226 Pa. 594 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
The Fidelity Title & Trust Company filed its first and final account as ancillary administrator of the estate of James H. Hopkins, deceased, at No. 68, October Term, 1905, of the orphans’ court of Allegheny county. The account came before the court for audit on October 17, 1905, and at the instance of counsel representing Edward Rahm, Jr., distribution was suspended for two weeks. On December 5, 1905, Rahm presented a petition to the court asking the distribution to be further postponed until after the hearing in the estate of Virginia Rahm, deceased, to which, he averred, that James H. Hopkins was largely indebted. The audit was postponed until January, 1908, when the hearing was resumed.
On January 20, 1908, the orphans’ court entered a decree of distribution in the Hopkins estate awarding the balance for distribution in the hands of the ancillary administrator to the domiciliary administrator at Washington, D. C. On January 22, 1908, the Guarantee Title & Trust Company, administrator d. b. n. c. t. a, of the estate of Edward Rahm, deceased, presented its petition to the court, averring, inter alia, that its decedent had devised to his sister, Louisa Rahm, the interest on $3,000 during her lifetime; and directed that when his son, Edward Rahm, should reach the age of twenty-eight years, all of his share of the .testator’s estate should be paid over to him except the sum of $20,000, which sum should be held by the executors for the heirs of Edward at his death, the interest derived from said sum to be paid to Edward by the executor semiannually during his life. It was further averred in the petition that James H. Hopkins was the executor of the will of Edward Rahm, deceased, that he had died June 17, 1904, a resident of the city of Washington, D. C., and that his administrator was the National Safe Deposit, Savings & Trust Company of Washington, and the Fidelity Title & Trust Company of Pittsburg was the ancillary administrator; that the account of the ancillary administrator had been filed showing a balance for distribution which was claimed by the domiciliary administrator. It was further averred that Hopkins’ ancillary administrator had not charged itself in the account
The citation was heard upon petition, answer and testimony. A supplemental account was filed, and on May 22, 1908, the court entered a decree of distribution in the audit awarding to the Guarantee Title & Trust Company, administrator and trustee of Edward Rahm, deceased, the $20,000, and directed the income thereof during the life of Edward Rahm, Jr., to be paid to the ancillary administrator of the estate of James H. Hopkins, deceased, and the principal at the death of Edward Rahm, Jr., to be paid to his heirs as directed in the will; and awarded to Rahm’s administrator and trustee the $3,000, and directed the income thereof to be paid to Louisa Rahm during her life, and at her death the principal be paid to the legal representatives of the estate of James H. Hopkins, deceased.
Edward Rahm, Jr., presented his petition to the orphans’ court, October 13, 1908, reciting, inter alia, the fact of the bequests of the $20,000 and $3,000, averred that the court was without jurisdiction to adjudicate the disposition of the fu
On May 4, 1909, the court entered a decree dismissing Rahm’s petition, and from that decree he has taken this appeal.
The appellant contends the court erred in holding that it had jurisdiction, in the audit in the Hopkins estate, to adjudicate questions relating to the payment of the future income, and disposition of the principal, of the trust funds belonging to the estate of Edward Rahm, Sr., deceased; and in holding that it had jurisdiction to dispose of the income, not accrued and presently in court for distribution, but to be derived in the future from trust funds in the hands of the substituted trustee.
We fully concur with the contention of the learned counsel for the appellant that a judgment is void and may be attacked
In his opinion the learned judge of the orphans’ court says: “This petitioner was in court during the hearings in the audit of the Hopkins estate. His petition is of record December 7, 1905, asking for postponement of distribution, and the same counsel who represents him now represented all the interests then, and were repeatedly notified by the court that the question of income on the Rahm claim would be determined in the Hopkins audit.”
It will be observed that the question of the right to the trust funds and the interest thereon was distinctly raised in the answer filed by the ancillary administrator of James H. Hopkins, deceased, to the petition of Edward Rahm’s administrator. The answer denied the right of Edward Rahm to the in
The fund for distribution was in the hands of the administrator of Hopkins, who had been the original trustee under Rahm’s will. This is not an appeal by the substituted trustee, but by Edward Rahm, Jr., who claims that the money in the hands of Hopkins’s administrator belonging to Rahm’s estate should have been paid to the substituted trustee. This is a contest, therefore, between Edward Rahm, Jr., the legatee under his father’s will, and the ancillary administrator of James H. Hopkins, deceased, for the legacy in question. The court awarded to the substituted trustee the corpus of the trust funds,' but directed that the income from the $20,000 and the remainder after the life estate in the $3,000, the legacy bequeathed to Edward Rahm, Jr., should be paid to Hopkins’s administrator. It appears that by mistake Hopkins paid to Edward Rahm, Jr., the $20,000. He took the releases, above referred to, which acknowledged the receipt by Edward Rahm, Jr., of the amounts directed to be paid him by the will of his father, released Hopkins from all other liability or accountability to him on account of the estate, and agreed to indemnify Hopkins against liability by reason of the payment. This must be treated as an equitable assignment of Rahm’s interest in his father’s estate to Hopkins. The latter cannot retain the
As found by the orphans’ court, Edward Rahm, Jr., had full knowledge of the audit of the Hopkins account. He appeared by counsel in 1905 and obtained a postponement of the audit proceedings. Subsequently, on his petition, a further postponement was had in the audit for more than two years. He intimated to the accountant that he had a claim against the estate. He was personally present in court at the audit, as admitted by counsel. The court notified his counsel that the right to the income of the trust fund would be adjudicated.
It is therefore clear, we think, that Edward Rahm, Jr., had notice of the audit, was present during at least a part of it, and knew that the fund, which he now claims, was a subject-matter in controversy, raised by the pleadings, and would be determined by the court. He therefore had an opportunity to be heard and is bound by the decree: Johnston’s App., 4 W. N. C. 80.
The assignments of error are overruled and the decree is affirmed.