Loring
Loring
Opinion of the Court
The individual appellants are trustees under the will of Israel Lombard, while the trust company is trustee under various wills and an agreement of compromise. It is unnecessary to recite the provisions of these instruments. The only question which is common to all the appeals is, whether the charges for services of guardians ad litem appointed solely to represent “persons unborn or unascertained” having possible future interests in the trust funds or property should be taken out of income, or borne by principal.
The necessity of the appointment and the reasonableness of the charges are conceded. The court of probate in the first case on the trustee’s fifth account having ordered the amount charged to income, while in the other cases the decrees allowing the several accounts disallowed the items as charged against principal without prejudice to any right of the trustee in subsequent accounts to charge these items against income, the accountants appealed to this court.
By R. L. c. 150, § 22, where an account has been filed the items
• If by St. of 1907, c. 371, brokers’ commissions and other expenses properly incurred and paid for, in connection with‘the sale, or in the exchange or purchase of property are to be charged to principal, the general rule is, “that, in the absence of a different testamentary direction or of an agreement as to apportionment between the tenant for life and the reversioner, ordinarily taxes, insurance and all incidental expenses^ of the maintenance of real property, which forms a part of an estate held in trust, whether left by a testator or purchased by the trustees, are to be paid from income.” Jordan v. Jordan, 192 Mass. 337, 344, and cases there collected. It would hardly be contended where an insane remainderman is cited under R. L. c. 150, §§ 1, 2, 22, on the filing of the trustee’s account, that the expenses of the guardian ad litem who must be appointed to represent him would be an expense of maintenance chargeable to income. We are unable where a guardian is required, to perceive any difference in principle between a remainderman in being, and a remainderman who may come into being through the mere efflux of time. It is plain that the beneficiaries for life only can have no
The allowance for the guardian’s services moreover is a necessary general expense of administration as distinguished from ordinary current expense, and having been incurred for the protection and benefit of the entire property is to be borne by capital. Bridge v. Bridge, 146 Mass. 373, 377. Bartlett, petitioner, 163 Mass. 509. Jordan v. Jordan, 192 Mass. 337. Gray v. Hemmenway, 212 Mass. 239, 243.
The result is that the decree in the first appeal is reversed and the decree in each of the remaining appeals also must be reversed.
Ordered accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Augustus P. Loring & another, trustees, Old Colony Trust Company, trustee, (in eight cases)
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published