10 Pa. 245 | Pa. | 1849
It is the cardinal rule in the construction of wills, that the intention of the testator — to be collected from the whole instrument, or, as it is sometimes expressed, from its four corners — is to govern. But this must be the legal intention, to discover which, certain legal rules are firmly established, from which we are not at liberty now to depart. The rule is, as expressed by the Chief Justice in Steele v. Thompson, 14 S. & R. 88, that, when a devise is made in words, from which the law implies an estate for life, and no words of limitation are added, the devisee can take only an estate for life. But, as no technical words are necessary to show an intent to give a fee, any words which show such intent are sufficient And Mr. Justice Duncan, in one case, says, that when there are no words of limitation, and no neces-: sary implication from the whole body of the will to give a longer estate, the devisee takes but a life-estate. Of the rule and its qualifications many examples are given. in Steele v. Thompson, which it would be useless to repeat. f But I content myself with referring to the case, where most of the authorities are collected.
Two questions arise on the construction of the will: 1. Is the devise to the daughter a devise of a fee-simple or life-estate ? 2. .At what time did the devise vest; at the time of the death of the testator, or at the expiration of the life-estate of the wife ?
It is admitted there are no words of limitation contained in the will, and whether there are other words sufficiently indicative of his intention to enlarge the estate, which is otherwise a life-estate, into a fee-simple, is the point in controversy. I approach the question with a great disposition to find words of such import as carry the fee, as. I am convinced that in a very great majority of cases we thus carry,out the intention of the testator, although I disclaim all idea of effectuating this object by conjecture merely, nor would I wish to be understood as interfering with a single adjudged case. None has been cited on all fours with it, nor with much resemblance to it. ■ Although the testator omits the usual formula, of a disposition of all his “worldly estate,” yet it is apparent he, had no idea he was dying intestate as to any part of his property. He devises all this plantation, and moreover, orders thirty or forty acres of land to be sold by his executors, to pay his debts, without any- words of limitation. It would impute great folly to him to suppose that he gave power to sell nothing more than a life-estate for that purpose. But I 'do not put the case on that ground, nor upon the fact that it is devised to them, or the survivor .of them, in joint stock, share and share alike. These clauses in cases of similar import, have been ruled not to enlarge the estate. But, although worth nothing of themselves, yet they are not to be altogether discarded from the consideration of the case. Nor am I inclined to pass- by the words that at the decease of his wife, the plantation is to descend to his three daughters, or the survivor of them, in joint stock, share and share alike. It is well remarked that the word descend is inapplicable to any estate less than a fee; that the testator uses it as synonymous with “ belong to,” or “vest in,” which would carry a fee. Besides, he. limits the life-estate to his -wife by apt words, from which a fair inference arises, that had he designed the same interest for his daughters, he would have said so in express words, by devising it them also during their
Having, then, disposed of the question as to the quantity of the estate, and having come to_the conclusion he intended a fee, we
But, when the limitation was not immediate, (that is, in possession,) there being a prior life, as here, or other particular interest carved out, so that there was another period to which the words survivor or survivors could be referred, was á point, it seems, of more difficulty. In these cases, as well as in the cases where the gift was immediate, the courts of England, as Mr. Powell, in his Treatise on Devises, vol. 2, p. 750, very correctly observes, for a very considerable period, perhaps for upwards of one hundred years, applied the words in question to the period of the death of the testator, on the idea that there was no other mode of reconciling the words of survivorship with the words of severance, creating a tenancy in common. Without undertaking to decide as to the weight to be ascribed to this argument,’which does not seem to meet the approbation of the learned commentator, yet it cannot be disputed, that, for a long period, decision after decision followed in which survivorship was held to refer to the period of the testator’s decease. Mr. Powell enumerates no less than nine decisions in which this doctrine is held, embracing, if any, little less than a century: viz., Stringer v. Phillips, decided at the Rolls, in 1730; Rose v. Hill, by Lord Mansfield, in the Court of King’s Bench; Wilson v. Bayley, in the House of Lords; Roebuck v. Dean, by Lord Rosslyn; Perry v. Woods, and Maberley v. Strode, by Lord Alvanley; Brown v. Bigg, by Sir Wm. Grant; Garland v. Thomas, and Edwards v. Symons, by the Court of Common Pleas. In all these cases, notwithstanding that a previous interest
Judgment accordingly.