The question to be decided in this case is whether the heirs at law of Peter L, Willcutt should be determined as of the date of his death or the date of the termination of the life estate created by his will. The testator died in 1888 leaving a will made in 1882. After the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, he gave his entire estate, real and personal, in trust to his wife, Jane M. Willcutt, for life and upon her death "I give bequeath and devise all said trust estate to my heirs at law then living, said heirs to take the same as by the statutes of descent and distribution of this Commonwealth made and provided.” His widow, a brother and two sisters survived the testator. The widow died November 1, 1918. The brother and sisters died before the death of the life tenant. Mrs. Willcutt gave the residue of her estate to the appellant, the New England Anti-Vivisection Society, hereinafter called the Society. In the Probate Court it was decreed that the personal and real estate of Peter L. Willcutt passed to his heirs at law, determined as of the daté of the death
In the construction of a will, the general rule that, where there is a limitation over to a class designated as the heirs at law of the testator, they are to be determined at the time of the testator’s death, is not to be followed if it defeats the intention of the testator. White v. Underwood,
The testator devised and bequeathed his entire estate to his wife for life. This was the extent of his gift to her. He did not intend that she should further share in his estate as one of his heirs at law under the provisions of his will, see Bragg v. Litchfield,
The language of the will did not bestow a vested remainder upon those who were his heirs at the time of his death. It indicates an intention that the remainder was to vest at the time of his wife’s death in his then heirs at law; or as he expressed it, in his heirs at law who were “then living.” This construction is supported by the decided cases. In Wood v. Bullard, supra, in construing the meaning of the words “heirs at law then surviving,” where the limitation over was to such heirs, the court said at page 333: “The gift was only to heirs at law then surviving. There was no gift to any heir at law except to heirs at law surviving at the time fixed. It was necessarily wholly uncertain who would fall within that
In White v. Underwood, supra, on the death of the life tenant the trustees were then to pay all debts "against the trust fund and “distribute all the remainder thereof among my heirs at law, according to the statutes which shall then be in force;” it was there decided that the remainder should go to those who would be the testator’s heirs at law at the death of the life tenant, and not to those who were his heirs when he died. See also Harding v. Harding,
The decree of the Probate Court is affirmed. Costs between solicitor and client are to be in the discretion of a single justice.
So ordered.
