144 A. 129 | Pa. | 1928
Argued September 27, 1928. In construing wills the courts are always searching for the testator's true intent. The sole question for determination *263 in the present case is whether the real estate of the deceased passed under the residuary clause.
Testator was an unmarried man, by profession a dentist. His next of kin were an uncle and several cousins. The orphans' court has found from the evidence that they were nothing to him. Decedent wrote his own will. In it he directed the payment of his debts and funeral expenses. These it turned out amounted respectively to $6,408.75 and $12,681.75. As he wrote the document, it would be reasonable to conclude he had these probable amounts in mind; his death occurred less than a year subsequent to the writing of the testament. As he proceeded, he directed the purchase of a lot in Allegheny Cemetery and the erection of a mausoleum thereon to cost not less than $10,000, nor more than $20,000. He gave specific legacies of $5,000 each to three individuals. After the dispositions mentioned, he provided "Also I give and bequeath unto Alice E. Calhoun, all the rest and residue of my personal estate, whatsoever and wheresoever of what nature, kind and quality so ever the same may be and not hereinbefore given and disposed of." At death he possessed in personal property $8,882.87. It is manifest from what he said, that he thought he had what he called "personal estate," in excess of the specific sums bequeathed and that what he had given was in his view "personal" property. As a matter of fact he did not have anything like sufficient personal property to meet the legacies conferred on his beneficiaries. The payment of his debts and funeral expenses much more than exhausted it. When he gave to Miss Calhoun, who the court finds had been his companion for many years, "all the rest and residue of my personal estate . . . . . . nothereinbefore given and disposed of," did he have in mind his entire property both real and personal? We are of opinion he did; that manifestly he could not have meant personal property in the strict legal sense, because there was none of it "not hereinbefore given." He had already *264
given it all. He had in contemplation, so we conclude, what was left of his entire estate, and intended to pass to his residuary legatee what remained of his possessions, his real estate, or the proceeds from the sale thereof, remaining after the other legacies were paid. He must have known that it would be necessary in order to carry out his expressed purposes to sell his real estate, to convert it into cash. Out of this fund he necessarily contemplated the payment of all the specific legacies he gave and likewise by what was left of it he intended his residuary legatee to benefit. Otherwise, as the court below says, his provision for her was a mockery. What was said in Talbot v. Anderson,
Appellant bases his argument that testator died intestate as to his real estate, not upon a consideration of the entire will or even the whole residuary clause, but upon the words "all the rest and residue of my personal estate" and upon the legal meaning of these words. This is too restricted a view. We must consider the whole will, all the language employed in the residuary clause, the circumstances surrounding the testator when he wrote it and the amount and character of his property, "While we should search for the intent of the testator only within the four corners of the will, yet, when we come to consider the will and interpret its meaning we must do so in the light of all the circumstances by which testator was surrounded when he made it; to this end, his family, and the amount and character of his property, may and ought to be taken into consideration": Frisbie's Est.,
Allen's Executors v. Allen,
While precedents in will cases are of little value (Tarter's Est.,
The decree of the court below is affirmed at the cost of appellant.