263 Pa. 248 | Pa. | 1919
Opinion by
The fourteenth section of the Fiduciaries Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 447, provides: “Rents of real estate accru
Almatia L. Reel died June 8, 1917 — a day after the Fiduciaries Act went into effect. Her will, dated November 18,1916, was duly admitted to probate and letters testamentary were issued to the Commonwealth Trust Company and William G. Newmyer, the executors named therein. After directing that a sum not exceeding $2,000 should be expended in the erection of a tombstone over her grave, making some bequests of personal jewelry and bequeathing $28,000 to various persons, the testatrix
The personal property of the deceased, according to the inventory filed by her executors, amounted to but $767.25, and consisted largely of the furniture and fixtures in “Reel Hall.” Her indebtedness amounted to over $12,000. In a petition presented by the executors to the court below the averments were that her personal estate was insufficient to pay her debts; that two pieces of her real estate were in the possession of tenants under leases executed by her; that “Reel Hall,” which had been occupied by her was in the charge of her former housekeeper under the direction, of the petitioners, and the prayer of the petition was for authority to them to collect all rents accruing after her death as assets for the payment of her debts under the Act of 1917. The order prayed for was made without notice to the legatees or the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania of Free and Accepted Ancient York Masons, the residuary devisee. It subsequently presented its petition asking for a vacation of the order, but this was denied, on the ground that under the Act of 1917 the executors were authorized to collect all rents accruing from the real estate of their decedent, whether on leases executed by her or on tenancies created by them. From this the residuary
Rents which accrued after the death of Almatia L. Reel on leases executed by her undoubtedly became assets for the payment of her debts under the Act of 1917, and as this is conceded, the real and only question for determination is as to the authority of the executors to collect rents, as assets for the payment of her debts, from real estate which was not under lease at the time of her death. As has been observed, the manifest purpose of the Act of 1917 is the correction of a long-standing wrong to creditors of deceased owners of real estate, and, to give effect to that purpose, the act is to be given a liberal construction: Quinn v. Fidelity Beneficial Association, 100 Pa. 382; Poor District of Huntingdon Twp. v. Poor District of New Columbus Boro., 109 Pa. 579; Commonwealth v. Shaleen, 215 Pa. 595; Jones v. Beale, 217 Pa. 182. The cardinal rule in construing any statute is to ascertain the legislative intent, that effect may be given to it. No strained construction need be put upon the 14th Section of the Act of 1917 to discover the legislative intent in passing it. A reasonable reading of its words makes that intent most clear. It is that rents of real estate accruing after the death of the owner shall be assets for the payment of the debts of the decedent when the personal estate shall be insufficient therefor. Rents generally — not merely rents which may accrue after the death of decedent on leases
Decree affirmed at the cost of the appellant.