245 Pa. 392 | Pa. | 1914
Opinion by
The question for determination in this case is: Did the plaintiff, Charles M. Lea, take an estate tail enlarged to a fee, or but a life estate?
The testator gave the residue of his estate to his wife
The issue arose in a case stated wherein it was agreed that if it should be decided that Charles M. Lea took a fee, judgment should be entered for him, otherwise for the defendant. The plaintiff secured the judgment and the defendant has appealed.
The court below sustained the plaintiff’s contention that the terms of the devise gave him an estate tail which, under the rule in Shelley’s Case, and the Act of April 27, 1855, P. L. 368, was enlarged to a fee. We cannot agree in this conclusion; for it is apparent that the testator did not intend to use the word “descendants” in the sense of “heirs of the body” of the first taker, but simply to designate a certain set of persons to take directly from him, the testator, at a given time.
The words of the will are not sufficient in themselves to create an estate in fee-simple, for “descendants” does not comprehend “heirs” at law generally (Bates v. Gillette, 132 Ill. 287, 298); and the phrase “who shall be then living” restricts the word “descendants” to those alive at the time of the death of the first-taker, thereby negativing the idea of a devise to “heirs of the body,” or descendants to the remotest degree, which is the essential attribute of an estate tail. It is quite true that the phrase “shall pass to his descendants” strongly suggests an intent to make the first-taker the source of inheritable succession, and had the devise ended at that point, it could well be held to create an estate tail; but it did not, and this is the pinch of the case.
A clear statement of the principle which controls
The testator uses the word “descendants” several times; he first provides that, at the death of his widow, his property shall be divided “into as many parts and shares as at that time there shall be children of mine then living and children of mine then dead represented by ‘descendants’ then living,” next, he states, “to each of my children, Arthur and Nina, who shall then be living, and to the ‘descendants’ who shall then be entitled of any of my children then deceased, I devise its share, in fee-simple,” then follows the particular provision with which we are dealing. It seems clear that the testator first employed “descendants” as a mere descriptio personarum, hence, it is but reasonable to assume that he meant the word in that sense in the devise in question; and there is nothing called to our attention from the other parts of the will sufficient to overcome this assumption, or to show that he intended it as a synonym for the technical phrase, “heirs of the body.” The last words of the devise, which states that the descendants of Charles, living at the time of his death, shall take “in remainder in such proportions, with like force and effect as they would have taken said real estate had he
After considering all the relevant parts of the will (Kemp v. Reinhard, 228 Pa. 143), we are convinced that the learned court below erred in entering judgment for the plaintiff. The assignments of error are sustained; the judgment is reversed and is here entered for the defendant.