Tunnell's Estate

190 A. 906, 325 Pa. 554, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1937
DocketAppeals, 391, 392, 396, 397 and 398
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 190 A. 906 (Tunnell'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
Tunnell's Estate, 190 A. 906, 325 Pa. 554, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 413 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Linn,

At the audit of the account of the administrator c. t. a. eight persons, decedent’s sister, brother, nephews and nieces claimed, as beneficiaries under eight trusts, certain bonds which decedent had caused to be registered in his name as trustee for them respectively. The learned court below held that, in declaring the trusts, his intention was testamentary and that they were revoked by his will. Distribution was ordered accordingly. The five appeals raise the same question. The parties agree on the law but differ about its application. Testator died August 9, 1934, leaving a widow and without issue. His personal property was inventoried at approximately $410,000. The bonds in dispute, about $160,000 par, were included in the inventory.

Appellants claim as beneficiaries of trusts inter vivos, but their proof does not sustain their claims. Tunnell, as owner of the bonds or of the money used to purchase them, was competent to create trusts inter vivos. It cannot be said that the evidence of one transaction is typical of all the rest; for some of them there is more *556 evidence than for others; some depend on the registration alone. The use of the words trust and trustee are not in themselves sufficient: Wilbur Trust Co. v. Knad ler, 322 Pa. 17, 185 A. 319. As to some, it was assumed in the court below “that it was the testator’s intention to treat all of the bonds in exactly the same-manner, and that there probably were other memoranda to explain the other bonds, which have not been found, due no doubt, to the careless manner in which the testator kept his records,” the administrator having testified that he found decedent’s papers “in a terrible state of disorder.”

The burden of proving their equitable title was on claimants. Such a trust “must be created by clear and unambiguous language or conduct, it cannot arise from loose statements admitting possible inferences consistent with other relationships”: Wallace’s Estate, 316 Pa. 148, 151, 174 A. 397; Brubaker v. Lauver, 322 Pa. 461, 185 A. 848. It máy be, as claimants contend, that Tunnell intended to vest rights in them, but we think the evidence is too uncertain and too indefinite to permit a court to reach that conclusion and that, for want of proof of his intention to hold the bonds as contended, the claims must be dismissed.

The bonds pass under the words “my estate” as used in his will. He left two documents, each written on the back of an envelope, each to the same effect, dated July 1, 1932. They were admitted to probate and are as follows:

“at my Death I want Stephen W Tunnell and Chas B Davis Jr my nephews to be my admrs and settle my estate according to the Laws of the state of Pena and not to be obliged to give a Bond for there Performace of Duty all other wills Prior to this date made by me Bevoked
“July 1 1932 G. A. Tunnell
“witness 702 So 52 st Phila Pa.”
“at my Death I want Stephen W. Tunnell & Chas B Davis Jr my nepheives to be my admrs. & Settle my es *557 tate according to the laws of the State of Pena & not be obliged to give a Bond for there Performace of Duty all other wills Prior to this date made by me Bevked
“July 11932 G A Tunnell
“witness 702 So 52 st Phila Pa.”

Decedent’s widow, who lived apart from him, elected to take under the will, and resists the claims of appellants.

It will not be necessary to recite the evidence of all of the transactions. As to certain bonds of the City of Philadelphia the following appeared:

“The Philadelphia National Bank,
“Loan and Transfer Agent
“City of Philadelphia
“Gentlemen:
“I have constituted myself trustee of City of Philadelphia bonds, registered in my name in trust for ($5000.) Stephen W. Tunnell, nephew and ($5,000.) Charles II. Davis, Jr., nephew. Will you kindly issue bonds to me as trustee for each of my nephews as stated above.
“It is a condition of the trust that I retain full power to receive the interest and to sell, transfer and assign the bonds at any time to any person — it being your duty to consult no one but me so long as the bonds stand in my name as Trustee).
“It is my right and duty (or the right and duty of my personal representatives in case I am dead), to transfer to such child the bonds held by me in trust for him.
“George A. Tunnell, Trustee
“Sworn and subscribed this 28th
day of December 1928
“Woodward Cook
“Notáry Public”

For another transaction, the record is as follows: On June 2, 1927, he caused $30,000 of 3%% United States Treasury bonds of 1943-47 to be registered in his name as trustee for Ella V. Long, a sister. On the back of an *558 envelope, found among his papers, and apparently relating to the same bonds, was the following:

“August 1927 Mrs. Ella Y Long Dear Sister
“There is Thirty Thous Dol in gov 3% Reg Bonds 1947 option 43 in my safety Box in the Mlct St Title & Trust Co 52 & Mkt St in The name of George A Tunnell in Trust for Ella Y Long at my Death They would become yours
“Yours G A Tunnell
“(2) 10 000 Each No C 0000 1353 x B 0000 1352 one 5 00000 o 0000 15-33
(5) 1000 No K. 000 14310 A 000 311 B> 000 14312 x C 000 14313 x D 000 14314.”

In another transaction his phraseology differed slightly from that just quoted:

“Mr. Harry Long
“Dear nephew
“There is a one Thous Dol Reg federal Land Bank Bond due May 1 1957 option 37 in my safety Box at the 52 & Market St Bank in The name of George A Tunnell in Trust for Harry C Long at my Death & This Bond is still alive it would become yours
“G A Tunnell
“June 1927 702 So 52 st Phila Pa”

Speaking of all the memoranda and letters in the record, the learned auditing judge said that they “refer to bonds of a face value of $83,000 out of a total of $159,000, and that they deal with seven of the eight cestuis que trustents involved, and that in every case but one, they deal with only a portion of the bonds registered in favor of the respective parties.”

Some facts were stipulated into the record. All the bonds were found after his death in decedent’s safe deposit box to which he alone had access.

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Bluebook (online)
190 A. 906, 325 Pa. 554, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tunnells-estate-pa-1937.