Haak‘s Estate
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
January 31, 1941
reargued January 14, 1941
341 Pa. 93
Argued May 20, 1940. Before SCHAFFER, C. J., MAXEY, DREW, LINN, STERN, PATTERSON and PARKER, JJ.
The decree is reversed and the bill dismissed at the cost of appellant.
Haak‘s Estate.
Argued May 20, 1940; reargued January 14, 1941. Before SCHAFFER, C. J., MAXEY, DREW, LINN, STERN, PATTERSON and PARKER, JJ.
E. D. Siegrist, with him James R. Koller, for appellees.
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE PATTERSON, January 31, 1941:
This appeal is from a decree of the orphans’ court determining that appellants have no standing, as heirs at law of Elmer L. Haak, deceased, to file exceptions to the first and partial account of the decedent‘s widow and administratrix c.t.a. The propriety of the decree depends solely upon the interpretation to be given the provisions of the decedent‘s will relating to the disposition of that part of his estate not given to the widow.
Elmer L. Haak, a lumber dealer, died August 24, 1936, leaving to survive him his widow, Annie E. Haak, and collateral relatives consisting of one uncle and twenty-one cousins. The instrument which was duly probated as the decedent‘s last will and testament was in the form of a letter, addressed to the widow, and was dated January 4, 1936. After providing that the widow should share only “as the Law provides as if there were no Will, to avoid all discrepancy“, the will provides that “the distributing half” should be divided as testator “will enter off and on in a book in this desk, and whatever writings you may find, to relatives etc.“, and further that “If any remains, to be divided equally among Mary Leob and the yard employees who were in my employ at least two years at my death“. With this instrument were offered for probate two sheets out of an
At the audit of the account filed by the widow-administratrix in the court below, Mary Leob and the qualifying yard employees claimed that, in the absence of an effective disposition in favor of relatives, they were entitled to everything not given the widow; the collateral relatives, among whom are the appellants, resisted this claim, contending that there was an intestacy as to the “distributing half” and that they were entitled, as testator‘s heirs at law, under the intestate laws. The court below decided in favor of the former, and this appeal followed.
In deciding that Mary Leob and the yard employees were entitled to everything not given to the widow the court below said: “It is undoubtedly true that the testator had in mind at the making of the will an intention to provide for ‘relatives’ as he intended to enter in a book in his desk and possibly other writings but there is no evidence to warrant the inference that he ever made such provision and therefore the residuary clause is operative and under its provisions the residuary legatees are entitled to one-half of the estate. The testator made this will with the
Closely analogous to the present case is Hastings et al. v. Bridge et al., 86 N. H. 247, 166 A. 273. Testatrix in that case gave all her wearing apparel, jewelry, etc., to one Florence M. Hastings for distribution to persons named in a letter or memorandum of instructions which testatrix should leave addressed to her, and then provided: “Any of the articles not mentioned in said letter or memorandum of instructions I give and bequeath to the said Florence M. Hastings personally and if she is not living, to her children“.* A memorandum subsequently prepared by testatrix enumerating about fifty gifts was offered with the will, but, like the memoranda in the present case, was denied probate. The court, in a well reasoned opinion by PEASLEE, C. J., held that Mrs. Hastings took nothing under the provision. The court said, inter alia: “The will plainly contemplated that the memorandum was to be a valid disposition of property—a part of the will. Since there is no such document, a less formal one cannot supply the deficiency in the will nor affect the disposition made by the will. . . . A valid testament includes two essential elements. There must be a sufficient designation of the beneficiary and of the property given to him. If either is in terms left to future designation the will is incomplete and ineffective. . . . In the present case the description of what is to go to Mrs. Hastings is incomplete. If no memorandum had been made, it could not
Decree reversed. Costs to be paid by appellees.
Haak‘s Estate
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
January 31, 1941
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE LINN:
The will provides:
Myerstown, Pa. Jan. 4, 1936.
Elmer L. Haak
To
Annie
Annie never was life more uncertain and death more certain to me than now—after returning from our southern trip—after seeing all those accidents along the road.
So I wish and will that you share only with my Estate as the Law provides as if there were no Will, to avoid all discrepancy, but the distributing half to be divided as I will enter off and on in a book in this desk, and whatever writings you may find, to relatives etc.
If any remains, to be divided equally among Mary Leob and the yard employees who were in my employ at least two years at my death.
ELMER L. HAAK
The opinion of the Court seems based on the proposition that the will contains no residuary clause and that the third paragraph is too uncertain to pass anything to the legatees designated in it. The third paragraph,
In Ingham‘s Estate, 315 Pa. 293, 296, 172 A. 662, we said: “It is a well settled rule of construction that a will is not to be interpreted so as to produce an intestacy as to any part of the testator‘s estate, if it may reasonably be construed so as to avoid such a result. . . .” But it will be observed that, notwithstanding the efforts of the testator to avoid intestacy, his entire estate, by the judgment of this Court, passes precisely as it
The “relatives etc.,” mentioned in the second paragraph, are in the same legal position as if testator had set forth in his will their names and the property he desired to give them and had afterwards cancelled the provision by running his pen through it or by more formal revocation, and left the third paragraph untouched. The words of that paragraph, “If any remains,” clearly state his intention that what he had not given, or had withheld, or as to which he had subsequently changed his mind, should pass to the parties designated in the third paragraph. Under
I would affirm the order appealed from.
Mr. Chief Justice SCHAFFER and Mr. Justice MAXEY concur in this opinion.
