264 Pa. 478 | Pa. | 1919
Opinion by
The will of the testatrix devised the residue of her estate to her executor to pay the income and net profits, subject to a spendthrift trust, to her husband for and during Ms life, and at his death the income to be paid to her two children, in equal parts, under the same character of trust, with the right of survivorship in case any child should die without issue. The husband, Henry K. Fox, was named as executor and it is the contention of the appellant that no spendthrift or other trust can be created where the sole trustee is also the cestui que trust, the absolute ownership of the entire income of the trust during his life being in the beneficiary. This objection does not correctly state the situation. The trustee is not only trustee for himself, but he is trustee for the remain
Cestuis que trust are not, as such, incapacitated from being trustees for themselves and others; but, as a general rule, they are not altogether fit persons for the office, in consequence of the probability of a conflict between their interest and their duty: Lewin on Trusts, Vol. I, Sec. 40; Perry on Trusts, Secs. 59 and 297. But, it has been stated with great positiveness that the same person cannot be both trustee and beneficiary. Where the trustee is made beneficiary of the same estate, both in respect to its quality and quantity, the inevitable result is that the equitable is merged into the legal so that the latter alone remains. Such was Hahn v. Hutchinson, 159 Pa. 133. This doctrine results more from the merger than from any incompatability of interest between the trustee and cestui que trust. In distinguishing between active and passive trusts, “in the former case, equity preserves the trust to give effect to the donor’s right of dominion over his property, and in the latter, in favor of public policy, permits it to fall as useless”: Dodson v. Ball, 60 Pa. 492, 497. But the prohibition against the dual relationship is directed against the same interest and, therefore, a cestui que trust is not absolutely excluded from occupying the office of trustee, especially where he is one of several trustees, or where he is trustee for himself and others. But where property is given to an executor with certain duties to perform, impressed with a spendthrift trust, to pay to himself as an individual the income for life, and at his death the estate, corpus and income goes to his children, or others, the trust estate in the corpus and in the income is not in any manner destroyed, nor does the necessity for its existence cease during the life estate. The income still remains the testator’s property until it is actually paid to the beneficiary. There is no merger of interest in the trustee arising out of the fact that he is also a beneficiary. The trust is an
In conclusion, this estate was not devised as a freehold estate with the condition that it should not be liable for the devisee’s debt, as was done in Ehrisman v. Sener et al., 162 Pa. 577; Morgan’s Est. (No. 1), 223 Pa. 228; Breinig v. Oldt, 45 Pa. Superior Ct. 629; and where the subsequent disposition of the property was left to the devisee, as was said in Hahn v. Hutchinson, supra (141): “The whole course of reasoning is that a man shall not be the real owner of property with full right to deal with it as he pleases......and keep the same free from the claims of his creditors.” Here the residue was devised to the executor in trust with certain defined duties to perform, all of which were for the benefit of the corpus of the estate as it will ultimately reach the remaindermen. It was just as much an active trust as that upheld in Wanner et al. v. Snyder, 177 Pa. 208.
The decree dismissing the petition is affirmed, at the cost of the appellant.