10 Pa. 498 | Pa. | 1849
The true guide to the construction of any devise in a will, is the general and manifest intent of the testator, as it can be discovered and collected from the whole will. Any minor, or, apparently, secondary interest, must yield, if inconsistent with, and repugnant to, the general intent. We therefore look to all the phrases and clauses of the instrument, aided by a knowledge of the condition and habits of life of the testator; and all, and each, furnishing aid in ascertaining his meaning and intent, in any particular clause or devise.
From the earliest date after the first statute authorizing the making of wills in England, the courts began to lean in favour of giving effect to the intent of the testator, even when opposed to well-established rules of descent, as governed by artificial phrases in a deed. Thus, Littleton saith, “ Where lands be given to a man and his heirs male, he hath no estate tail, and therefore he hath a
The rule of the English law on this subject is succinctly stated by Viee-Ghaneellor Plumer, “ that it is a general rule with regard to the construction of wills, that the testator’s meaning is to
■ Laying aside, then, the multitude of cases as to what words create an estate tail, or cut down a fee simple into a fee tail, or what words mean an indefinite failure of issue, or a failure within a life or lives in being and twenty-one years afterwards, which were cited by the learned counsel from the English books, and the repetitions of them in the American books, let us go to the fountain-head, the will itself, of David Walker, a substantial Irish farmer, of a good name, and see if we can ascertain what he did mean by his devise of the plantation to his daughter Jean and her heirs. He first gave her a fee simple. Of that there is no doubt. The devise is to her, and her heirs and assigns for ever. He had two other daughters, to whom he devised each a portion of real estate, and he had grandchildren, who were the children of a deceased son and daughter, to whom he also devised real estate. He then devises as follows :
“ 8th, and lastly, in case any of my daughters die without heirs of their bodies, I do, and it is my will that their part, as above
The next question is, in what proportions ?
Of the four children of Elizabeth Stewart, referred to in the will, David, William, and Mary died intestate and without issue, after their grandfather and before their aunt Jean Johnson. Eliza, the fourth one, was married to Dr. Cyrus McCurdy, and died after her grandfather and before her aunt Jean, leaving one son, Horace McCurdy, one of the plaintiffs. Eliza Stewart had another child named Ann, who was married to Abraham Lukens, and died before her grandfather, leaving issue one.son, John Stewart Lukens, one of the plaintiffs. Jane Currin, Eliza Patterson, and Mary Templeton, are three of the children of James Walker, mentioned in the will — the fourth, David, died intestate and without issue, before his grandfather and aunt Jean.
It is a rule, that an executory interest, whether in real or personal estate, is transmissible to the representatives of the devisee, when such devisee dies before the contingency happens, and if not .disposed of, will vest in such representatives, when the contingency happens: Eearne on Rem. 554. The clause in the will is, ‘ and in case 'any of my daughters dies without heirs of their body, I do, and it is my will, that their part, as above bequeathed to them, be equally divided between the survivors of them, and my grandchildren, counting James Walker’s four children one, and Elizabeth Stewart’s four children one.’ The survivorship here is confined'to the daughters; there is no contingency in that respect as to the grandchildren. In regard to them, it was an executory interest that was transferable, and we are relieved from the necessity of determining whether the survivorship referred to the time of the
The plaintiffs, therefore, are entitled to a one undivided half part of the land in dispute, one-half whereof to go to Currin and wife, Patterson and wife, and Templeton and wife, as representing James Walker’s four children; and óf the remaining half thereof, five undivided eighth parts to Horace “McCurdy, and the. other three undivided eighth parts to John Stewart Lukens, they being the sole heirs and representatives of the four children of Elizabeth Stewart.
Judgment affirmed..