252 Pa. 394 | Pa. | 1916
Opinion bt
Nancy Neel devised her residuary estate in trust during the life of her only child, a daughter, with directions that the trustees should “apply during the life of my \ daughter, Adella, so much of either income or principal j in their charge as in their best discretion they may think proper to and for the maintenance and support of my j said daughter......And her the said Adella’s receipts for whatever moneys they......may see fit to give herí
The testatrix died, a widow, in 1872; her daughter, Adella, never married, and she died intestate and without issue in 1912. One brother of the testatrix died intestate, unmarried and without issue, in 1888; another brother died testate, leaving children, in 1892; a sister of testatrix died testate, leaving children, in 1900; another sister died testate in 1914; all of which is set forth more at large in the notes of th.e reporter, published in connection herewith, to which we shall refer, from time to time, during the course of this opinion. The several questions now before us concern the construction of Nancy Neel’s will, and they arise on five separate appeals taken by various parties in interest
The learned auditor appointed by the court below,' after finding facts and stating conclusions of law, so ably discusses the material points involved, that, throughout this opinion, we shall quote liberally from his report. In dealing with the subject of the character of the estate for distribution, whether real or personal, the auditor said: “It is to be noted that the will authorizes and empowers the trustees to make sale of the real estate at any time they may see fit, and directs that the proceeds thereof shall be held upon the same trusts and for the same purposes as the personal estate. At the death of her daughter, Adella Neel, she (the testatrix) provides for the distribution of her estate in the form of money, and, for that purpose, again gives to her trustees authority to sell any real estate then unsold, with the further provision that all of her estate shall be converted into money and that it shall be so distributed. The language of the will scarcely constitutes a positive direction to sell the real estate, but, in order that the trustees may execute the will according to its purpose and intent, there would appear to be an absolute necessi-. ty to sell any of the real estate remaining unsold at the death of the daughter, Adella Neel, in order to make distribution of the estate in the manner provided under the will. The auditor is of opinion, that there is under the provisions of this will such a blending of realty and personalty of the decedent’s estate as to show that she intended to create a common fund from both and to bequeath such fund in the form of money; ......it is apparent, therefore, that the provisions of the will worked a conversion of her real estate into personalty, thus breaking the descent and vesting the entire estate as personalty: Dundas’s App., 64 Pa. 325; Darlington v. Darlington, 160 Pa. 65.” [Also see Ramsey v. Ramsey (No. 1), 226 Pa. 249]. In this we find no error.
The next important question in the case concerns the
In Safe Deposit and Trust Co. of Pittsburgh v. Wood (No. 1), 201 Pa. 420, 427, the rule is comprehensively stated thus: “The question of vested or contingent is not to be tested by the certainty or uncertainty of obtaining the actual enjoyment; for that would make the character of the estate depend, not upon the terms of its creation, but on the form of the result. Neither does it depend upon the defeasibility or indefeasibility of the right of possession; for many estates are vested without possession, as well as with, which are yet defeasible. If there is a present right to a future possession though that right may be defeated by some future event, contingent or certain, there is nevertheless a vested estate.” Moreover, a legacy will always be regarded as vested rather than as contingent unless the language of the will plainly indicates that the testator had a different intention ; and here, when we consider that the brothers and sisters of the testatrix were alive and ready to take at the date of her will, and at the time of her death, and that her daughter, Adella, because of her physical and mental condition, was never likely to marry or have children, it is plain that the testatrix, in all probability, intended to vest an estate in such brothers and sisters. As said by the present Chief Justice in Rosengarten v. Ashton, 228 Pa. 389, at page 396, in distinguishing Carstensen’s Est., supra, “the brothers and sisters of the testatrix were in esse at the date of her death, and the time when they were to come into possession of their legacies was fixed by the will, to wit, at the death of Edward Carstensen (here, Adella Neel);...... the bequest was not qualified, but absolute and immediate; there was no condition precedent attached to the gift
Frasier v. Scranton Gas & Water Co., 249 Pa. 570, cited by some of the appellants, is a case where we construed the language employed in the will as creating a condition precedent that, in order to take, the remainder-man had to be alive at the death of the life tenant; therefore, we determined the remainder was contingent. On the facts in that case, as in many others of its kind, so far as concerns its final determination, the result would have been precisely the same whether the limitation
The last branch of the case to be considered, and, perhaps, the most important one, concerns the subject of the accumulations referred to in the third finding of fact (see reporter’s notes, supra); in this connection, the auditor states: “The original fund passing into the hands of the trustees......and constituting the corpus of the estate has been increased by the receipt of rents and interest in
The auditor calls attention to the Act of April 18, 1853, P. L. 503, Section 9, which provides as follows:“No person or persons shall, after the passing of this act, by any deed, will, or otherwise, settle or dispose of any real or personal property, so and in such manner that the rents, issues, interests, or profits thereof, shall be wholly or partially accumulated for any longer term than the life or lives of any such grantor or grantors, settlor or settlors, or testator, and the term of twenty-one years from the death of any such grantor, settlor, or testator; that is to say, only after- such decease during the minority or respective minorities, with allowance for the period of gestation, of any person or persons, who, under the uses or trusts of the deed, will, or other assurance directing such accumulation, would, for the time being, if of full age, be entitled to the rents, issues, interests, and profits so directed to accumulate, and in every case where any accumulation shall be directed
After stating the above contentions, citing the Act of 1853, supra, and quoting from the will of the testatrix, the auditor, in discussing the branch of the case now under consideration, says: “It is important to note at the beginning that the 'testatrix did not in positive language direct that the interest and income should be accumulated and capitalized......; she did, however, dispose of her real and personal property in such a manner that the rents and interests thereof have ‘partially accumulated.’ The daughter for whose benefit for life the trust was created, was more than twenty-one years of age at the time her .mother’s will went into effect. ......In this respect, therefore, any disposition of her property by the will of testatrix in such manner as to accumulate the rents and interests could not come within the provisions of the above statute authorizing accumulations after the decease of the testator during the minority of any person who would for the time being, if of full age, be entitled to such rents and interest. Notwithstanding the fact that there is no direct and positive language to accumulate and capitalize the income, the auditor is of the opinion that the statute applies whenever the result of the directions in the will is to produce accumulations and capitalization thereof under conditions which do not comply with the provisions of the statute, although in such case there may have been no conscious intention on the part of the testator to direct unlawful accumulations. As was said in White’s Est., 8 Pa. D. R. 33, 35, by Penkose, Judge, ‘Accumulation is forbidden by the act no less where it results by indirection than where it is expressly ordered.’ The same lan
The auditor thus concludes that on either line of reasoning, i. e., a breach of the act or an intestacy, the estate 'of Adella Neel was entitled to the accumulations, and,' in support of his conclusions, he cites and discusses Washington’s Est., 75 Pa. 102 (in connection with which, see what is said in Wright’s Est., 227 Pa. 69, at page 74); McKee’s App., 96 Pa. 277; Edwards’s Est., 190 Pa. 177; Roney’s Est., 227 Pa. 127; Walter’s Est., 223 Pa. 598, and Howell’s Est., 180 Pa. 515; after which he considers a contention which is strenuously urged by certain of the present appellants, i. e., that, if the fund in question represents unlawful accumulations in breach of the act, the money should pass to the brothers and sisters of the testatrix, or their issue, as residuary legatees, and not to the heirs of Adella Neel. In negativing this view of the case, the auditor said that, under the decisions already cited, he could not sustain the above stated contention, for, according to the terms of the will, the brothers and sisters, or their issue, were not entitled
We concur in the auditor’s views as just quoted, and we agree with him that none of the cases relied upon by the appellants controls the point now under consideration. Eberly’s App., 110 Pa. 95, decided only that the accumulations in that case did not exceed a reasonable contingent fund, and, for that reason, no distribution should be ordered; and this is true of McIntosh’s Est., 158 Pa. 528, 537. Hibb’s Est., 143 Pa. 217, simply determined that the amount then in the hands of the trus
We have not attempted to review every case cited to us, since to do so would unduly extend this already too lengthy opinion; but we have read all of them, and have referred to or discussed those which impressed us as most relevant. Although in the five appeals up for review, 102 alleged errors are assigned, yet we do not find a single specification setting forth in totidem verbis the table of distribution confirmed by the court below, and the assignments generally are not in proper form (Prenatt v. Messenger Printing Company, 241 Pa. 267; Scull’s Est., 249 Pa. 57, 58-9). We have considered, however, the important points in the case, and are not convinced of material error in any particular.
The assignments are all dismissed, and the decree is affirmed; the costs to be paid by the respective appellants in each instance.