Yost's Estate

175 A. 383, 316 Pa. 463, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1934
DocketAppeal, 140
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 175 A. 383 (Yost'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
Yost's Estate, 175 A. 383, 316 Pa. 463, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 751 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

By his last will and testament, William Yost devised and bequeathed his residuary estate to the Fidelity Title *465 and Trust Company, now the Fidelity Trust Company, of Pittsburgh, in trust to pay the income to his son John Yost for life, and upon his death to pay the principal to such persons as he should by will appoint. Exceptions were filed in the court below by the beneficiary to the fifth account of the trustee, complaining, inter alia, that a certain mortgage, now foreclosed, was taken by the trustee in its own name, and not as trustee of the estate, for which reason the beneficiary, having so elected, claimed to be entitled to the repayment in cash of the trust funds invested in it. From the decree confirming the account the beneficiary has appealed.

The mortgage in question was given by one F. M. Henderson to the trust company in 1924, in the amount of $22,000, payable in monthly installments, with the balance due at the expiration of five years. The trust company took and held the mortgage in its own name and placed it in an installment mortgage pool. Shortly afterwards, Henderson conveyed the property to Irene A. Woods, who assumed the mortgage. In October, 1926, she and her husband, to whom she had conveyed an interest in the property, asked to be relieved of the requirement of monthly payments. After some negotiation, their application was granted by the company, it being then agreed that the time of payment should be extended for three years from October 18, 1926, no payment of principal to be made during the term of the extension, but interest to be paid semiannual!y. Since it was no longer an installment mortgage, it was taken out of the mortgage pool, and on October 18, 1926, it was allotted to the Yost estate by a declaration of trust placed on the books of the company, although title continued to be held by the company in its own name. At this time the amount due on the mortgage was $17,000. The record discloses no notice to the beneficiary of the fact that funds of his trust had been invested in this mortgage until at least two years after the allotment was made. In July, 1933, foreclosure proceedings were *466 begun, for default in payments and failure to produce tax receipts. At the sheriff’s sale the property was bought in by the company for costs and taxes.

Appellant contends that the company acted improperly in continuing to carry the mortgage in its own name after allotting it to the estate, and that the mere execution of a declaration of trust on the books of its trust department was an insufficient compliance with section 29 of the Act of April 29, 1874, P. L. 73, as amended by the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 159, and by the Act of April 6, 1925, P. L. 152. * With this we are entirely in accord. That act as amended requires that trust companies “shall keep all trust funds and investments separate and apart from the assets of the companies, and all investments made by the said companies as fiduciaries shall be so designated as that the trust to which such investment shall belong shall be clearly known.” We are unable to agree with the opinion of the court below that the company’s declaration of trust on its books was a sufficient compliance with the act. Where the trust to which the investment belongs is designated in no other way than by a declaration on the company’s *467 books, the allotment is “clearly known” to no one except the company. While the act as amended in 1925 provides that a clear designation on the company’s records shall be a sufficient compliance in the case of a mortgage pool, the mortgage here had been taken out of the pool and put into the Yost trust. The company was therefore under the same duty in regard to it as in the case of any other specific piece of property acquired for a specific trust. Whether it acquired the property from another or from itself, as in this case (a practice of which we do not approve but of which no complaint is here made), it should have taken title as trustee for the specific trust, by an instrument designating it as such and placed upon public record, so that all persons interested might be put upon notice of the trust: Freas’s Est., 231 Pa. 256; Carr’s Est. (No. 1), 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 369; see Restatement, Trusts (Tentative Draft No. 2), section 174, comment d. Only when such precautions have been taken is the beneficiary properly protected from the danger of an unfaithful trustee’s subsequently claiming the property as his own and from the possibility of attacks by the trustee’s creditors. A failure of the company to realize that a mortgage allotted to a specific trust could not be treated like a mortgage in a pool, but imposed different duties upon it, would not, of course, serve to excuse it from the neglect of such duties.

It is well settled that where a trustee invests trust money in property which he takes in his own name as an individual the beneficiary has the option to accept the investment or require the trustee to account for the money so invested, with interest: Morris v. Wallace, 3 Pa. 319; Stanley’s App., 8 Pa. 431; Royer’s App., 11 Pa. 36; Freas’s Est., supra; Carr’s Est., supra; see McAllister v. Com., 30 Pa. 536; Norris’s App., 71 Pa. 106. We see no reason for changing so settled and salutary a rule. As was said in Matter of Union Trust Co., 219 N. Y. 514, “It has been quite universally held *468 that a trustee should not invest trust funds in his own name. Such rule of law should not be abandoned, qualified, or in any way impaired......There is no difference between a corporate trustee and an individual trustee in its or his duty in respect to investments. Trust funds should not only be kept independent of individual and other trust funds, but the investments thereof should, so far as possible, be clearly defined, and at all times stamped with the individual trust to which they severally belong.” The trustee should not be permitted so to make an investment that he can call it his own today, if good, and tomorrow, if bad, ascribe it to the trust, or shift it from one trust to another, or leave it subject to attack by creditors as his individual property. Only by giving the beneficiary a right to make the trustee account for funds thus invested can a practice so fraught with danger be effectually prevented. Nor is the danger less where the trustee is a corporation than where the trustee is an individual.

This case is ruled by Freas’s Est., supra. There a trust company foreclosed a mortgage held in trust by it, and at the foreclosure sale bought in the property in the name of one of its officers. For four years thereafter the company permitted the record title to remain in the name of its officer, without any other designation of the trust than a declaration of trust executed by the officer and placed in its files. We held that the beneficiary was entitled to require the company to account for the amount bid at the foreclosure, with interest.

It follows that appellant is entitled to the option of affirming the transaction or of making the trust company restore the funds expended, with interest. The contention is made that his subsequent conduct amounted to an affirmance and' that he was thereby debarred from repudiating the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 383, 316 Pa. 463, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yosts-estate-pa-1934.