195 Pa. 417 | Pa. | 1900
Opinion by
It is perfectly clear that the joint bequest to the testator’s
It will be observed that this very broad power of sale of any or all the real estate of the testator, is given to his executors with express direction to them, to see that the interests of the widow and daughter of the deceased under the previous clauses of the will, should be properly secured on the land sold. As the ascertainment of those interests would necessarily devolve
While it is true that a bare power to sell real estate given to an executor does not authorize him to take possession of and lease the real estate and collect the rents in the interim without the consent of the heirs, yet there is an abundance of authority for implying such power when the provisions of the will are of such a character as to indicate that such was the intention of the testator. Thus in the case of Bush v. Allen, 5 Mod. Rep. 63, it was held that if a testator devise the issues and profits of certain lands to his wife, to be paid to her by his executors, the executors shall take the lands in trust to receive the rents and profits to the use of the wife. It was held that the executors took the title to the land in trust for the wife simply because they were directed to pay the rents and profits to the wife.
Both of these cases were recognized as authority in the opinion of this court in the case of Parker’s Appeal, 61 Pa. 478, wherein Thompson, C. J., delivering the opinion said: “Implied trusts to executors result from the intention of their testators, to be gathered from the terms and provisions in wills, have always been more or less common. Several English cases have been cited, and among them Bush v. Allen, 5 Mod. Rep. 63, and South v. Allen, 5 Mod. Rep. 101, in which trusts to executors are implied from provisions very similar to the case in hand, and it is not improbable that we might feel ourselves impelled to imply such a trust in this and cases like it, were it not that the legatees for life are placed on the footing of trustees for those iu remainder in regard to the thing, or the principal of the fund devised for life by the 44th section of the Act of February 24, 1834, P. L. 81.”
A very good illustration of this doctrine occurs in the case of Potter v. Adriance, 44 N. J. Eq. 14. A testator by his will provided that at any time after his son Stephen should attain the age of twenty-one years, “ and a majority of the heirs so directing, the real estate may be sold either by public or private sale, as a whole or in lots, and upon such terms as a majority of the heirs shall decide upon,” and that one third of the proceeds of such sale should be given to his wife, and the remaining two thirds of such proceeds should be divided among his six children share and share alike, and then appointed his wife and one of his sons executrix and executor of the will. Held that the executor and executrix have power to sell when a majority of those to whom the land descended exercised the discretion required of them by the will, and that it will be the executor’s duty to distribute the proceeds of sale. The chancellor said: “ The primary and most important question in this
In the case at bar the purchasers were relieved of liability for the application of the proceeds of the sale, but the executors were especially charged with that duty, and as we have seen the performance of that duty required that they should determine the application of the rents and profits of the real estate which had been received by the widow and daughter Elsie.
In Williams on Executors, 413, it is said, “ It sometimes happens that a testator directs his estate to be disposed of for certain purposes without declaring by whom the sale shall be made. In the absence of such a declaration, if the proceeds be distributable by the executor, he shall have the power by implication.” In Rankin v. Rankin, 36 Ill. 293, Lawrence, J., delivering the opinion, said, “ The land was directed to be sold, and its proceeds divided among certain persons named in the will. It was then to be considered as a bequest of money. . . . It is then a fund distributable by the executors to the devisees, and, as such, passes through their hands by virtue of their office. This gave them the power to sell.” The foregoing citations have been made to show that powers to sell real estate will be inferred from provisions of the will, to be exercised by the executors though no such power is given to them in express terms. We have endeavored to show heretofore how a power to the executors to lease the lands in question should be inferred from the
If any additional fact be needed to enforce the same conclusion it is to be found in the fact that all of these parties have so construed the present will from the death of the testator for a period of more than five years. The executor during all that time collected the rents of all the properties and rendered periodical accounts of the rents received and the expenses deducted, and in all of them entered a debit against the widow for the rent of the house occupied by her at the rate of $300 per annum to which she made no objection until after a considerable balance arose against her. In addition to this an agreement was entered into in December, 1893, signed by the widow and the two children of the testator to whom the residue of the estate was given, making a division of certain articles of personal property, and in which it was expressly agreed that the widow was to pay rent for the property occupied by her. Thus it appears that the widow and residuary legatees agreed to the collection of rents and the distribution of the proceeds, by the executors, and that is another and very forcible reason why such collection and distribution should not now be challenged. All the assignments of error are sustained. We sustain the action in its present form.
Judgment reversed and new venire awarded.