217 Pa. 71 | Pa. | 1907
Opinion by
At the time the testatrix, Ann Eliza Snyder, executed her. will she was the owner of twenty-six shares of the capital stock of the Farmers’ & Mechanics’ National Bank of Mercer of the par value of $100 each. Among other bequests are the following: “ I also give and bequeath to the said Ina Stuart six hundred dollars of bank stock of the Second National Bank of Mercer, said bank being located in Mercer, Mercer County, Pa..... I give and bequeath to my beloved brother Peter Myers two thousand dollars of the Bank stock of Bank referred to above.”
It is admitted that there did not exist at the time the will was written, or at any other time, a bank in Mercer under the corporate name of the “ Second National Bank of Mercer.” From this misdescription of the stock there arose a latent ambiguity in the will and evidence dehors it was properly admitted to explain it and to show what stock was the subject of the bequests: Best v. Hammond, 55 Pa. 409. Under the admissions before the auditor and the testimony offered, there can be no doubt that she meant by the “ Second National Bank of Mercer” the Farmers’ & Mechanics’ National Bank of Mercer. The first national bank to be established in that place was the First National Bank of Mercer, organized in 1864, and carrying
After she executed her will, the testatrix exchanged her twenty-six shares of the Farmers’ & Mechanics’ National Bank stock for stock in the Mercer County Trust Company, and, as she did not have the bank stock at the time of her death, the appellant, her residuary legatee, insisting that the legacies to the appellees were specific, contends that they were adeemed, and that the sums awarded to them should have passed to him.
The law leans against specific legacies and to general ones : Blackstone v. Blackstone, 3 Watts, 335; Ludlam’s Estate, 13 Pa. 187; Balliet’s Appeal, 14 Pa. 451. “ A specific legacy or devise is a gift by will of a specific article or part of the testator’s estate, which is identified and distinguished from all other things of the same kind, and which may be satisfied only by the delivery of the particular thing.” 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 714. By these two bequests the testatrix does not give to the legatees specific shares of bank stock belonging to her, but gives to each of them, in general terms, a certain amount of stock, without identifying any particular shares or distinguishing those given from all others of the same kind of stock. Under all the authorities these are general legacies.
In Blackstone v. Blackstone, supra, 335, the words of the bequest were: “I give and bequeath all my two hundred
The rule as to legacies of stock is thus laid down in Hawkins on Wills, *301, and these bequests are strictly within it, for the testatrix had twenty-six shares of the stock of the bank worth, at par, $2,600 : “ A legacy of stock, of whatever denomination, is not prima facie specific, but is a general legacy; although the testator may have had stock of the description
The assignments are all overruled, and the decree is affirmed at appellant’s costs.