Opinion by
This is an appeal by a cotrnstee under an inter vivos trust from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County refusing to vacate a previous order of that court finding the settlor of the trust unable to take care of his property and appointing a guardian of his estate.
On April 1, 1950 William E. Elliott created an inter vivos trust under the terms of which he was the sole beneficiary and the Colonial Trust Company (now, by merger, the Fidelity Trust Company) and George F. Elliott were trustees. On September 19, 1950, George F. Elliott, a brother of William E. Elliott, presented a petition to the Court of Common Pleas of Yfestmoreland County to have William E. Elliott adjudged weak-minded and to have a guardian appointed for his estate. After a hearing, the Court, on September 30, 1950, adjudged Yvbliiam E. Elliott unable to take care of his property and appointed the First National Bank of Greensburg as guardian of his estate.
On October 1, 1954 — over four years subsequent to its appointment as guardian — the First National Bank of Greensburg, as guardian, instituted a proceeding to terminate the inter vivos trust and have the assets thereof turned over to it as guardian. In this proceeding the corporate trustee (appellant) alone, by way of preliminary objections, attacked the order of September 30, 1950 appointing the bank as guardian upon *323 the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction to make the appointment. In order to secure a preliminary-determination of this question the corporate trustee alone filed a petition for a rule to show cause why the order of September 30, 1950 should not be vacated to which petition the guardian made answer. After a hearing, the court below discharged the rule and from that decree this appeal was taken. 1
Appellant attacked the guardian’s appointment upon the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to act because (1) the petition for the appointment of the guardian failed to aver the jurisdictional fact of the alleged incompetent’s residence within the county, (2) the inter vivos trust then in existence sufficed to protect the alleged incompetent from any designing persons and (3) since it, as corporate trustee, had the incompetent’s property in its possession under the trust there existed no estate in connection with which a guardian could be appointed.
A motion to quash this appeal has been filed averring, inter alia, that the appellant-trustee has no standing to attack the order of appointment of the guardian and no right to prosecute this appeal.
To be entitled to prosecute an appeal, a person must have a present interest in the subject matter and must be aggrieved by the judgment, order or decree entered:
The order which appointed a guardian for the mental incompetent William E. Elliott was made in the *324 course of proceedings instituted under the Act of 1907. 2 Under section 1 thereof it is provided that only persons in a named class (parent, brother, sister, husband, wife, child, next-of-kin, creditor) or, in the absence of any such person or persons, “any other person” has the right to petition a court for the appointment of a guardian for an alleged mental defective. It is clear that the appellant could not have presented a petition under this section.
Between the date of the original order of appointment — September 30, 1950 — and, the date of the petition to vacate the order — January 12, 1955 — the Act of 1907, supra, was repealed by the Incompetents’ Estates’ Act of 1951. 3 Under section 8 of the Act of 1907, supra, provision is made for an appeal to the Superior Court by “any person aggrieved by the final decree”; the Act of 1951, supra, is silent on the right of appeal and appellate review would be by broad certiorari. Regardless of which statute governs this situation the appellant-trustee must be a person aggrieved by the decree from which it appeals before it can be considered to have a standing to prosecute the appeal.
The late Mr. Justice Linn, speaking for the court in
Musser’s Estate,
If the order or decree imposes upon the trustee a personal liability such as a surcharge or if the trustee has a duty to protect some otherwise unrepresented trust interest which requires protection then and only then does the trustee have a standing to appeal. The present decree from which the trustee appeals falls in neither category. The appellant-trustee has no standing to prosecute this appeal. 4
In
Lansdowne Borough Board of Adjustment’s Appeal,
Parenthetically we note that the order of September 30, 1950 which appointed the guardian was not appealed from and therefore was a final order not subject to attack by the appellant. This court in
Bigel Appeal,
In view of our conclusion that the appellant is without standing to prosecute this appeal, appellee’s motion to quash must be granted. It is, therefore, unnecessary to discuss the other questions raised upon this appeal.
The motion to quash the appeal is granted. Costs are to be paid by the appellant.
Notes
The petition and answer were filed to the same number and term as the original petition to secure the appointment of a guardian.
Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292.
Act of June 28, 1951, P. L. 612, 50 PS §1631. The Incompetents’ Estates’ Act of 1955 is inapplicable to this appeal: Act of February 28, 1956, P. L. 1154, §104, 50 PS §3101.
A complete annotation on this subject is to be found in 6 A.L.R. 2d, p. 147.
