41 A.2d 715 | Pa. | 1944
Lead Opinion
These appeals require the construction of the will and codicil of Alan Campbell Harris. He was a citizen of the United States, domiciled at Sierre, Canton of Valais, Switzerland; he died June 4, 1941, without issue, survived by his widow, Elsa Treumann Harris. His next of kin are two brothers, residing in the United States. One of them, born in 1870, has no descendants; the other, born in 1880, has four children. Elsa Treumann Harris was born in Germany February 19, 1869, and is now 76 years of age. In 1934, she was declared mentally incompetent in Switzerland and is there confined *371 in an institution for the mentally ill; she is afflicted with dementia præcox, a progressive and incurable disease. Dr. Otto Peyer,1 counsellor-at-law in Zurich was appointed guardian of her estate. Her "heirs and next of kin", the record states, "are German nationals residing in Germany". The parties agree that Mr. Harris "had the legal right" pursuant to treaty with Switzerland "to provide that his estate should be governed by and distributed in accordance with the laws of his country of origin"; that he was born in the City of Philadelphia and that Pennsylvania shall be regarded as the state of origin.
On November 20, 1940, in Switzerland, he made a will appointing an executor and making specific bequests to various legatees in the total of 375,000 Swiss francs. This will contained no residuary clause and no reference to his wife. On February 3, 1941, he made a codicil, written in French by a Swiss scrivener, disposing of the residue of his estate not disposed of in the Will of November 20, 1940. This codicil contains a clause about the meaning of which the parties differ: The question is whether the testator made a gift to his wife or whether, without making such a gift, he merely left her to the exercise of such right or rights as the law gave her.
We now have for consideration appeals from two courts; an appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas No. 1 of Philadelphia County; and two appeals from a declaratory judgment rendered by the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County.
After the probate of the will and codicil in Switzerland, an exemplified copy was probated in Philadelphia County and ancillary letters of administration c. t. a. *372 were granted to Girard Trust Company. The ancillary administrator then filed its petition in Court of Common Pleas No. 1 alleging the incompetency of Elsa Treumann Harris, her guardianship in Switzerland; that testator left real property in Philadelphia and applied for the appointment of an ancillary guardian to care for Mrs. Harris' property in Pennsylvania. The court appointed the Provident Trust Company of Philadelphia to be ancillary guardian of her estate. The ancillary guardian then filed its petition2 in Court of Common Pleas No. 1 stating that testator's widow had a limited time under the statute in which to elect to take against the will and desiring instructions3 whether or not to elect on behalf of its ward. Testator's two brothers answered and opposed the petition. After hearing, the court, for reasons stated in its opinion, to be considered later, directed the ancillary guardian not to file an election. The ancillary guardian appealed to this court from that decree and that appeal, No. 74, January Term, 1944, is now before us.
On the first argument of that appeal, it appeared that a proper appreciation of the questions involved and their decision by this court would be aided by the immediate construction of testator's will and codicil by the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County which had exclusive jurisdiction of the administration by the administrator c. t. a. A petition was therefore filed in the Orphans' Court by the ancillary guardian praying for a declaratory judgment "construing the rights and interest *373 of the ward of the petitioner under the will and codicil of Alan Campbell Harris, deceased".4 A joint answer was filed by testator's brothers, contending that the codicil did "not constitute a gift or legacy or bequest or devise to his wife", and that, on the contrary, he gave his entire estate to them as next of kin and heirs at law. After argument on petition and answer, the Orphans' Court entered a declaratory judgment to the effect that testator had made a bequest and devise to Elsa Treumann Harris. Testator's brothers appealed from that judgment (Nos. 283 and 284, January Term, 1944) and this appeal is now also before us.
We shall deal first with the appeals construing the codicil because, if the Orphans' Court correctly held that the testator gave his wife one-half his estate, the maximum which a widow may elect under Pennsylvania law, the question of election raised in the appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas No. 1 is moot for the reason that if she was given one-half by the codicil, she can receive no more by taking against it.
By far the larger part of testator's property consisted of his interest in a testamentary trust created by his grandfather, Thomas H. Powers, who died in 1878, domiciled in Philadelphia, leaving a will probated in Philadelphia. This trust is being administered by the Girard Trust Company. An account filed in the Orphans' Court by the Girard Trust Company, surviving *374 trustee of the estate of Thomas H. Powers, deceased, and awaiting audit, shows that the net worth of the principal of the trust is $6,835,000, invested in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania securities, personalty and realty. Thomas H. Powers provided that the trust should terminate and distribution be made twenty-one years after the death of the survivor of his grandchildren living at the time of his death. In that trust, on the death of his mother on August 30, 1921, the testator, Alan Campbell Harris, acquired a vested equitable interest in an undivided one-third part of the corpus, subject to an executory limitation5 on a contingency to be stated, requiring the payment of income to his widow for life in the amount of one-half the income of the third part of the trust. From his interest in this trust, Alan Campbell Harris had been receiving income, at or about the time of his death, at the rate of about $60,000 a year. The contingency referred to above results from the provision6 that if any of Thomas H. Powers' grandchildren die without issue and without making testamentary provision for his or her surviving spouse, the trustee shall pay to such surviving spouse for life, out of the the trust income, an *375 amount equal to one-half the income theretofore payable to such grandchild. That contingency happened if Alan Campbell Harris made no provision for his wife in the codicil, which is the fact to be determined on this appeal.
At the time Alan Campbell Harris made his will and codicil, he also had absolute ownership of property in Pennsylvania valued at about $472,000 and in Switzerland at about $250,000. At that time, Elsa Treumann Harris owned property in Switzerland worth about $60,000, presumably under the administration of the Swiss guardian, and in Pennsylvania worth about $10,000 and now under the administration of the ancillary guardian. In addition, she was receiving and continues to receive annuities of about $4,000 under trusts created by her husband's relatives in Pennsylvania.
With that brief statement of the situation of the testator, of the natural objects of his bounty, of the property held by him absolutely and as cestui que trust, we come to the construction of the codicil in the appeals from the Orphans' Court.
It is perhaps not surprising that differences have arisen in ascertaining the testator's expressed intention; his "formal wishes" were expressed by a Swiss lawyer who was thinking in French in terms of the Swiss law with which he was familiar and writing a testamentary disposition to be governed by the law of Pennsylvania with which he was not familiar.
What testator meant must be determined by his words. The record contains two translations, one made in Switzerland and filed with the exemplification of the will and codicil, and the other made in the Swiss consulate in Philadelphia. They are7 *376
"2. Unless I have otherwise "2. As much as I have not disposed my whole succes- disposed otherwise, my sion whole estate is to go entirely to my shall revert entirely to my relatives in the United relatives in the United States States of America, of America, it being understood that my it being understood that my wife shall receive the wife shall receive thecompulsory portion as pro- compulsory portion, vided by law provided for by the Law, in proportion as the suc- in the measure provided for cessional law of my coun- by the Estate Law of my try prescribes . . . country . . . This is the expression of Such is the expression of my formal wishes." my formal (explicit) will."
The learned court below said, "The sole question to be determined is what share, if any, the widow is entitled to receive by virtue of the phrase 'shall receive thecompulsory portion, provided for by the Law'." After so stating the question for decision, the learned court held that ". . . these words constitute a testamentary gift to the widow of the share of her husband's estate she would be entitled to receive under the Intestate Laws of this State . . ." The court said the clause " 'She shall receive' is construed as expressing, 'I give, devise and bequeath'."
The contention made on behalf of testator's brothers, in opposition to that conclusion, is that he intended, by what he said, to give them the entire residue of his estate and that he added parenthetically that, while giving his brothers the entire residue, he understood that his widow had a right under the law of Pennsylvania with which he could not interfere. *377
We must reject the construction suggested by the learned court below. The codicil begins with testator's election to have the law of his country applied. He then referred, in the first line of paragraph 2 (by the words "Unless I have otherwise disposed") to the fact that he had not disposed of his entire estate by his will. He then proceeded in the same sentence to dispose of the entire residue by describing it as "my whole succession". This "whole succession", he declares, "is to go entirely to my relatives", etc. (according to one translation), and according to the other, "shall revert entirely to my relatives", etc. If he had stopped there, it must have been conceded, that he had given his brothers all his property. He then continued the sentence by saying, "it being understood" that his wife had some right or rights by "the successional law" or "the estate law" of his country. This is nothing more than a recognition by him of the existence of such rights. As the learned court below has read a different meaning out of the clause, we must resolve the uncertainty by the aid of rules of construction. The question of construction then becomes: How is the clearly stated, absolute gift to his brothers of the entire residue to be affected by the uncertainty and ambiguity of the next clause in the same sentence? The rule is that a testator may by words, standing alone, give an absolute estate and then, by subsequent words, may cut down that absolute estate, but such a reduction in quantum may be made only by words clearly and unambiguously requiring that result: Chestnut v. Chestnut,
When we consider the position of the clause in the sentence of which it is part, and take account of the structure of the sentence and the purpose of the scrivener, we think the clause cannot be regarded as having been intended to make a gift under the law of Pennsylvania. It is not important that the translator, in rendering the future tense of the verb "receive", used the auxiliary "shall" instead of "will".8 The testator, having just given his entire residue, was adding that, with respect to the "compulsory portion",9 his wife should be relegated to her rights under the law of Pennsylvania. The next inquiry must be: What are those rights? In Pennsylvania, there is no "compulsory portion"; that term is the translation of the technical term in the Swiss law, "la rêserve", which, according to the expert who *379 testified in the proceeding in the Common Pleas, means property which a husband, leaving a wife, may not give to someone else and which, notwithstanding his attempt to do so, remains her property and which her trustee in bankruptcy can seize for account of her creditors. The term "compulsory portion" has no counterpart in Pennsylvania law.
Not only have we no such "compulsory portion" in this State, but the only right the widow has is the right to elect. It is a mere personal privilege and is not property: Fleming'sEstate,
We have been referred to cases in which testator measured his gift by describing it as the portion of his estate which a surviving widow had the right to elect. For example, inMorris's Estate,
In the construction of an ambiguous testamentary provision, all the circumstances confronting the testator when he made his will may be considered. Chief Justice *381
MAXEY, in Jackson's Estate,
The federal estate tax situation was a circumstance that would properly have weight with him in deciding whether his wife would be more richly left by a testamentary gift to her or by allowing to happen the contingency provided for in the trust created by his grandfather to the effect that on failure of a grandchild to provide by will for his or her childless spouse, such surviving spouse should receive for life one half the income received by the grandchild. Testator's interest in the trust estate, said to be valued at over $2,000,000.00 is subject to inheritance and estate taxes in a very large amount. If his widow receives the income under the *382 conditional gift of the grandfather, she will receive a large income from that trust — one-half of what her husband had been receiving. As his grandfather died in 1878, testator would assume that this benefit to his widow would not be subject to estate taxes not at that time in existence. As she is now 76 years old, she can never, by taking against the will, enjoy the trust principal not distributable until 21 years after the death of her husband's brother. Testator was thus confronted with the problem (1) of giving her half his estate by will subject to an estate tax burden that might leave nothing payable to her for the years during which it was necessary to obtain out of the trust the funds to meet the estate tax burden, or (2) of refraining from making a gift and thereby allowing her at once to receive the grandfather's gift of one-half the annual income of testator's interest in the trust created by the grandfather. Altogether apart from the result of the analysis of the codicil made earlier in this opinion conclusively showing that no gift was made to the widow, we cannot believe that the testator, confronted with those alternatives presented by the tax situation, intended, by the words of the parenthetical clause, to leave his widow without income from his or his grandfather's property for any considerable period; on the contrary, we think he intended by what he said, to make no gift to his widow and that, in any event, he would have refrained from doing so for the very purpose of enabling her immediately to receive the income provided by the grandfather's will.
Appeal No. 74.
The question for decision on this appeal is whether there was abuse of judicial discretion in refusing to direct the ancillary guardian to elect to take against the will and codicil. The relevant facts have been stated in the appeals from the Orphans' Court.
It is firmly established that the committee of a lunatic or the guardian of a weak-minded person cannot *383
elect on behalf of the ward to take against the will of the latter's spouse unless empowered to do so by the court:Kennedy v. Johnston,
Another principle frequently stated is that, while the court should base its decision on the consideration of all the circumstances (Kennedy v. Johnston,
In summarizing the case the learned court below well said: "The court cannot in this situation properly take that course which would create for the incompetent a large estate of which she could by no possibility have the present benefit in her lifetime, but which ultimately would go to her next of kin sometime in the distant future. The primary consideration is the current welfare of the incompetent herself, and the court's discretion in the matter must be so exercised as to serve that purpose. Of course, if it were necessary, in order to assure the incompetent of sufficient income adequately to care for her, to elect to take against her husband's will, the court would so direct, notwithstanding that as a consequence thereof some benefit would accrue to her next of kin on her death. However, if adequate provision for the incompetent is made either by the will or there are other sources of assured income for the incompetent, the court may not properly direct the guardian to take against the will, which would result in diverting a part of the principal estate to strangers of the blood of the testator. All the more true is this, when related to an interest which the deceased husband had in another estate, to wit, that of his grandfather, from the blood of whom the incompetent's next of kin would be that much further removed. The court cannot properly divert the estate of the incompetent's husband's *386 grandfather from his own blood unless there were a compelling necessity to do so. . . ."
We find no abuse of discretion.
Numbers 283 and 284. The judgment is reversed and it is now declared that Alan Campbell Harris, by his will and codicil, made no gift, legacy or devise to his wife, Elsa Treumann Harris.
Number 74. Order affirmed.
In each case the costs shall be paid out of the principal of the estate of Allan Campbell Harris.
"(b) That the will and codicil of Alan Campbell Harris, deceased, provided that his wife should receive that part of his estate which she would take under the law of Pennsylvania and that said provision was effective and operative without the filing by her, or on her behalf, of any election to take against the said will and codicil."
"2. Pour autant que je n'en ai pas disposé autrement, ma succession entière reviendra entièrement à mes parents aux Etats-Unis d'Amérique, étant entendue que mon épouse recevra la rêserve prévue par la loi, dans la mesure ou le droit successoral de mon pays la prévoit. . . .
"Telle est l'expression de ma volonté formelle."
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the majority opinion. I neither find nor "create" an ambiguity in the codicil, nor do I "reform the testamentary disposition." I have no difficulty in discovering the testamentary intention in the language the testator used.
As Justice STEARNE concedes in his dissent, in Pennsylvania "there exists no legal requirements for obligatory shares to the surviving spouse." As the majority opinion points out, a widow's "right" to take against her husband's will is merely "a personal privilege." It is "not an asset" of the wife's estate "or a right which" she "can be compelled to exercise."Fleming's Estate,
When Alan Campbell Harris had a French scrivener write this codicil, he was obviously under the impression that there was a certain portion of his estate which Pennsylvania law would immediately upon his death "compulsorily" divert to his widow. This impression was erroneous.
The question comes to this: What was the state of mind of Harris toward his wife's sharing of his estate: Did he consciously will that his wife should have (as the dissenting opinion holds) "a share in his estate, as measured by the Pennsylvania Intestate Act of June 7, 1917," or was his attitude of mind that of submission to what he "understood" would be the state's action regardless *387 of his wish? There is a vast difference between the mental state of willing a thing and of submitting to it. There is exactly the same difference between them as there is in the mental state of a man who wills his own destruction and commits suicide and the mental state of a man who merely recognizes thefact that for him death is inevitable and is resigned to it. He does not want or will death, but he "understands" that some day death will be his "compulsory portion."
Careful consideration of Harris' codicil convinces me that he did not will his widow anything, but that as far as his volition was determinative of the matter, his "whole succession" would "go" to his "relatives in the United States." His statement as to the "compulsory portion" which he "understood" his wife would receive merely amounted to his saying that "whatever portion of my estate the law of Pennsylvania gives to my wife, let it go, I cannot do anything about it." As to what that portion would be, he apparently knew nothing and cared little, for he believed it as much beyondhis control as the "compulsory portion" of his estate which would be consumed in paying inheritance taxes.
We are asked to interpret this codicil as though it read: "I devise and bequeath to my wife such share of my estate as would be hers under the laws of Pennsylvania had I died intestate." For us to thus "interpret" this codicil is to re-write it. We would be no more justified in so interpreting what this testator wrote than we would be justified in interpreting as abequest to the United States of America and to Pennsylvania the following if it had been found in the testator's codicil: "My whole estate not otherwise disposed of shall revert entirely to my relatives in the United States of America, it being understood by me that my estate is compelled to pay certain inheritance taxes to the governments of both the United States and of Pennsylvania." A testator who makes a bequest must make it "animo testandi," that is, with a deliberate intention to make it. A testator *388 who declares that he "understands" (or "it is understood") that the law compels a part of his estate to go to the government is not bequeathing anything to the government. He is merely yielding to "vis major," like a man who submits to the demands of the tax collector. It cannot be correctly said that such a man is "giving" his money to the collector. If, for example, a man in obedience to a court order pays his deserted wife one hundred dollars a month, it is a perversion of language to call those payments "gifts." I think it does equal violence to language to construe as a bequest what this testator said about his wife receiving "the compulsory portion . . . as the successional law of my country prescribes." The words "compulsory" and "prescribes" negative the idea of the testator exercising volition in the matter. Where there is no volition there is no "will."
If this testator really wished his widow to receive that substantial share of his estate which under the law of Pennsylvania is allocated to the widow of a man dying intestate, he could have died intestate (after providing for the specific bequests made in his will), or he could have said in apt language that he willed to his widow that share of his estate which the laws of Pennsylvania declare shall be inherited by the widow of a man dying intestate. That this testator knew how to make bequests is shown by the bequests of money totalling $90,000 which he made in his will written in English.
Instead of this testator's saying that he bequeathed a certain share of his estate to his widow, he simply said in effect: I understand that regardless of what I say, the American law "compels" a portion of my estate to go to my wife. As to this he was mistaken. The compulsion he thought he saw was only conditional, and the condition which would make the "compulsion" operative never came into being. It is not the law standing by itself, but the law coupled with the widow'selection to take against the will which compels the allocation of a certain portion of a testator's property to his widow. *389 When the widow is mentally incapable of making an election, the jurisdictional sovereignty speaking through the appropriate officials decides whether or not incompetent's guardian will beallowed to make the election.
Since Pennsylvania, speaking through an appropriate tribunal, refused the guardian of this widow permission to elect to take against the testator's will, the "compulsion" that this testator envisaged and gracefully yielded to when he made his will is now as nonexistent as it would be had the law giving a widow the right to take against her husband's will been repealed on the day before the testator died.
The words of the codicil show that the testator's "intention" was to bequeath his wife nothing, though he "understood" (or believed) that in spite of anything he could say or do the sovereignty which would administer his estate would take a portion of it and give it to his wife. While I find this intent in the words used (where testamentary intent must be found, if possible), such an intent was also a reasonable one under the circumstances. When this codicil was written on February 3, 1941, the testator's wife was 72 years of age and had been for seven years declared "mentally incompetent." Her condition was incurable. Neither the testator nor his wife had any children.As long as she lived and until her husband should provide forher in his will, she was in possession of a $30,000 annuity from the estate of her husband's grandfather. Why under these circumstances would the testator wish to bequeath his wife anything, knowing that the real beneficiaries of such a bequest would be her relatives residing in Germany?
It is conceded that the heirs of a widow have no rights under a widow's "right to elect" to take against a husband's will and therefore if a widow dies without exercising her "right to elect," that "right" dies with her and her heirs do not inherit it. The widow being mentally incompetent cannot elect to take against her husband's will; and this Commonwealth speaking through *390 its judiciary denied her guardian authority to elect to take against this will because it concluded that owing to the provisions of the will of the testator's grandfather, this mentally incompetent woman's "current welfare" would be better served by her continuing to receive the large income from the estate of that grandfather than by electing to take against her husband's will and thereby (according to the terms of the grandfather's will) deprive herself of further income from the grandfather's estate. That the widow's kindred would ultimately be enriched by permitting this widow's guardian to take against the husband's will was a consideration to which the court which had the guardian's request before it properly refused to give any weight. With their interest the court had no concern. Considering only the widow's interest the court declined to authorize her guardian to take against the will and we therefore have a situation exactly as if the widow was of sound mind and had herself decided not to take against her husband's will.
In the case of Fidelity Trust Co.'s Appeal,
That the testator did not wish to bequeath anything to his widow is indicated by his will dated November 20, 1940, in which he made no mention of his wife. Forty-four days later he executed the codicil. It is a reasonable inference that during those forty-four days he somehow came to the "understanding" that under the law of Pennsylvania his wife would be allocated a portion of his estate regardless of his wishes. He then wrote the codicil declaring his "will" as to where his "whole succession" should "entirely go." The phrase which he added about "the compulsory portion" was merely his way of saying "I am not so uninformed as not to know that despite any wishes or will of mine my wife can lay claim to a part of my estate."
It is said that under the Swiss law a share of the husband's estate goes to his wife regardless of any action on her part, and it is argued that this testator understood that the laws of Pennsylvania operated in the same way. If such was his understanding, it is immaterial to the issue before us. We apply the Pennsylvania law as it is, not as some non-residentthought it was. If, for example, Switzerland had a law expropriating 80% of the estate of a Swiss citizen dying childless, and this testator then residing in Switzerland "understood" that Pennsylvania had an inheritance tax law exactly like the Swiss law it could not be held that if he had said "I understand that the law of Pennsylvania compels a large portion of my estate to be distributed to that state," hethereby bequeathed 80% of his estate to Pennsylvania. A testator's erroneous conception of the "compellable" cannot be judicially translated into a testamentary bequest.
Since the widow takes nothing under this will unless an election is made for her, the whole question comes to this: Did the court below after carefully considering the *392 matter abuse its discretion in refusing permission to the guardian of this mentally incompetent aged woman to take against the will? The majority opinion has demonstrated that it did not but that, on the contrary, its action will promote the "current welfare" of this woman during the presumably brief allotment of life now remaining to her.1
When in writing this codicil Harris focused his mind on (1) the "whole succession" which he had not otherwise disposed of, and (2) his "relatives in the United States" his will (i. e., his volition) was operative. When he focused his mind on the wife who might survive him and on her interest in his estate, his will was not operative at all, for he understood that as to her "compulsory portion" of his estate, the will of the countryof his origin" would be exclusively operative to just the extent that country's law prescribes. I agree that "the codicil does not disinherit the widow," but I am equally certain that it does not "inherit" her. It leaves her in respect to her husband's estate exactly where the law of Pennsylvania places the mentally incompetent widow of a man dying testate. As to his wife and her share in his estate if she survived him, Harris' attitude was passive. When a man intends that his widow shall without any action on her part come into possession of that portion of his estate which would be hers if he died without a will he testamentarily says so in apt words or else dies intestate. This testator did neither.
The majority interpretation gives effect, I believe, to what was in the testator's mind when he wrote this codicil and only by a strained construction of the latter can the view be upheld that "what testator intended to do primarily was to take his estate out from the operation *393 of the Swiss law and to substitute the provisions of the Pennsylvania Intestate Act."
Dissenting Opinion
I am in complete disagreement with this decision.
Testator, by his will and codicil, in plain and unambiguous language, bequeathed to his widow a share in his estate as measured by the Pennsylvania Intestate Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 429, 20 PS section 1. The majority reject this interpretation. They create a supposed ambiguity in the language of the codicil where none exists. They then reform the testamentary disposition. An implied intent is attributed to testator to disinherit his widow, with an added supposed expression of knowledge on his part that his widow could elect to take against the will. Finally they deny permission to the guardian of the widow, a mental incompetent, to elect to take against the will and receive her intestate share. The entire estate is passed to testator's two brothers, next of kin, to the exclusion of the widow. Such an extraordinary construction and such approval of the exercise of judicial discretion have no sound basis for support.
Testator was a citizen of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, domiciled in Switzerland. He was survived by his widow, who resides in Switzerland, and by two brothers, who reside in America, his only heirs and next of kin. Both the will and codicil were executed in Switzerland.
Before analyzing the words of these testamentary writings, it is necessary to consider the surrounding circumstances under which they were executed. The Swiss law of succession must be compared with the Pennsylvania Wills and Intestate Acts. It was established by expert legal testimony that in Switzerland an estate of a person domiciled therein passes by law, irrespective of testamentary direction, to "issue, parents, *394 or brothers or sisters or a spouse" in prescribed shares. These are known as "compulsory portions". While the record is silent as to amount of such shares, it was testified ". . . the law which designates the heirs also determines the distributive shares of such heirs and also the manner in which such shares shall be calculated." It was also proved that if testamentary dispositions impinge upon the statutory shares of the spouse, issue or next of kin, all excesses must be abated.
In Pennsylvania, under the Wills Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, 20 PS section 181, there exists no legal requirements for obligatory shares to the surviving spouse, heirs or next of kin. A testator may disinherit any or all of such individuals. However, a surviving spouse is given the personal right, under Section 23 of the Wills Act, to elect to take against the will and thereupon is ". . . entitled to such interests in the real and personal estate of the deceased spouse as he or she would have been entitled to had the testator died intestate."
It was also proved that under the law of Switzerland, an alien domiciled in that country (the status of testator) may"subject his succession to the substantive law of his countryof origin."
The will is dated November 20, 1940, and the codicil February 3, 1941. The will was written by hand in English and is probably holographic. The codicil was written in French by a Swiss notary. The language employed in the codicil reflects the notary's familiarity with Swiss law and terminology, but exhibits his lack of knowledge respecting legal terms and phrases in the Pennsylvania Wills and Intestate Acts. We are therefore required to construe, as one testamentary disposition, a will written in English, with distribution underSwiss law, and a codicil to the will, written in French, designed to distribute the estate under Pennsylvania law.
We have repeatedly decided that in expounding a will, theintent of the testator is the polar star: Woelpper's *395 Appeal,
With these principles as a guide, the will must first be construed to ascertain what interest testator intended *396 to pass to his widow. The codicil must then be examined to determine in what manner and to what extent its language affected the widow's interest already bequeathed to her by thewill. Both testamentary writings must be construed together.
The probated will bequeathes to named individuals legacies totalling 375,000 Swiss francs, said to be the equivalent of about $90,000. It names an executor but makes no disposition ofthe residuary estate. Because of the absence of a residuary clause, my learned brothers of the majority note in their opinion that the will contains "no reference to his wife", thereby inferring that the testator intentionally or accidently ignored her. But it is to be observed that neither did the will refer to testator's brothers. There is an obvious reason for this omission. There was no occasion to refer in the will to the "compulsory shares" payable by law to the widow and the brothers, as next of kin. The Swiss statutes had already provided for this. Such disposition was fixed by law and eventhe testator could not change it. For the same reason, the statement in the majority opinion that the codicil disposed "of the residue of his estate not disposed of in the will . . ." is not accurate. It is apparent that testator's omission to dispose of his residuary estate was not the accidental omission or failure to forecast events which so frequently appears in wills in which a share remains undisposed of. The present omission was the deliberate act of testator. Judge PENROSE, of the Philadelphia Orphans' Court, wrote in Wunder's Estate, 13 Dist. Reports 197, 198: "We have no right to assume that the absence of a residuary clause was an accident". See DeSilver'sEstate,
An exemplified copy of the probated codicil, written in French as above indicated, with the English translation, is on file in the office of the Register of Wills of Philadelphia. Its dispositive words read: ". . . . The law of my country oforigin will alone. . . . be applicable to my succession. . . .Unless I have otherwise disposed my whole succession is to goentirely to my relatives in the United States of America, itbeing understood that my wife shall receive the compulsoryportion as provided by law in proportion as the successionallaw of my country prescribes. . . . This is the expression ofmy formal wishes."
According to the Swiss expert, testator, by this language, effectively accomplished his purpose to distribute his estate according to the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania instead of under the statutes of Switzerland.
As I construe the words of the codicil, what testator intended to do primarily was to take his estate out from the operation of the Swiss law and to substitute the provisions of the Pennsylvania Intestate Act. He first conditioned his testamentary dispositions by the words: "Unless I have otherwise disposed. . . ." This referred to the bequests of 375,000 francs in his will. Testator says his whole succession
is to go entirely to his relatives in the United States of America. But he makes another condition to that bequest, viz.:". . . it being understood that my wife shall receive thecompulsory portion as provided by law. . . . in proportion asthe successional law of my country prescribes. . . ." Even though written in French, by a Swiss notary, employing terms not ordinarily found in a Pennsylvania legal vocabulary, testator expressed his intent with remarkable clarity. InHeckman's Estate,
The majority reject this construction. They decide an ambiguity exists in the language, which enables them to declare testator's presumed intent.
Before examining the assigned reasons for the existence of an ambiguity, it should be borne in mind that, after all, it isonly an ambiguity which is asserted. The codicil does not, in terms, disinherit the widow. Testator by his codicil substituted the law of Pennsylvania for that of Switzerland. By his will testator passed to his widow a statutory share underthe Swiss law. To take away from the widow her commensurate share, as measured by the substituted Pennsylvania Intestate Act, requires more than a supposed ambiguity. It cannot be done by inference or surmise. Plainly expressed, unequivocal terms are required. The correct statement of the law, which is applicable by analogy, is found in the majority's opinion: "The rule is that a testator may by words, standing alone, give an absolute estate and then, by subsequent words, may cut down that absolute estate, but such a reduction in quantum may bemade only by words clearly and unambiguously requiring thatresult" (italics mine).
As I view the majority's construction, they havecreated an ambiguity where none exists, and have then attributed to testator a supposed intent in actual hostility *399
with his plainly expressed intent. See: Bruckman's Estate,
In an effort to demonstrate the existence of an ambiguity, the majority minutely dissect the testamentary words and phrases, compare translations, and even parse French verbs. They have discussed the meaning of "dispositive portions" under the Swiss Civil Code. No one disputes the accuracy of what has been thus written. But all of these considerations, taken singly or collectively, do not change to the slightest degree testator's express and unequivocal words that his widow"shall receive the compulsory portion as provided by law inproportion as the successional law of my country prescribes."
An attempt is made to create an ambiguity because of the use of the words "compulsory portion". There appears to be but slight difference between the Pennsylvania and Swiss statutes. The Pennsylvania Intestate Act prescribes the measure of the intestate shares. These are obligatory and may not be increased or diminished. Under the Wills Act, a surviving spouse may elect to take her intestate share in lieu of the share provided for her by the will. In Switzerland, however, the statutory share passes to the widow regardless of testacy or intestacy. It seems most clear that this testator realized that under Pennsylvania law his widow could always demand her intestate rights and therefore regarded such share as "compulsory". Regarding the will as a whole, any distinction in terms appears most narrow. It certainly does not support the assertion of ambiguity. *400
I am unable to comprehend the involved reasoning of the majority, whereby the testamentary words are construed toimply testator's intent to give his wife nothing and at the same time to indicate his supposed knowledge that his widow could elect to take against the will. There is nothing in these writings which even remotely suggests such an idea. The majority seat themselves in testator's mythical "arm chair" to seek out the surrounding facts and circumstances under which the writings were executed as an aid to their interpretation. After considering the extent of testator's estate, his family, the wills of his grandfather and mother, taxes, income and many other matters, there is attributed to this sick, aged testator "pinched with the messengers of death", supposed intent relating to matters which, I am positive, from their very statement, testator never considered, or of which he was even capable of remotely comprehending. Indeed, concerning testator's supposed knowledge of the tax situation, contrary to what appears in the opinion, counsel for the next of kin frankly concedes in his supplemental brief ". . . it would beunreasonable to assume that [testator] had in mind thecorrect solution of all these difficult tax problems."
Having decided that testator disinherited his widow and indicated that he was aware that his widow could elect to take against the will, the majority reach a conclusion which disinherits the widow, but prevents her from electing to takeagainst the will. They approve the action of the majority of the common pleas court in refusing the guardian of the widow the right to make such election. To my mind the action of the common pleas court was a flagrant abuse of judicial discretion. The law has long since emerged from the ancient conception that a married woman was a chattel and could be dismissed by the formality of handing her a slipper. The marriage relation vests in the wife a statutory interest in her husband's real and personal property. Her property rights, once acquired, have always been protected *401 and defended by the courts. In early times a widow even possessed the "right of quarantine", a right secured to her by Magna Charta, Cap. 7, which permitted her to tarry in the chief house of her husband for forty days until her dower rights were assigned to her Co. Litt. 32b, 34b. A mentally competent widow may freely elect to take against her deceased spouse's will. It is a personal decision, not subject to judicial supervision. But widows frequently acquiesce in the terms of their husband's wills, even though they could have received larger portions under the intestate laws. It is this underlying consideration which is the basis of the requirement that a legal representative of a mentally incompetent widow must secure the court's permission to elect in her behalf. I agree with the majority and the cases they cite in support of this principle. It is well stated by Judge HUNTER in his Pennsylvania Orphans' Court Commonplace Book, Vol. 1, page 354: "The right of a committee in lunacy to take against a will is not absolute but is within the sound discretion of the court having control of the lunatic's estate; the leaning of the law is in favor of the will, particularly where a taking against it would divert the estate of the deceased from his own blood; where the individual estate of the lunatic and that bequeathed to her are ample for her needs, leave to elect to take against the will will be denied."
It is to be observed that this statement couples with the sufficiency of the individual estate of the wife the requirement: "and that bequeathed to her". In every case cited by the majority the testator had, by his will, made adequateprovision for his widow in a measure almost equivalent to her statutory intestate share. In none of the cases was the widow disinherited. But in no reported case which I have discovered, has this principle been applied to allow a widow to be disinherited because she possessed an individual estate of her own, was old, insane and therefore would not be able to enjoy it. Such considerations are, to my mind, wholly unsound and untenable. *402
An illustration of the application of this principle may be shown in the facts of this case. Suppose this Court had construed the will to pass 375,000 francs to legatees and an intestate share in the residue to the incompetent widow. A valid election to take against the will would entitle the widow to receive such interest as she would have taken had her husband died intestate. Thus, she would take a full one-half. The 375,000 francs legacies would then be payable out of the other intestate share. See cases cited in Judge HUNTER'S Commonplace Book, supra, Vol. 1, section 12, page 355, et seq. It is highly probable that with an estate of this size, where testator by his will had amply provided for his wife, the court would refuse permission to the guardian of the incompetent widow to elect to take against the will, for the sole purpose of increasing the widow's estate to the extent of one-half of the amount of the legacies, a gain in dollars, of even as much as $45,000.
In the facts of this case, I most emphatically do not agree that it is for the "welfare of the widow, the main object of .. . consideration", that she should be denied her intestate share. The assigned reasons for the exercise of the discretion by the common pleas court denying the guardian the right to elect are in two classes: (1) what the widow will receive from the testator's grandfather's will in case she is disinherited, and (2) what it will cost her in taxes, if she rejects the will (as interpreted) and takes her intestate share.
It is not at all clear to me precisely how many American dollars this widow will receive from the grandfather's trust if it is held, as the majority do, that testator did not "provide" for his widow. It is true that the stipulation states that the widow, in such event, is to receive "one-half the income" which the testator enjoyed in his lifetime, said to be $60,000 per annum. This, of course, would be $30,000. But it is also stated that there will be a probable federal estate tax of $940,300 payable. Counsel for the widow contends that such federal *403 tax will considerably reduce that income, which is denied by the counsel for the next of kin. In any event, what, if anything, the widow will receive is a matter of serious question.
It was argued with great earnestness by counsel for the brothers that if the widow received her intestate share she would be required to pay federal estate taxes which would consume all her income for the next few years and as the vested remainder would not fall in until 21 years after the decease of a named living person, she would be without income from her husband's estate for such period and hence, probably for the remainder of her life. Counsel for the widow argues to the contrary. Elaborate briefs have been submitted, with highly technical tax calculations. It is apparent that the federal tax question is subject to a wide divergence of opinions. I do not think this Court should essay to pass upon such federal tax matters. Realizing the extremely complicated state of the tax law and tax regulations, I would prefer to allow the responsibility of deciding what was best for the widow to rest with her capable representatives and not be influenced by the arguments of the next of kin who will receive the whole estate to her exclusion.
After much reflection I have formed the opinion that what my learned brothers are really attempting is areformation of a will rather than its construction. They have been persuaded that it is desirable to keep this large fortune within the confines of the United States, where it was created, and in the blood of the founder of the fortune. They brush away the rights of the widow because she is seventy-six years of age, insane, and with a life expectancy, at best, of few years; because her wants, relatively small, are sufficiently supplied by her own estate and by her husband's relatives; and because her income might be augmented, in an uncertain amount, if her husband disinherits her. If such reformation can be accomplished, the estate is preserved in America and *404 little harm, the majority consider, is done to the widow. They have accordingly constructed a Procrustean bed out of sound and seasoned legal principles. This is wholly improper. In a will construction the sole inquiry should be to ascertain the true intent of the testator and to enforce the disposition unless unlawful. The testamentary disposition need not coincide with the construing judge's idea of equity and propriety.
This will should not be reformed. The plain and unambiguous gift of an intestate share to the widow should be upheld. To tear down plain, testamentary words and in their stead to erect a top-heavy structure of supposed intention, and to refuse permission to the widow to receive her statutory share, is contrary to every established principle of will construction.
I would affirm the definitive decree and declaratory judgment of the orphans' court, and dismiss the order of the common pleas as moot.
Mr. Justice DREW and Mr. Justice JONES concur in this opinion.