9 Watts 472 | Pa. | 1840
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Rogers, J.
A legacy payable at a future day does not carry interest until after it is payable, unless in the case of a legacy to a child, when the parent has made no other provision for its maintenance. And it seems that the exception does not extend to the case of a grandchild; Lupton v. Lupton, 2 Johns. Chan. 628; Heath v. Perry, 3 Atk. 101. In this will, although the payment of the legacies is postponed until the grandchildren severally attain the age of twenty-one years, and consequently without some modification or qualification would come within the principle above stated, yet the rule is not applicable when the testator has manifested a different intention. After the several bequests to his grandchildren, he adds, “ I allow that the legacies bequeathed by me to my three first named grandchildren shall be lent out by the executors of this
It is insisted that, until the money is received, these legacies do not carry interest, and if we disregard the intention of the testator, and give the will a literal construction, this would be a legitimate conclusion. But this would be sinning against a cardinal rule of construction, for the objection which has not been met is, that it would defeat the intention of the testator, which manifestly is, that
The appellant also alleges that the court erred in disallowing interest, on the pecuniary legacies, to James Hiester and his children, from one year from the death of the testator. To this claim there is no reasonable objection, except that it appears that the only question which was submitted to the court was, whether the three first named legacies bore interest, and from what time? The • case seems to have been argued with the concession that the other legacies had been paid, and for that reason the funds having been exhausted, it became unnecessary to allow interest before 1825. • But as it is possible that in this some mistake may have been com•mitted, and we are willing that justice should be done, we think • it right to delay entering the final decree until the fact of payment be ascertained. If, on investigation, it should be found that the whole or a part of these legacies remains due, there can be no diffi
Decree affirmed.