260 Pa. 349 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
When tbe will which is tbe subject of tbe present controversy was executed, April 25, 1904, tbe testatrix, Matilda Miller, a single woman, owned no real estate whatever, but was possessed of considerable personal property, mainly mortgages which she estimated in her will to be of tbe value of at least $5,000, but which, according to statement accompanying and proved as part of tbe will, seems to have amounted to upwards of $7,000, a deposit
Subsequent to the execution of the will the testatrix converted all her mortgages, except one for $1,000, and applied the money realized therefrom in the purchase of certain purparts of real estate of which she died seized, November 25, 1908. Amelia Miller, sister of testatrix, and legatee under her will, died May 5, 1913, leaving a will by the terms of which her entire residuary estate
The question raised is a very narrow one; whether the
The time was when after acquired real estate was not and could not be made the subject of testamentary disposition without a subsequent republication of the will: Girard v. Philadelphia, 4 Rawle 323. The Act of April 8,1833, P. L. 250, followed close upon this decision. By the tenth section of this act it is provided — “That the real estate acquired by a testator after making his will, shall pass by a general devise, unless a contrary intention be manifest on the face of the will.” To this day that remains the law, though it may now receive a wider application than was foreseen as likely to result. .One effect of it is to give the words “general devise” when they occur in a will, the import and significance of an express intent on the part of the testator to' dispose of after acquired real estate. By “general devise” is to be understood a testamentary disposition of real estate without qualification as to tenure.. Evidently the applicability of the act in any given case. depends on
It follows that the decree must be reversed. It is now so ordered, and it is further ordered that the petition of the appellant for partition of the real estate be reinstated with procedendo.