4 Watts 13 | Pa. | 1835
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
—There appear, on the face of the record, many strange things; such as, that several legatees or administrators of deceased legatees, to whom distinct shares of a sum of money were devised, join in the same suit, and that the administrator of John Quigley is
This last point being considered the only important one, has, 1 suppose, prevented the parties from bringing or putting on the record the will of John Quigley. We have only a small part of it, and for that reason, as well as that the cause rests on the other point, we give no opinion whether the legacies to the plaintiffs are specific and taken away by the testator’s having received the debt in his lifetime, or whether it is a general bequest of so much, and that debt referred to as fixing the amount. Not supposing this point material, we have brought before us only a small part of the will. Now it is never safe to decide on part of a wiil: e. g. a devise of land to a man and his heirs, is a gift of the fee simple; but other clauses in the will may reduce the devise to an estate less than a fee.
Was this bequest charged on the land devised to Robert Quigley by the testator ? This has not been much insisted on; and unless where a testator gives his sons each a distinct tract of land in the same words, and then makes one executor and residuary devisee of personal property, this makes all the legacies a charge on the land of the son who is made executor—it could not be insisted on. I admit that in England, where debts and legacies are often lost unless charged on land, very slight grounds have been sometimes held sufficient to make them a charge; and at other times it required almost express words to make them a charge. The cases are totally irreconcilable, but they all agree that there must be an express charge, or it must appear that the testator intended to make them a charge from the whole of the will.
Where the testator gives to his children each a tract of land, and makes one of them executor, it has never been held that this alone throws the whole burthen of debts or legacies on the tract given to the executor, and in addition makes them a lien on that tract, so that the devisee cannot sell or devise it for perhaps half a century. We are of opinion that these legacies, admitting them to be general legacies, were not charged on the tract devised to Robert, and such appears to have been the opinion of the judge in the common pleas.
But there was proof, if believed, that Robert expressly promised to pay these legacies, and this up to near the time of his death in 1810,
Judgment reversed,