158 Pa. 651 | Pa. | 1893
Opinion by
The clause in the will of Robert C. Taylor under which his widow, the present plaintiff, claims title, is in these words, “ To my beloved wife I allow the use as she may deem best the residue of my estate for her own advantage and at her death if any of it remain to be equally divided between my three children, Alexander, John and Alice.”
Upon a careful examination of the rather numerous decisions upon this class of cases, we feel constrained to differ with the learned judge of the court below, and to hold that the interpretation of this will is controlled by our rulings in Follweiler’s Appeal, 102 Pa. 581, which it closely resembles; Cox v. Sims, 125 Pa. 522, and cases kindred to them. In Follweiler’s Appeal the residuary clause of the will gave the whole residue of the estate to the widow, “ to keep and enjoy during her lifetime, and after her death what shall be left shall be divided equally, my heirs and her heirs, share and share alike.” The right “ to keep and enjoj’- during her lifetime ” and the right “ to use as she may deem best for her own advantage,” terminable at her death, are practically identical in any legal sense, as they are in a merely physical sense. We can see no difference between
The case of Cox v. Sims, 125 Pa. 522, decided in 1889, followed Follweiler’s Appeal, and was disposed of upon the same line of reasoning. The words of the will in that case are a little stronger in favor of a life estate only, in the wife, than in either the Follweiler case, or in this. But the language from which it was claimed that a fee should be implied in the widow was rather stronger in them than here. The will gave the widow the whole of the residue, real and personal, just as here, “to have and to hold the same for and during the whole period of her natural life, and from and immediately after the death of my said wife all the property hereby devised or bequeathed to her as aforesaid, or so much thereof as may remain unexpended, I give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved children,” naming them. It was claimed that the widow took a fee under the implied power to expend the principal, but we held, reversing the court below, that the words were used in describing the devise over to the children, and not in describing the widow’s estate, and that they were, at any rate, only applicable to the personal estate, as was held in Fox’s Appeal, 99 Pa. 382, and in Follweiler’s Appeal, supra, and that no power of sale was given to the widow. All these features concur in the present case and control its decision.
There are a number of decisions upon this general subject, most of which are cited either in the opinion of the learned court below, or in the argument of counsel for the appellee, which seem to support the contention of the appellee, but they will be found upon careful examination to be based upon the presence of a power to sell, or to dispose of, the property in the will creating the estate. We are saved the necessity of reviewing them in detail by the circumstance that this work has been very recently and exhaustively done by our brother Wile LIAMS in an elaborate opinion in the case of Boyle v. Boyle, 152 Pa. 108, in which the widow’s right to a fee was sustained. The distinctions which divide the cases are most carefully pre
The judgment is reversed, and judgment is now entered under the case stated in favor of the defendant with costs.