said that the account was drafted by a stenographer or book-keeper employed in Mr. Schaefer’s office, but that does not relieve the accountants of their responsibility. The accountants should have charged themselves with the actual purchase prices of the several pieces of real estate and taken credit for all deductions therefrom, so that the account would show on its face just what the trustees did, without supplementary or explanatory statements. In fact, the auditing judge would have been justified in requiring the account to be restated at the expense of the accountants, but refrained from doing so, as the question raised at the audit can be accurately stated in a few words. The facts are that commissions have been deducted at the rate of 3 per cent, on $46,500, or $1395, and that the trustees have charged additional commissions of 3 per cent, on the net amount, thus making a further charge of $1351.16. Practically, nearly 6 per cent, commissions are charged on the proceeds, and this was objected to by Maurice L. Tull, entitled to one-third of the balance. The other distribu-tees acquiesce, as of course they have a right to do.

The accountants relied, first, upon the agreement annexed to the account, and signed before the filing thereof by the three parties in interest, including Maurice L. Tull, who now objects, but the auditing judge attaches little importance to this. The account, as presented to the parties for their signatures, does not show the payment of double commissions, but merely 3 per cent, on the debits claimed by the trustees. It may be true that the memo-randa or copies of the statements of the settlements for the various properties were on the table, together with the account, before the parties, when they added their signatures, which statements contained the payment of 3 per cent, to Mr. Knopf, but there is nothing to show that Maurice L. Tull, when he agreed to the account, knew that these commissions had been charged, and Maurice L. Tull testified that he did not remember looking over any other papers or even seeing them. In the opinion of the auditing judge, Maurice L. Tull had a right at the audit to object to the charge of double commissions. If the account had been fully and properly stated, as it should have been, and had shown on its face that Knopf was getting full 3 per cent, commissions in addition to the trustees’ charges, the case might have been different, though, even then, it would seem the agreement to the account might have been withdrawn at the audit: Fisher’s Estate, 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 297. This would have been an appropriate time for Mr. Schaefer to have explained to the legatees that the amounts with which the accountants debited themselves as the proceeds of sales were only the net amounts after deductions of Mr. Knopf’s commissions, but, unfortunately, the trustee did not avail himself of this opportunity.

[294]*294The accountants further relied upon two agreements signed by the parties Aug. 26, 1919, and Nov. 9, 1920, and the settlement of Dec. 10, 1920, as found on pages 58 and 59 of the testimony, which authorized Winfield S. H. Knopf to sell the real estate for certain prices mentioned in each case. This agreement did not include premises Nos. 5821 and 28 Germantown Avenue, sold for $20,200, which property was agreed to he sold during the lifetime of the widow, though the settlement was not made until the following August. The agreement of sale, it appears, was signed by the three parties in interest. Charles J. Schaefer is a well known real estate agent and broker in German-town, having his place of business at No. 5702 Germantown Avenue, in the general location of the properties in question. He was appointed by the will one of the executors and trustees, and has since the death of the testator been in active management of the estate. Winfield S. H. Knopf is also a real estate broker, and has been in the employ of Mr. Schaefer for nearly twenty-seven years on weekly salary and given commissions in addition. Mr. Schaefer’s name appears on the front of the office building, Mr. Knopf’s name being there as notary public. Mr. Schaefer’s for sale signs were placed on the properties of the Tull estate, and Mr. Schaefer’s printed letter-heads were used by Mr. Knopf, who had none of his own, and he testified also that he wrote a great many letters for Mr. Schaefer and signed the latter’s name. One letter, however, dated March 27, 1920 (page 61 of the testimony), was signed by Mr. Knopf with his own name. Mr. Schaefer testified that he did not engage the services of Mr. Knopf to effect the sale of the real estate, and, further, that he paid him on account of the commissions, some money still being due, and that he had no arrangement or agreement with Mr. Knopf by which he was to receive any of the moneys so paid.

The testimony is not altogether clear as to the circumstances under which the parties in interest authorized Mr. Knopf to sell the properties and fix the prices. It appears, however, that Mr. Schaefer told them or sent them word, after the widow’s death, that it was time to sell the properties, and- to come to his office.

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Related

Fisher's Estate
65 Pa. Super. 297 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 292, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulls-estate-paorphctphilad-1921.