135 A. 119 | Pa. | 1926
These two appeals, involving the same question, will be treated as one. Spencer B. Rumsey, of Oakmont, Allegheny County, died March 19, 1917, childless, and his last will provides, inter alia: "I give to my wife all my property, real and personal, for the full term of her lifetime, she to have the entire income therefrom, and also as much of the principal as she desires, for her support and comfort. And my said wife shall not be required ever to file any bond or inventory, or to make any report or accounting, to any court, person or interest. And in the management of the estate she is authorized and empowered, to sell, buy, transfer to herself or to others, and do any other things she desires and finds necessary or convenient. Upon the death of my said wife, I give and bequeath such balance of my estate as she may leave in accordance with the foregoing as follows. [Giving $10,000 to his wife's sister in trust and $2,000 to his brother.] Subject to the disposition of my estate as hereinbefore mentioned, I give all the residue to my own heirs at law. I hereby appoint my wife executrix of this my will." The estate consisted approximately of $18,000 in real estate, $40,000 in bonds and $23,000 in corporate stocks. At his death the bonds and stock certificates were in his box in the Union National Bank of Pittsburgh. The widow became executrix and by arrangement allowed the bonds to remain in the bank, where the interest thereon was collected and remitted to her. She had the certificates of stock reissued in her own name, kept them where she pleased, leaving them generally in the same bank, and was paid the dividends thereon. Mrs. Rumsey had been a most devoted wife, was economical and, during the balance of her life, kept the corpus of her husband's estate intact. She had some estate in her own right which her will gives to her nieces, the appellants, but makes no mention of this stock; however, it would pass under the general language of her will were she its owner. Mrs. Rumsey *451 died September 25, 1925. At the distribution of Mr. Rumsey's estate, the nieces above mentioned claimed the $23,000 of stocks, including the stock dividends thereon, as part of Mrs. Rumsey's estate, and, from the award of the stock to Spencer S. Rumsey, the appellee, as sole heir and residuary legatee of the original testator, brought this appeal.
The decision of the orphans' court followed the well-settled law of the State and cannot be disturbed. Spencer B. Rumsey's will in clear language gives his wife the income of his entire estate for life and so much of the principal as she desired for her support and comfort, with power of sale, transfer, consumption and reinvestment in her own name. So long as she acted in good faith there was no limit to her right to use the estate for her support and comfort. In the language of Mr. Justice KEPHART, speaking for the Superior Court, in Zumbro v. Zumbro,
In clear language the husband's will makes disposition of whatever the widow might leave of the estate. While she had ample power of consumption, for the purposes stated, her dominion over the estate was for her life only. As stated by Mr. Justice MITCHELL, in the somewhat similar case of Tyson's Est.,
Appellants have received the $10,000 given their mother in trust by the will of Mr. Rumsey and must abide by the provision giving the unexpended balance of his estate to his own kin.
It was the duty of appellants as executrices of Mrs. Rumsey's estate to turn Mr. Rumsey's estate over to his representatives. For this service they claimed five per cent commission, which, under the circumstances, the orphans' court reduced to three per cent. This was a matter for that court's discretion and nothing appears to justify our interference.
The decree in each case is affirmed and each appeal is dismissed at the cost of the respective appellant.