276 Pa. 274 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
Clement Regli and his children appealed from a decree of the orphans’ court, awarding to a trustee for John McCourt, instead of to them, the sum of $5,000, referred to in the following paragraph of testator’s will: “I give and bequeath to John McCourt, son of my brother Patrick McCourt, the sum of $5,000. I have not heard from him for some years and he may be dead, and I therefore provide that the said sum shall be held by my executor hereinafter named and invested and the income accumulated for the period of five years, during which time efforts shall be made to find him by advertising, and if at the end of five years he has not been heard of I direct that then the said fund with its accumulations shall be held for the benefit of the children of Clement Regli to be divided equally between them share and share alike.”
Testator died December 22, 1914. The first “efforts ......made to find him [John McCourt] by advertising” were begun one year later, and thereafter like advertisements were inserted three and a half years, four and a half years, and finally nearly five years after testator’s death. Five years and four months after the death, John McCourt appeared and gave to appellee an assignment of the legacy, upon certain trusts not necessary to be stated.
It will be observed that the absolute gift to John McCourt, is not to be taken away only because he shall not be “heard of” within five years after testator’s death; the will also requires, that, before this shall result, “efforts shall be made to find him by advertising” during that length of timer. This does not mean that an advertisement must have been made every day of the five years, any more than it means the legacy will be lost if he is not “heard of” after advertising on the last day of that period, or, as the fact was, on four occasions, the earliest of which was one year after the death. If this latter was sufficient, the “during which time” would not be the five years required, but only four years thereof. John McCourt and his trustee have the right to insist that the legacy to him shall not be decreed payable to appellants, unless there was an attempt to give him constructive notice, during the period the will prescribes; hence, since he appeared after only four years and four months of
As further supporting this conclusion, it will be noticed that the five years, during which he must be “heard of,” is nowhere stated as beginning at the date of testator’s death; on the contrary, the provision relating to a possible gift over to appellants, immediately follows the clause requiring an advertisement during the time specified, and may well be held dependent on it; especially as testator was bound to know the executor could not have justified, as against creditors, any expense incurred in advertising for John McCourt, and hence, in the absence of an express provision to the contrary, of which there is none, may be presumed to have intended the five years to begin to run only after some action by the court showing the fund was not needed for the payment of debts, or directing it to be held until notice was given as required by the will. This conclusion, if adopted, would also defeat the appeal.
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellants.