In re Adams' Estate
| Decision Date | 25 October 1897 |
| Docket Number | 161 |
| Citation | In re Adams' Estate, 38 A. 514, 183 Pa. 134 (Pa. 1897) |
| Parties | In re Estate of Rose Ann Adams in the hands of William J. Alexander, Trustee. Appeal of William A. Adams |
| Court | Pennsylvania Supreme Court |
Argued October 20, 1897
Appeal, No. 161, Oct. T., 1897, by William A. Adams, from decree of O.C. Washington Co., Feb. T., 1897, No. 6 sustaining demurrer to petition. Affirmed.
Petition for bill of review.
The facts appear by the opinion of TAYLOR, J., which was as follows:
It is conceded by the petitioner in this case for a bill of review of the accounts of Wm. J. Alexander, trustee of Rose Ann Adams, and James S. Alexander and Joseph A. Herron, executors of the will of the said Wm. J. Alexander, who was trustee of the said Rose Ann Adams, deceased, that he has laid no ground demanding relief as a matter of right, which was to admit that there were no errors of law apparent on the face of the records referred to, and that no new matter had arisen since the decrees confirming said accounts. It was frankly stated by the petitioner's counsel at the argument of the case that if the petitioner were granted the review for which he laid claim, it rested solely with the court as a matter of grace, and to this attribute alone on the equitable side of the court he addresses himself and refers his cause. In disposing of the case it will be necessary to consider only when and under what circumstances a review should be granted as a matter of grace, after referring to the facts stated in the petition, from which the petitioner's rights are now to be determined, if he have any, under this proceeding.
The will of Joseph Alexander must be taken as the basis of any claim the petitioner here may have to relief, since the petition sets forth his will, and that whatever estate Rose Ann Adams had was derived by and under said will, and in which the trust here was also created. Joseph Alexander died testate in June, 1871. His will was duly probated and letters testamentary issued to Wm. J. Alexander, a son, who at the time of his father's death was engaged with him in the banking business as private bankers in the city of Monongahela. By the said will of Joseph Alexander his executor therein named was also made trustee of the one fifth residue of his estate remaining after the payment of his debts, to be by him held in trust for the use and benefit of the said Rose Ann Adams during her life, and then any remaining after her death to be paid to her two sons, Wm. A Adams, the petitioner in this case, and Charles W. Adams, who died intestate, unmarried and without issue. Rose Ann Adams was a daughter of the said Joseph Alexander and a sister of Wm. J. Alexander, the executor and trustee under the father's will. In the appraisement of the estate of Joseph Alexander, deceased, filed August 1, 1871, the sum of $4,988 was appraised as "due from Alexander & Co.," the banking firm, and represented the interest of the deceased father in this business. This sum, with other items of personal property of the deceased, aggregated $5,542 which sum the accountant, together with the sums derived from the sale of the decedent's real estate, aggregated, as the entire estate of said deceased, $17,961.50; and after deducting debts, funeral expenses and expenses of settlement, left a balance for distribution among the legatees under said will of $17,169.95, which balance was distributed in five equal shares and amounts to and among the children of said deceased of $3,433.99 each, as shown by the account of said executor filed to No. 14, February term, O.C. 1872, which account was confirmed and never excepted to. The executor of Joseph Alexander received, and receipted for as trustee of Rose Ann Adams, her full share as shown by the distribution account of her father's estate, December 16, 1871, $3,433.99, and placed it on deposit in the banking house of Alexander & Co., where it remained until finally used up by the said Rose Ann Adams, principal, and interest which it drew from the date of its deposit with the bank on December 16, 1871, the interest of which and so much of the principal as was remaining were paid July and January of each year for the support and care of the said Rose Ann Adams, who was a lunatic, confined in an asylum for the insane until her death, May 22, 1893.
At No 5, January term, O.C. 1881, the said William J. Alexander filed an account of his management of this trust fund held by him under the will of Joseph Alexander for the use of said Rose Ann Adams, accounting for principal and interest accrued thereon July 1, 1880, $4,810.88, from which he took credit in the sum of $2,683.02, as paid out for the maintenance, care and keeping of his sister, in the institution for the insane where she was confined. This account was duly confirmed by the court without exception filed, and the balance shown by it in the hands of the trustee, viz: $2,127,86, the said trustee continued to keep invested at six per cent annual interest until January 2, 1888, when principal and interest of the trust fund became exhausted in the support of the lunatic, and the trustee and brother had expended of his own funds, as appears by the account of his executors, who to No. 56, May term, O.C. 1895, filed his final account as trustee, the sum of $971.54, showing an indebtedness in said amount of the estate of Rose Ann Adams to the executors of William J. Alexander, deceased. This account filed of this trust estate by the trustee's executors, the trustee having died June 4, 1894, was exhibited in the register's office May 15, 1895, in a few days less than one year after the decease of the said trustee of Rose Ann Adams, and was advertised and confirmed according to law absolutely April 17, 1895, without exception filed thereto. It is these two latter accounts that the petitioner here, William A. Adams, the only surviving son and heir of the said Rose Ann Adams, filed March 8, 1897, for a rule, etc., asks the court to open up to him, as a matter of grace, for review, for the purpose of showing, as he sets out in paragraph 14 of his petition, that "the portion of the estate allotted to the trustee of Rose Ann Adams was an interest in the said Alexander & Co., equal to the amount of said estate, and was never converted into money, and never passed through the hands of Wm. J. Alexander as executor and trustee, but remained a vested interest in said company without interruption from the death of Joseph Alexander to this date, and the principal thereof has never been accounted for." It is here plain to be seen that no new proof has been discovered after the decree confirming the account of Wm. J. Alexander, as trustee of the said Rose Ann Adams, a lunatic, filed to No. 5, January term, 1881, which proof could not possibly have been used at the time when the decree confirming that account was made. By that account the trustee plainly discloses the fact that the share or interest derived by the said Rose Ann Adams from her father's estate, and by him held in trust under the will of his father for this lunatic sister, is not a vested interest in the banking firm of Alexander & Co., but there as a deposit drawing interest thereon at the legal rate, the same as that of an investment for an interest rate instead of an interest in the firm. A period of about eight years had elapsed between the death of Joseph Alexander and the filing of the first account of Wm. J. Alexander, as trustee of Rose Ann Adams, yet in all these years no expenses of the running of the banking house of Alexander & Co., were charged up to the trust estate of Rose Ann Adams in the trustee's hands; in this account, and then, as now, the accountant treated the money derived by her from her father's estate as invested simply as an interest bearing investment, the income of which, as well as some of the principal, from time to time, were necessarily used for her support and maintenance in the asylum. There is no allegation in the petition that the petitioner was without knowledge of the filing of this account, or the last one filed by the executors of the trustee, or so situate that he could not inspect the same, and we must take it after this lapse of time, and particularly after the death of Wm. J. Alexander, the trustee, whose lips are now sealed in death, that the petitioner has been guilty of such laches, he being the residuary legatee of the mother's trust estate under the will of his grandfather Joseph Alexander, as destroys his title to relief. For the principle laid down above, and which controls our decision in this case, see Scott's App., 112 Pa. 427; Priestley's App., 127 Pa. 420, and the cases in the above two cases cited, wherein these principles of equity, as applicable to the act of 1840, were early adopted by the Supreme Court of this state. We must assume that the petitioner, interested as he was in the estate of his grandfather, a portion going to his mother and then to himself, in the hands of the trustee appointed by the will of his grandfather, had legal notice of the filing of these accounts which were advertised, and the solemn decrees of the court confirming them, wherein it is shown on the face of each that they could then, before the confirmation of each, have been attacked for the same...
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