47 Pa. Super. 108 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1911
Opinion bt
The will of Sarah M. Tyson, executed September 17, 1903, contained the following bequest: “Third; I give, devise and bequeath unto each of the children of my deceased brother Abel Kimbel the sum of $1,000, excepting Evan T. Kimbel, to whom I have already given a farm in Abington Township. ...”
At . the date of the will the persons entitled to take under the paragraph quoted were five in number, one of whom was Amanda Heckler. Mrs. Heckler died January 8, 1904, leaving to survive her a husband and two children. The testator executed a codicil to her will,
The appellant claims that in addition to the $500 bequeathed in the codicil she is entitled to one-half of the $1,000 bequeathed to her mother in the third paragraph of the will, under the provisions of the Act of July 12, 1897, P. L. 256, which provides among other things that no legacy in favor of the children of a brother or sister of any testator whether such children of the brothers or sisters be designated by name or as a class, shall be deemed to lapse or become void by reason of the decease of such legatee in the lifetime of the testator.
The question presented is, what effect did the execution of the codicil have on the bequest of $1,000 to Amanda Heckler as one of the children of Abel Kimbel? The bequest, it will be observed, is to a class of legatees. The children of the testator’s brother Abel are not named, and they take therefore by reason of their relationship to him. In the absence of the codicil it is clear that the appellant and her sister would take the legacy which their mother would have received if she had survived the testator. The statute expressly so provides. It was intended to carry out the intention of the testator as nearly as could be done, although the legatee had died before the will became operative. By substitution those who were nearest in blood to the legatee became entitled to the bequest. The codicil was executed after the death of Amanda Heckler, and we must determine what bearing this change in the will had on the legacy which would have gone to the mother of the appellant if she had survived. If the effect of the codicil was to bring the will down to the date of the codicil and republish it there was no bequest to Amanda Heckler for she was then dead,
• This subject was considered in Good title v. Meredith, 2 M. & S. 5, in which case Lord Ellenbohough, C. J., reviewed the English cases and said: “The effect of all these decisions is to give an effect to the codicil per se and independent of any intention so as to bring down the will to the date of the codicil, making the will speak as of that date,- unless indeed a contrary intention be shown. . . . The codicil draws the will down to its own date in the very terms of the will and makes it operate as if it had been executed in those terms.”
In Doe ex dem. York v. Walker, 12 M. & W. 591, Lord Abinger said: “The will must be construed as if the testator had inserted in the codicil all the words of the will.”
The rule is stated in 1 Powell on Devises, 616, to be that the legal operation of a codicil is to republish the whole will just as if it had been then for the first time published, and it can only be negatived by the contents of the codicil itself showing by internal evidence not that such an intention had no existence but that a contrary intent was entertained. It follows that the terms and words of the will should be construed to speak with regard to the property of the testator and the persons named therein at the date of republication. The same rule is recognized in 1 Jarman on Wills, 723. See also 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.), 198.
The cases in this state follow these authorities: Coale v. Smith, 4 Pa. 376; Neff’s Appeal, 48 Pa. 501; DeHaven’s Estate, 207 Pa. 152; Linnard’s Appeal, 37 Legal Int. 165.
In Neff’s Appeal Justice Strong said: “That the effect of a codicil duly executed is to republish the will to which it refers whether the codicil be annexed to the will or not is the doctrine of all the authorities.” And in the same case, “It is still the law then, as it always was, that a codicil to a will is a republication of it unless the contrary intent be avowed by the testator, and that it makes the will republished to speak from the date of the codicil.”
The application of these principles to the present case has this effect; by the execution of the codicil the testator’s will was republished and is made to speak as of the time when the codicil was signed; the bequest to the children of the testator’s brother Abel Kimbel included the persons who were in that class at the date of the codicil, and as the mother of the appellant was dead when the codicil was made, she was not one of the persons to whom the third paragraph of the will applied. There was therefore no bequest to Amanda Heckler. It will be observed, moreover, that in addition to the presumption of republication there was an express ratification and confirmation of the will by the terms of the codicil. The testator therefore readopted the will as of the date of the codicil subject to the amendments created by the codicil. Whether it was so intended or not by the testator, the legal effect of the codicil was to restrict the list of legatees under the third paragraph of the will to the children of Abel Kimbel who were living at the time the codicil was executed. But in view of the legacies in the latter instrument to the appellant and her sister we think that these were intended to be a substitute for what they would have received if there had been no codicil. The like provision for the children of Sarah J. Knight, a deceased daughter of Abel Kimbel, gives countenance at least to this inference. As the testator knew at the time the codicil was added to the will that Amanda Heckler
The decree is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.
Rice P. J. and Head J., dissent.