5 Rawle 231 | Pa. | 1835
The opinion of the court was delivered by
As the question to be decided in this ease, arises out of the will of John Rattew deceased, it becomes necessary in order to solve it correctly, to ascertain, if possible from the face of the will itself, what was the intention of the testator. And after , having discovered this, it will be our duty in construing the devise in question, to carry it into effect, so far as it shall be found consistent with the rules and policy of the law to do so.
The words of the will which have given rise to the present controversy are: <( Item, I give and bequeath to my son Aaron, the messuage, plantation, and tract of land, (where my son John now lives,) in Middleton township, containing about one hundred and nineteen acres more or less, with the appurtenances, to hold to him, my said son Aaron, during the term of his natural life, and if he shall hereafter have issue of his body lawfully begotten, then to hold to him, and his heirs, and assigns forever; but in case he shall die without having such issue, then I give and devise the same to all the rest of my children, their heirs and assigns forever, as tenants in common."
The plaintiff’s counsel contend that Aaron took under the will a conditional fee, determinable upon his dying without issue living at his death, and that the limitation over in that event to the testator’s other children, must therefore be considered an executory devise, and consequently not affected by the common recovery suffered by Aaron; or in other words, they allege that Aaron according to the terms of the will, in case he had had issue, would thereupon have become immediately vested with a fee-simple estate in the land devised to him, defeasible however upon his dying without
If the fee given to Aaron, which is admitted to have been determinable, had vested in him during his life, the limitation over to the other children of the testator could only have taken effect as an executory devise, but being ever in contingency and the event having failed upon which it is claimed-by the counsel for the plaintiff, that it would have become vested, the ulterior devise of the land to the other children had all the properties of a contingent remainder, and as such might and would have taken effect, if the recovery had not been suffered, and therefore could not have operated as, an executory devise. The devise to the other children of the testator, is not then the case of a limitation over to them, after a prior vested determinable fee given to Aaron, which would make it an executory devise, but it is one of two several fees limited merely as substitutes or alternatives, one for the other, that is, the first to Aaron, if he should die leaving issue living at the time of his death? but if not, then to the other children of the testator in lieu thereof; thus substituting the latter in the room of the former, if it should fail of effect. This is the principle which vims decided in Loddington v. Kyme, 3 Lev. 431; S. C. 1 Ld. Raym. 208, where it was held that the first remainder was a contingent remainder in fee to the issue of A., and the remainder to B. was also a contingent fee, not contrary to, or in any degree derogatory from the effect of the former, but by way of substitution for it. And this sort of alternative limitation, was termed a contingency with a double aspect. Fearne on Cont. Rem. 373. So that if the estate vested in the one, it never could in the other. Herbert v. Selby, 2 Barn. & Cress. 926. S. C. 9 Eng. Com. L. Rep. 278. The ulterior devise then to the other children of the testator, being considered in the fevent that has taken place, a contingent remainder, and Aaron by suffering the common recovery, having
The plaintiffs therefore have no right to recover the land, and the
Judgment is affirmed.