The opinion of the court was delivered, January 5th 1869, by
If, under the will of Jacob Geyer, the estate of his son Stephen H. Geyer was an equitable estate for life only, the legal estate being in William Baxter, the trustee, and if the remainder devised to his heirs and legal representatives, their heirs and assigns for ever, was an executed legal estate, or would become such upon its vesting upon the death of Stephen H. Geyer, then the rule in Shelley’s Case does not apply: Fearne on Rem. 52; Kay v. Scates,
By the will in question the property was devised to William Baxter in fee, in trust to let and demise, to recover and receive the rents, and pay them over to Stephen H. Geyer, or at his option to permit and suffer him to let and demise, occupy and enjoy, and take the income thereof “ during all the term of his natural life, for his own separate use and so the same shall not be in the power or liable to the debts, control or engagements of the said Stephen H. Geyer, he paying all the taxes thereon and all necessary repairs and improvements thereon.”
That a benefactor has the power of thus restricting the enjoyment of his bounty through the medium of a trust during the life of the beneficiary is now the unquestionable law in this' state : Holdship v. Patterson,
Nor had the deed of November 29th 1867, from William Baxter, the trustee to Stephen H. Geyer, in fee simple, any effect whatever to change the nature of his estate from equitable to legal. However it might have been in England, in Pennsylvania it was simply inoperative. It was clearly a breach of trust. If a trustee conveys the legal title to a boná fide purchaser for a valuable consideration and without notice, the purchaser, indeed, will hold the land discharged of the trust, but the trustee will be decreed in equity to buy and settle other land to the same uses, Mansell v. Mansell, 2 P. Wms. 681; but if the conveyance be to a volunteer or to one having notice of the trust, he will take the legal estate subject to the same trust: Id. In such case reconveyance will be decreed; Rye v. Gorge, 1 P. Wms. 128; Hill on Trustees 318; and in Pennsylvania it will be considered as though it had been done. It is not in the power of a trustee to destroy the trust, unless by a sale to a purchaser for a valuable consideration, bond fide and without notice, and then he will be held answerable out of his own means to the full value and on the same trusts. Whether Stephen H. Geyer, having full notice, be regarded as holding the legal title subject to the trust, in which case no merger would take place; or that it remained in William Baxter unaffected by the deed or revested in him immediately, as upon a reconveyance decreed by a chancellor, which perhaps is the more correct idea; the result is the same. The life estate of Stephen H. Geyer remained an equitable one.
That the remainder in trust for the heirs and legal representatives of Stephen H. Geyer, their heirs and assigns, was an executed legal estate when vested, cannot admit of a question. In Bacon’s Appeal, 7 P. F. Smith 504, it was decided by this court that a direction in the will that the trustees should convey to those in remainder, which in England would require the legal estate to remain in the trustees until conveyance, produced no such effect in Pennsylvania.
On the whole, then, we are of the opinion that the rule in Shelley’s Case has no application; that there is, under the limitation contained in this will, an equitable estate for life in Stephen H. Geyer, with a legal contingent remainder in fee to his heirs and
Judgment reversed, and judgment for defendant according to the case stated.
