90 Pa. Super. 512 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued March 18, 1927. Two questions are involved in this appeal. The one relates to the allowance of credit in the account of a bill for painting done after decedent's death; the other to the construction of the residuary clause in the will. We will consider them in that order.
(1) Sometime before her death the testatrix orally engaged C.M. Becker, a local painter, to paint the buildings on her farm situated on the Bull Road, under a time and material contract, which he estimated would cost in the neighborhood of $400. He ordered the paint from a local hardware firm, and one barrel of oil had been delivered him when the testatrix died. *514 None of the work had been performed. By her will the testatrix devised this farm in trust for the executor, Franklin H. Wogan, for twenty-five years, at the end of which period it became his absolutely, or his heirs' or devisees' in case he did not live that long. She disposed of her residuary estate differently. After the testatrix's death Mr. Becker took the matter up with the executor. The latter demanded a "solid estimate," which was furnished at $394, and the work was done under it and paid for out of the estate. This evidence was received without objection.
It was the executor's duty to administer the estate with nothing in view but its interests. The devise, in effect, to him of the Bull Road Farm did not alter his duty in this respect. He was under obligation to see that his private interests were not taken care of at the expense of the estate. No work had been begun on the contract. There is nothing to show that the materials to be used were not staple products, which could have been utilized on other work, or readily disposed of, or even that the order for paint could not have been countermanded without loss. The executor had the power to cancel the contract: Dougherty v. Stephenson,
(2) The other assignments are concerned with the interpretation of the residuary clause in the will, as follows: "I direct the hereinafter named executor of this my last will and testament to convert into money all the real and personal estate not hereinbefore devised or bequeathed, and the balance remaining after payment of debts and the costs of administering my estate, I give and bequeath unto Franklin H. Wogan, and the nephews and nieces of my late husband, Charles A. Herman, that survive me, share and share alike."
Franklin H. Wogan was the testatrix's nephew and only heir at law. In previous clauses of her will she had given him certain of her personal effects and devised to him the turnpike frontage of her farm in Manchester Township, in addition to the Bull Road Farm as above mentioned; while by the third clause she provided: "I give and bequeath to each of the nephews and nieces of my late husband, Charles A. Herman, three hundred dollars. Should any of the nephews and nieces above referred to not survive me, the three hundred dollars, that is herein bequeathed to them, I give and bequeath to the issue of each of the said nephews and nieces that die before me." In the second clause of her will the testatrix bequeathed to Franklin H. Wogan certain china and furniture, "and the large mahogany clock. The larger cherry clock I have given to the Hermans, who are to have the same upon my decease."
We agree with the learned court below that the correct interpretation of the will requires the residuary estate to be divided equally between Franklin H. Wogan, and the nephews and nieces of her husband, who survived her, treated as a class, thus giving one-half of her residuary estate to her own heir and the other half to the heirs of her husband; and that he rightly construed the will in holding: "The thought of *516 the testatrix regarding her one nephew, Franklin H. Wogan, ended when she stated: `I give and bequeath unto Franklin H. Wogan,' with a comma after his name. The remainder of the clause relates solely to the share of the nephews and nieces of her deceased husband, restricting the bequest to those living at her death, and regulating the distribution among them....... These beneficiaries stood in different degrees to the testatrix. The first mentioned, as residuary legatee, is her sole heir. The other nine are in an entirely different class. When this is so, the intention for distribution per stirpes is to be inferred."
Of course, two wills are hardly ever alike in all particulars, and every will must be interpreted in the light of its own provisions. We think, however, that the principles of construction applied in Minter's App.,
The decree is reversed to the extent indicated in this opinion and the record remitted to the Orphans' Court to report distribution in accordance herewith. The costs of the appeal to be paid out of the estate.