188 A. 205 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1936
Argued October 7, 1936. This is an appeal from the decree of the orphans' court refusing to surcharge the executor of the will of Rosa Pozzuto with certain moneys alleged by the appellant, guardian of two minor legatees, to belong to the decedent's estate.
On March 16, 1933, the decedent deposited in the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society $3,300 in the name of "Rosa Pozzuto, in trust for Josephine Matour." She made no further deposits or withdrawals and died June 14, 1933, leaving a will, naming her daughter, Josephine Matour, as executrix. The decedent left certain real estate, which she specifically devised, and no personal estate, except $18.41, being a balance of interest in the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society from an account she had there in 1931, although it appears in the adjudication that there was some funeral beneficial insurance. The will also provided for a bequest of $200 to a grandchild which was charged against the real estate, and directed the erection of a headstone at a cost of $150. There was a residuary clause disposing of the real and personal estate. The account shows the usual expense of administration, $150 for a headstone, and funeral cost of $154.75 "over and above insurance." It became necessary for the executrix to advance $500.51 of her own money to take care of these expenditures.
In the first paragraph of decedent's will, she expressed the intention "to dispose of all my property . . . . . . hereby revoking and making null and void any and all wills, testaments or writings in the nature thereof, at any time heretofore made by me."
The appellant's contention is that the tentative trust created by the decedent was revocable, testamentary in *96 character, and was revoked by the decedent in her last will.
It is not disputed that the decedent had the power to withdraw at any time all or any of the fund deposited and use it as her own or revoke the trust by will. A reserved right to revoke a trust is not inconsistent with the creation of the trust: Dolan'sEst.,
The doctrine of tentative trust recognized in the Scanlon case, supra, was adopted by the American Law Institute. Section 58, Restatement, Trusts, reads as follows: "Where a person makes a deposit in a savings account in a bank in his own name as trustee for another person intending to reserve a power to withdraw the whole or any part of the deposit at any time during his lifetime and to use as his own whatever he may withdraw, or otherwise to revoke the trust, the intended trust is enforceable by the beneficiary upon the death of the depositor as to any part remaining on deposit on his death if he had not revoked the trust . . . . . . Comment: b. . . . . . . A tentative trust of a savings deposit can be revoked by the depositor by his will. It is so revoked where by will he makes a disposition of the bank deposit in favor of anyone other *97 than the beneficiary. It is also revoked where by will he makes a disposition of his property which cannot be carried out except by using the deposit, as for example where he leaves no other property than the deposit."
There is nothing in the writing creating the trust in the case at bar that reasonably leads one to conclude that the decedent intended this trust to be testamentary in character, nor does the will expressly revoke it or make any specific reference to or disposition of the money included in the trust. Revocability is an attribute of a will, but it does not follow, because a written instrument is revocable, it is a will. If it was the testatrix's intention to revoke the trust, she certainly would have been more specific in the language used in her will, which was made shortly after the creation of the trust, than the general expression in the first paragraph thereof. She should have unequivocally revoked the recently created trust. A residuary bequest, without more, does not revoke a tentative trust: Richardson's Estate,
Mr. Justice SCHAFFER, in Scanlon's Estate, supra, cited In reTotten,
In Wilson v. Anderson,
In Rieff's Estate,
The appellant relies upon Waltman v. Germantown *99 Trust Co.,
In Nicklas v. Parker et al.,
Decree of the learned court below was affirmed, at appellant's costs. *100