Boyle v. Boyle

25 A. 494, 152 Pa. 108, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 947
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1893
DocketAppeal, No. 187
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 25 A. 494 (Boyle v. Boyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Boyle, 25 A. 494, 152 Pa. 108, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 947 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Williams,

It is conceded that David Boyle was at the time of his death in 1866 the owner of the land in controversy, and that both parties to this action claimed title under him. The plaintiff seeks to recover, as one of the children and heirs at law, his distributive share in his father’s real estate under the intestate laws. The defendants rely upon the last will and testament of David Boyle, by the terms of which he devised an estate in this land to his wife. If that estate was for life only then the plaintiff would seem to be entitled to a verdict ; but if it was an estate in fee simple then the defendants are her successors in title and the plaintiff cannot recover. This controversy depends therefore on the construction of the will which is in the following form : “ As to my worldly goods, after my just debts are paid, I give and bequeath to my loving wife Rhoda all my. property real and personal, for her support during her natural life-time; any remainder at her decease to be disposed of by her, as she may think just and right, among my children.” The real estate consisted of a one half interest in a farm of ninety acres. The personal estate consisted of [111]*111three cows, some farming tools and his household furniture. The total value of both real and personal estate was probably at the time of testator’s death not far from two thousand dollars. The will was duly probated and the widow took possession under it. ■ She used the property for about two years and died. By her will she divided the real estate between two sons, John C. and Henry. She gave the personal estate in equal parts to Andrew, another son, and to the four daughters. The plaintiff was at this time in California, whither he had gone as early as 1857, and where he had continued to reside. He had been absent for eleven years when his mother made her will, and whether she knew that he was living does' not appear. She did not name him in her will. Mrs. Boyle’s will was duly proved and John C. and Henry went into possession and they and those holding under them have remained in possession from the death of their mother in 1868 down to the bringing of this suit in 1890. When they took possession the land was of little value and the improvements were unimportant. During the twenty-two years that had elapsed when this suit was brought two lines of railroad had been built over this little farm. The region in which it lies had been developed, and the value of the land greatly increased. After this lapse of time and this great change in the value of the property, the plaintiff brings his action on the theory that his father’s will gave to his mother only a life estate with a power of appointment among his children in fee; and as he was not named in her will the execution of the power of appointment was for that reason defective, and no title passed under it. Upon the death of Mrs. Boyle without having made a valid appointment he contends that the real estate' descended to the heirs at law of David Boyle, of whom he is one, and he asks to be allowed to recover one eighth part of the real estate of which his father died seized.

The question thus presented is over the estate given by the will of David Boyle to his wife Rhoda. It can admit of no doubt that the primary object of the testator’s solicitude was his wife. Their children had reached maturity and most of them were settled in homes of their own. If his wife survived him she would need the care and support that he could no longer provide in person. He accordingly made his will put[112]*112ting all that he had into her hands, that she might use it “ for her support during her natural life.” The words of the will import an absolute gift. “ I give and bequeath to my loving wife, Rhoda, all my property real and personal.” The reason he gives for this disposition of his property shows that he intended to invest her with a power of disposal, for he explains that it is “ for her support.” A life estate in his undivided one half of ninety acres would have been practically valueless to her in the condition in which the land then was. The words relied upon as conferring a power of appointment show with equal certainty the testator’s purpose to give her a power of sale of the real as well as the personal property. He says, “ any remainder at her decease,” thus clearly indicating his idea that, there might be nothing at all left to go to any one ; but if anything should remain of the estate so given to his wife he ex- . presses a wish that it may “ be disposed of ” not in a manner directed by him, but “ by her as she may think just and right among my children.” There is therefore a power of sale to be exercised during her lifetime for her support, and a power to dispose by will of “ any remainder ” left unsold and unconsumed. In the exercise of this power of disposition she is not bound by any rule of distribution which the testator lays down, but is left to do what, in view of her children’s circumstances and condition, may seem to her mother’s heart right and just when she comes to prepare her will.

This view of the will is conclusive of this case. It gives the widow a fee with all its incidents, including the power to sell and the power to devise, accompanied by the expressed.wish of the testator that if anything shall be left unsold it may go to their children. Not necessarily in equal parts, or to all the children, but to so many and in such proportions as she may determine, when the time comes, to be “ right and just.” The words referring to “ any remainder ” do not limit his wife’s estate or the preceding words of gift, but are precatory. They show his wish that if anything remains out of the little he left to his wife it may go to their children, but he submits the whole subject to her sense of right.

It is suggested that the words of trust and confidence employed by the testator operate to destroy her estate and turn her into a trustee for all the children, so that she could not [113]*113change their relative rights or interfere with the trust estate further than to use its income during her natural life. But words of trust and confidence, without more, do not create a trust or turn a devisee into a trustee. The intention of the testator to create a trust must be apparent, apart from the mere existence of words of trust and confidence, or none will be held to exist.

The history of the rise, decline and fall, in this state, of the doctrine that words of confidence import a trust, is illustrated in the several cases arising under Pennock’s will. The doctrine was borrowed several centuries ago by the English courts from the Roman law, and was first recognized and applied in this state in Coates’s Appeal, 2 Pa. 129, which arose upon Pennock’s will. A bequest of personal estate was made by the testator to his. wife, absolutely, followed by these words: “having full confidence that she will leave the surplus to be divided at her decease justly among my children.” Upon these words ifi was held that the widow became a trustee for the children so that she could not use the corpus of the gift to her, but only the income derived therefrom. A few years later the same bequest came under consideration in McKonkey’s Appeal, 18 Pa. 253, and it was then held that the widow was not restricted in the use of the bequest to her by the words of confidence, but only in the disposition of the surplus remaining at her death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A. 494, 152 Pa. 108, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-boyle-pa-1893.