Opinion by
We have here two appeals from the same decree involving precisely the same question. We shall consider them together.
The particular clause in the will of the testatrix which gives rise to the present controversy reads as follows:
“Whereas, I am the owner of certain property and estate which I hold in my own right free from any trust,*333 Now I hereby give, devise and bequeath the same to my husband, Arthur Peterson, absolutely.”
Charles J. Harrah, the father of Mrs. Georgiana Harrah Peterson, here the testatrix, whose estate is now being distributed, by his last will bequeathed to trustees, who were also executors of his will, the sum of $250,000, in trust, to pay the income thereof to his said daughter Georgiana during her natural life, and at her death to pay the principal sum as she, the said Georgiana, should by her last will direct. Charles J. Harrah’s estate consisted largely of holdings in the Midvale Steel Works. Gut of a total issue of seventy-five hundred shares of capital stock of this corporation he was the owner of thirty-three hundred shares, of appraised value of $198.68 per share. Under the advice and recommendation, if not direction, contained in the will, the investment in this stock was continued by the trustees. We are here concerned only with so much of it as represented the $250,000 bequeathed in trust as aforesaid. The stock representing this particular interest was not earmarked or individuated so as to distinguish it in the general holdings, but the number of shares necessary to meet the requirements of the trust was fixed by the appraised value of the stock; and this amount of stock remaining in the hands of the executors, acting as trustees, was impressed quite as securely and certainly with the trust as though it had been passed from the executors to the trustees by formal transfer. As to the income derived therefrom, Mrs. Peterson as cestui que trust was entitled to receive it; but, saving her power of appointment, she had no control over the fund; she did not hold that “in her own right free from any trust.” In the years succeeding the death of Mr. Harrah, the business of the Midvale Steel Works became so enormously profitable, that by 1910 the accumulated undivided profits of the concern largely exceeded the entire capitalization of the corporation. These earnings were income pure and simple; the fact
So completely had this income been divorced from the trust by the course of business adopted by the parties with respect to it, that had Mrs. Peterson’s death occurred immediately prior to the date of the agreement, there can be little question that under this third item of her will above recited, the testatrix’s share in the accumulated income from the stock which had been placed in trust would have passed. No property right with respect to this income was ever in the trustees; theirs was a legal duty, founded on a personal confidence, to pay it over to the cestui que trust who for all purposes is to be regarded as the real owner. Assuming, then, this to have been the situation before the agreement was entered into, it is not pretended that anything thereafter occurred to change it, except that a year and a half before her death, which occurred 19th September, 1911, Mrs. Peterson became a party to the agreement above referred to, whereby all those having interest in the Midvale Steel Works stock derived from Charles J. Harrah, assigned all their interest in the 39600 shares of the proposed new issue of stock, as and when issued, to the executors of Charles J. Harrah, in trust, to have, and hold and vote the same for a period of ten years, or such part of said term as in the judgment of the executors it might be necessary to hold the same until the control of Midvale Steel Works can be advantageously sold; and in further trust to collect the dividends and sell the stock at such time as the control of the company may be advantageously sold in accordance with certain pre
The contention on behalf of the appellant is that whatever may have been the legal status of these earnings prior to this agreement, now that they were represented by shares in the capital stock which had been assigned to trustees, who held the legal title to them at the time of Mrs. Peterson’s death, they did not pass under the above-recited bequest to her husband, the appellee, inasmuch as they were not then property and estate which testatrix held “in her own right free from any trust.” In what we have said our purpose was to show that the earnings and income of the stock representing the investment of the $250,000 bequeathed in trust by Charles J. Harrah, the father, In whatever shape they were, belonged to Mrs. Peterson in her own right. That they continued to be property held by her in her own right under the assignment of the shares to the executors to hold in trust, is not to be questioned. Admitting the binding effect of the agreement, Mrs. Peterson had the sole beneficial interest in the shares, and, subject to conditions which she herself had imposed for a definite period, she was free to do with them as she pleased. Had the subject of the bequest been indicated or described by no other words than those which refer to it as “property and estate which I hold in my own right,” there would have been little room for dispute as to what was included; it is the added expression, “free from any trust,” which, because it may be understood as limiting and qualifying toe words which immediately pre
“In the construction of wills the great general and controlling rule is that the intent of the testator shall prevail. And by his intent is meant his actual intent.*340 It-is often said, as in the case of .Wiedman App., 42 Leg. Int. 338, quoted by our Brother Green in Hancock’s App., 112 Pa. 532, and cited by appellant, £The ■question in expounding a will is not what the testator means, but what is the meaning of his words.’ But by this it was never intended to say that the testator’s meaning when apparent can be disregarded, but, that it cannot be got at aliunde, by what he might have meant, or even what under the circumstances perhaps he would have meant, but only by what he said. The search is confined to his language, but its object is still his meaning.”
So here, the object of the inquiry has been the meaning the testatrix gave the words she employed, and we have kept within the narrow limits of the rule.
We find but a single provision or expression in this will which can be construed as indicating anything short of a purpose to give to this husband the entire individual estate, short of those things specifically bequeathed to others, except the fact that the will concludes with a residuary clause. It is only necessary to say with respect to this, that the record, as we read it, discloses no residuary estate except as one would be created were the construction of the devise and bequest to the husband contended for by the appellant to prevail. The fact that there is a residuary clause can in no wise limit or detract from what had been previously given in the will; nor can such residuary clause have the effect of putting a construction on a previous clause of the will in order to create a residue.
Upon a careful study of the will from its four corners, and after no less careful consideration of the very able arguments of counsel on both sides, we are of opinion that under item three of this will, the testatrix’s husband is entitled to the fund in dispute agreeably to the plain and manifest intention of the testatrix as therein expressed. The appeal is dismissed and the decree is affirmed.