21 A.2d 34 | Pa. | 1941
Phillip K. Hensel died on January 25, 1934, leaving a will in paragraph 4 of which he provided as follows: "I give and bequeath to Union Trust Company of Pennsylvania, Trustee hereunder, my real estate known as and numbered 28 and 30 South Third Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in trust nevertheless, to pay to my wife, Maude V. Hensel, the income therefrom". Following the death of the widow on April 25, 1934, appellants, who are her heirs at law, instituted these proceedings, in ejectment, contending that, under paragraph 4 of Hensel's will, their decedent took an absolute estate in the 28 and 30 South Third Street properties and claiming to be the owners thereof under the intestate laws. Appellees, who claim the real estate in dispute under the residuary clause of the will of Phillip K. Hensel, filed demurrers on the ground that the terms of the will gave the widow, Maude V. Hensel, merely a life estate in the properties, which demurrers the court below sustained, and these appeals followed.
While it is a well settled principle in our law of wills that "a devise of the rents, issues and profits of the *316
land passes the land itself both at law and in equity" (France's Estate,
In paragraph 8 of his will, which was undoubtedly intended to embrace all real estate given to the trustee, including the two parcels referred to in paragraph 4 and here in controversy, the present testator not only authorized and empowered the trustee "to sell my real estate when in its judgment a sale can be made for the benefit of my estate, to such person or persons and for such prices as may be reasonably secured for the same", but he imposed upon the trustee the affirmative duty to invest the proceeds in securities legal for trust funds "in the event of a sale of all or part of my real estate during the lifetime ofmy wife", and expressly directed the trustee "to pay the income therefrom to my wife, *317 Maude V. Hensel, during her natural life". Under the decisions referred to, testator thus clearly manifested an intention not to pass an absolute estate in these properties to the widow, but only the income therefrom for life; consequently, the technical rule of construction sought to be invoked by appellants, her heirs at law, has no application.
Judgments affirmed.