Testatrix, who died on September 18, 1932, was survived by her adopted daughter, her second husband, and her brother. By the eleventh clause of her last will and testament she bequeathed her residuary personal estate to her executors, in trust to pay the income to her brother for life, and at his death "to pay over and divide the corpus or principal thereof in equal shares to and among the children of my daughter, Eleanor D. Wallace, then living, and the children of my brother, David Benson, then living, and the then surviving issue of a child of either of them then deceased, such issue taking their deceased ancestor's share by representation." Testatrix's husband elected to take against the will, and payment to him of half the estate was accordingly ordered, under the intestate laws. The life tenant having died on November 28, 1933, after the audit but before the adjudication of the executors' account, a distribution of the residuary estate was sought by the remaindermen, of whom eight are the children of testatrix's brother and two are the children of her daughter. A decree directing distribution among the remaindermen per capita was entered by the auditing judge, whose action was confirmed absolutely by the court in banc. This appeal is by the two children of testatrix's daughter. The claim is that distribution should be per stirpes, one-half to be divided among the children of testatrix's brother and the other half among the children of her daughter.
A careful consideration of the language of the will has left us without doubt that the decree of per capita distribution was proper. As we said in Garnier v. Garnier,
Furthermore, testatrix directed distribution of the corpus "among" the children of her daughter and those of her brother. The use of the word "among" naturally suggests that testatrix had in mind a division among a number greater than two, and that she was thinking of a distribution to several individuals rather than to two classes, for which the appropriate word would have been "between": see Green's Est.,
It is further to be noted that testatrix knew how to direct a per stirpes distribution when she so intended. After naming the children of her daughter and those of her brother as beneficiaries, she included "the then surviving issue of a child of either of them then deceased, such issue taking their deceased ancestor's share by representation." On the other hand, no words of stirpital distribution were used in the gifts to her daughter's and brother's children. Clearly, therefore, testatrix did not intend such a distribution as to those children. Another circumstance pointing toward an intent that the beneficiaries take per capita is the use of the words "divide . . . in equal shares." It is true, as was said in Ashburner's Est.,
Appellants urge upon us the analogy of the intestate laws. Where a testator directs a distribution to his heirs or next of kin, leaving doubtful the proportions in which they are to take, the scheme of distribution of the intestate laws will ordinarily be applied: Baskin's App.,
Decree affirmed, costs to be paid out of the estate.