3 A.2d 218 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued October 26, 1938. The testator, John Ashhurst, Jr., a resident of Philadelphia, died July 7, 1900 leaving a will dated March 15, 1892, which was duly admitted to probate on July 13, 1900. He left a widow and seven children. By his will the bulk of his estate was left in trust, the net income to be paid his wife during her natural life, and at her death, the said net income to be paid in equal shares to his children then living, "or the issue of any child of mine who may be deceased," until the death of the longest living of his children, when the principal or corpus was to be divided among the issue of his children per stirpes. The widow died September 11, 1910. Four of the children are dead. One of them, Sallie W. Ashhurst, died October 26, 1937, unmarried and without issue, but leaving an adopted daughter,1 Mercedes Olympia Cubria, this appellant, who claims the income payable to Sallie W. Ashhurst during her life. The auditing judge and the court in banc disallowed her claim. The decree will be affirmed.
Counsel for appellant has persuaded himself that the *528
recent decision of the Supreme Court in Cave's Est.,
"Section 16. (a) Whenever in any will a bequest or devise shall be made to the child or children of the testator, without naming such child or children, such bequest or devise shall be construed to include any adopted child or children of the testator, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will.2
"(b) Whenever in any will a bequest or devise shall be made to the child or children of any person other than the testator, without naming such child or children, such bequest or devise shall be construed to include any adopted child or children of such other person who were adopted before the date of the will, *529 unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will."3
It is clear that section 16(b) of the Wills Act gives no help to this appellant, for she was not adopted by Sallie W. Ashhurst until January 8, 1937, while the will was made in 1892 and proved in 1900. The Wills Act effected no change in the distribution of this estate from that prescribed by the testator in his will.
But the testator did not direct that upon the death of any of his children, the share of the income of such deceased child should be payable to his or her children but to the issue of such deceased child. They are not the same: Bedford's Appeal,
Whatever changes the Intestate Act of 1917 may have made in the distribution of estates of persons dying intestate thereafter, and whatever change the Wills Act of 1917 may make on the construction of wills made or proved after its date, neither of them can change the distribution of his estate prescribed by a testator in his will, made and proved seventeen years before; nor will the Act of April 4, 1925, relating to Adoption, *530 passed twenty-five years after the will was proved, affect its provisions. The will will be interpreted and applied in the light of the law as it was when admitted to probate. We are satisfied that so applied the word `issue' did not include an adopted child.
Counsel for appellant in his exhaustive and scholarly argument discusses a number of very interesting questions, which are not really involved in this case.
The appellant may well be a member of her adopting mother's family, but that does not prevent a testator from limiting his bounty to certain members of the family to the exclusion of others; and when this testator, by his will proved in 1900, directed that the income payable to one of his children, should, on the death of that child be payable to her issue, we are of opinion that he limited it to children by blood and excluded children by adoption. See Russell's Est.,
The decree is affirmed at the costs of the appellant.