127 A. 627 | Pa. | 1925
Argued January 5, 1925. This controversy came before the court below in the form of a case-stated, with the stipulation that, if it should be decided plaintiff had a fee simple title to certain real estate, a money judgment was to be entered in her favor, otherwise in favor of defendant. It was determined *250 that plaintiff had but a life estate; hence judgment was entered for defendant, and this appeal ensued.
The case-stated agreed on the following facts: E. W. Smith died May 25, 1917, testate, leaving a widow but no children, seized in fee of the land here involved, which became part of his residuary estate. After a number of devises and bequests to others, testator, by item 7 of his will, left to his widow an estate for life in a piece of property, not here involved, using the specific words "a life estate"; he also left her "six thousand dollars, in cash," to be paid "immediately upon [his] death," the household belongings which they had enjoyed together, and the private residence in which they had lived. Following this, and still in the same item, appears the portion of the will which gives rise to the question in this case, wherein testator provides: "I give, bequeath and devise to my said beloved wife all the rest and residue of my estate . . . . . . . not specifically hereinbefore given, bequeathed or devised under this will. I hereby, however, enjoin upon my said beloved wife that she make, execute her last will and testament wherein and whereby she will make, give, bequeath and devise all of her estate which she has derived or secured from me under this will to her heirs and to my legal heirs and devisees under this will, in equal proportion — that is one half of said estate to her heirs and the other one half of said estate to my heirs."
Section 9 of the Act of April 8, 1833, P. L. 250, now section 12 of the Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, provides that "All devises of real estate shall pass the whole estate of the testator in the premises devised, although there be no words of inheritance or of perpetuity, unless it appear by a devise over, or by words of limitation or otherwise in the will, that the testator intended to devise a less estate"; and the present will indicates that testator was cognizant of the effect of this legislation, for, although in certain of the devises, prior to those contained in item 7, he employs words of inheritance, in *251 others, where his purpose to give an absolute estate is equally clear, he omits such words. But the court below, construing the will in its entirety, concluded that, as to the properties here involved, testator's intention to give plaintiff less than a fee sufficiently appeared; with this conclusion we cannot agree.
The guiding rule in such case has been stated by us many times, the latest instance being in Deeter's Est.,
In considering the present will as a whole, we are not particularly aided by those parts which make bequests or devises to persons other than testator's widow; however, when we read the portions dealing with the widow's interest, we can sufficiently deduce from them that testator's "dominant purpose" was to give his residuary estate (including the property in controversy) absolutely and in fee to his wife, his secondary intent being to control her testamentary disposition of it.
At the beginning of the seventh item (which includes the sections dealing not only with specific bequests and devises to the widow, but also with the residuary estate), testator gives to his wife a life estate, employing *252 the words "life estate," to denote the interest she is to take in the property there dealt with (this property, as previously noted, is not involved in the present controversy); then he gives to her, without suggesting a desire to confer less than an absolute estate, certain real and personal property, and, next, devises to her his residuary estate, again without limitation or restriction. But, after the devises and bequests, absolute in form, testator, later on in the paragraph disposing of his residuary estate, attempts to direct his widow's testamentary disposition of "all of" the estate which she "derived or secured" from him under the will. Taking the seventh item as a whole, considering the specific devise of "a life estate" made by testator at the beginning thereof, as well as his gifts in the three following paragraphs, it becomes quite plain, when we read the residuary devise, that his effort to control the devisee's testamentary disposition of the estates in fee previously given her represents a subordinate intent, which, under well established law, must fall.
Had testator's dominant intent been one of reducing the absolute estates given his wife, instead of controlling her testamentary disposition of them, it is reasonable to assume (in view of the manner in which, immediately prior to the creation of these absolute estates, he dealt with another property, where he aptly gave his wife but a life interest) that he would have qualified them himself rather than "enjoin" her so to do. Of course, the word "enjoin" is ordinarily an imperative one, but that it may be given less than mandatory force is shown by our decision in Good v. Fichthorn,
In Hebron v. Magda,
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below, in order that the petitions to intervene may be supplemented by proper averments. Should these amendments be made, and it is shown that all persons concerned are before the court in such manner as to permit a legal adjudication of their interests, judgment may be entered for plaintiff, as agreed upon in the case-stated. If all parties in interest are not added within a reasonable time, the court below will withhold the entry of judgment and strike from its records the case-stated.