Wilbur's Estate

5 A.2d 325, 334 Pa. 45, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1938
DocketAppeals, 165, 166
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 325 (Wilbur'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
Wilbur's Estate, 5 A.2d 325, 334 Pa. 45, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 594 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

The ultimate disposition of these appeals depends on whether the record contains facts that support (1) the order charging the two trust estates with the fees of counsel for the exceptant, and (2) the payment of auditor’s fees in the amounts awarded. We all agree that the evidence shows clearly that the cases are not within the rule permitting the award of counsel fees and also that, in the circumstances disclosed, the learned court erred in not reducing the auditor’s fees.

The only exceptant to the accounts is Mrs. Hazzard, beneficiary under the will of Ray Wilbur, her husband, who died March 27, 1928. He was a beneficiary under *49 the wills of his parents, his father, Elisha P. Wilbur, dying in 1910, and his mother, Stella M. Wilbur, in 1920. Their wills, made in 1904, were alike as respects the questions now raised. They left seven sons surviving; the first to die was exceptant’s husband in 1928; the next was Warren A. Wilbur, January 14, 1932. Since these proceedings began, but after the testimony was taken, a third son, Rollin, died. None of the surviving sons excepted to the accounts; they are not only satisfied with them, but appellants’ briefs say, join in what is urged against the orders appealed from.

Elisha P. Wilbur, until his death, had been dominant in the ownership and management of the E. P. Wilbur Trust Company, named as testamentary trustee by himself and his wife. By his will he gave his property to his wife for life, remainder to their sons for life, subject to spendthrift trust provisions, and with general powers of appointment by will. On his death, letters testamentary were granted, June 20, 1910, to his widow Stella, and their eldest sons, Warren and Rollin, Warren being then president of the trust company. They prepared a first and final account but did not file it. The inventory showed gross personalty of $1,295,165.32, as of January 4, 1912. This property was transferred on January 5, 1912, to the testamentary trustee, together with a cash income balance of $2,348.52. No account was filed until September, 1933, when the trustee filed its First and Partial Account covering administration to January 15, 1932, the date of Warren’s death.

By Stella Wilbur’s will, the seven sons also took life estates subject to spendthrift trust provisions and with general powers of appointment by will. It was probated May 25, 1920, letters c. t. a. issuing to her sons Warren and Rollin. She left written instructions, not probated, for the disposition of certain personal property which was thereafter (May 27, 1920) made the subject of agreement by all the sons, pursuant to which it was distributed among them, the exceptant participating, a fact *50 of importance to be mentioned later. The administrators c. t. a. filed their First and Final Account May 14, 1921, confirmed absolutely, and showing a net balance of $293,646.53. In this account, credit was not taken for federal estate taxes approximating $20,000, nor for the distribution of the personal property under the agreement referred to above, appraised at $59,987.25, nor for certain other items subsequently shown in a Reconciliation Statement filed in the proceeding below. While the administrators c. t.' a. filed their account May 14, 1921, it was not until early in 1922 that they formally turned over the assets to the testamentary trustee, as of December 31, 1921. Prior to the transfer, they delivered to the trustee two supplemental statements of receipts and expenditures showing on hand, as of December 31, 1921, a net balance of $283,231.42, which, it will be observed, is $10,415.11 less than the net balance shown in the earlier account of May 14,1921. Each year the trustee rendered to each of the sons a statement of the trust administration, showing corpus, changes from time to time, income and disbursements. Such accounts were furnished annually until and including 1932. None of the sons ever made any objection. The obvious irregularity, complained of, in the performance of the duties of the personal representatives of the decedents and of the duties of the trustee, was doubtless the result of the intimate family relationship and of the control of the management of the trust company and its affairs by members of the Wilbur family. These facts constitute no excuse but are elements for consideration in the problems now presented.

After Ray Wilbur died in 1928, leaving his property, including the appointive estate, to his widow, 1 a new chapter opened. There was apparently no sign of dis *51 satisfaction until December 14, 1932, when she demanded 2 the separation of her interests and an accounting. The trustee filed the accounts in September, 1933. An auditor 3 was appointed, who, after hearing evidence, filed a report making what he called “surcharges” in the Elisha P. Wilbur trust in the sum of $442,545.61 and in the Stella Wilbur trust in the sum of $100,023.12, in appellants’ brief given as $101,610.43.

On November 16, 1935, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation loaned $2,862,649.90 to the trust company, taking as collateral, certain assets, including an assignment to the company made by the decedent’s grandson, Eobert Wilbur, son of Warren, of his interest in the estates of both his grandparents. Five days later, on November 21, 1935, the Secretary of Banking, as receiver, took charge of the trust company pursuant to the Department of Banking Code. In consequence of this receivership and on petition of appropriate parties, Tradesmen’s National Bank and Trust Company, of Philadel *52 pbia, was appointed trustee of both estates in succession to the trust 4 company.

Tbe auditor’s report on tbe Stella Wilbur trust account was filed July 12, 1937, and on tbe Elisba P. Wilbur trust September 13,1937. Exceptions to tbe reports were dismissed by the learned court below.

The appellants are (1) the Secretary of Banking, receiver of tbe trust company which, as trustee, filed both accounts, Nos. 58 and 8; be represents creditors and, in their interest, seeks to preserve tbe distributive assets from claims resulting from alleged mismanagement of tbe trusts; (2) tbe successor trustee, Tradesmen’s National Bank and Trust Company, Nos. 57 and 165; it is interested in conserving tbe trust estates by opposing unauthorized charges on tbe trust property; (3) Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, assignee of trust company, Nos. 56 and 166; this appellant seeks tbe benefit of tbe assignments of a one-seventh interest in each estate in circumstances to be stated.

Another important fact may be stated before coming to tbe assignments of error. On August 29, 1935, while tbe proceedings were pending before tbe auditor, and prior to the receivership, tbe trust company as trustee made an agreement with Mrs. Hazzard, in tbe case of each trust, by which she received from tbe Elisba Wilbur trust in cash and securities $49,364.88, and from tbe Stella Wilbur trust $51,920.56, in each case “in full satisfaction and payment of tbe said one-seventh share of tbe corpus and undistributed income of tbe said trust estate of [tbe testator] ...

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 325, 334 Pa. 45, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilburs-estate-pa-1938.