Davis's Estate

29 A.2d 700, 346 Pa. 247, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 312
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 24, 1942
DocketAppeals, 165-167
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 A.2d 700 (Davis's Estate) 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
Davis's Estate, 29 A.2d 700, 346 Pa. 247, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 312 (Pa. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Patterson,

These appeals involve a question of interpretation arising under a decedent’s will.

Kate Irvin Davis died testate, a resident of Philadelphia, on November 23, 1919. In the Eleventh Item of her will testatrix provided as follows: “All the rest residue and remainder of my property ... I give devise and bequeath unto The Philadelphia Trust Safe Deposit and Insurance Company ... in trust, nevertheless: To divide the same into as many equal parts as I have children, excluding my son Howard Langworthy' Davis, who survive me and who, predeceasing me, leave lawful issue surviving me, and to increase the number of said shares by one ‘additional share’, which ‘additional share’ shall be applicable to the issue of Howard Langworthy Davis by the body of his present wife Clara Davis, and which ‘additional share’ shall be and is hereinafter dealt with, treated and separately disposed of in this Eleventh Clause of my Will . . .” It was directed that the income from one of the shares be paid to each child, excluding Howard, for life, and that “upon the decease of any child, excluding my son Howard Langworthy Davis”, there should be paid over “to the lawful issue of such child” the share of principal “heretofore directed to be held in trust for the life of said child.” Finally, as to the shares set apart for children other than Howard, whom she excluded for reasons set forth in an earlier part of the will, testatrix provided: “And in ease said child dies without leaving issue him or her surviving, I direct said trustee to pay over and transfer said share, free of all trust, in equal parts to my children, excluding my son Howard Langworthy Davis, who survive said child and to the issue of any child who did not survive said child, such issue to take per stirpes and not per capita

*249 Having thus disposed of the shares given to her dutiful children, testatrix, in a separate paragraph, gave “the said ‘additional share’, to be computed and determined as hereinbefore provided,” in trust “to divide the said ‘additional share’ into as many parts or shares as there are children (hereinafter designated for convenience and easy reference ‘grandchildren’) of the body of said Clara Davis by my son Howard Langworthy Davis,” income from one of such shares to be paid to “the grandchild for whose benefit such share was formed and created, until such grandchild arrives at the age of thirty-five (35) years,” at which time it was directed such grandchild should become entitled to receive the principal of the share set apart for him, absolutely.

When testatrix made her will and at her death she had six children — one daughter, Edna Cadwallader Davis, and five sons, Edward, Irvin, Malcolm, Thomas, and the excluded son Howard. Malcolm died December 4, 1929, whereupon one of the five shares set apart for testatrix’ dutiful children was paid over to his two children, and on July 17, 1937, Thomas died without leaving any issue to survive. Howard still survives as do also the three other children of testatrix — Edna, Edward and Irvin. Howard’s three children have all arrived at the age of 35 and each has received his equal portion of the sixth or “additional” share.

At the audit of the trustee’s fourth account, filed following the death of Thomas without issue, Howard’s three children entered a claim to a portion of the fund from which the income was paid to Thomas during his lifetime. The auditing judge ruled that the claim must be dismissed, stating: “Whatever the testatrix may have desired to express, the intention expressed by her excludes the children of Howard, who survives Thomas, from a share of her residuary estate.” Exceptions to this ruling were dismissed by the court en banc and the matter is now before us on appeal.

Thomas having died without issue, testatrix has directed that his share be given “to my children, excluding *250 my son Howard Langworthy Davis, who survive said child [Thomas] and to the issue of.any child who did not survive said child.”. Appellants concede this- language excludes them from any participation in the fund for distribution, since Howard, their father, survived Thomas and they are not, therefore, “the issue- of any child who did not. survive,” but urge, in effect, that this Court may reform the unambiguous language used to bring them within its terms, because of a supposed intention of testatrix, allegedly gathered from reading the will as a whole, “clearly to establish equality between her children and Howard’s children.” Their contentions are well summarized by the court below as follows: “Howard’s children earnestly contend that the will as a whole requires that they be substituted for their parent, who for purposes of this clause should be considered dead; that they would participate in Thomas’ share had their parent been dead, and .their rights should not depend upon the accidental and irrelevant fact of the order in which deaths occur.”, We all agree that such position is wholly untenable and that the case was rightly decided by the court below.

The contention that the dominant scheme of the will is equality of distribution between testatrix’s dutiful children and the children of Howard ignores that each of the former was given a specific legacy of $25,000 as compared with $18,000 given the wife and children of Howard (Items Three to Eight); and it also fails, to take into account that the children of Howard were given no share whatever in testatrix” personal effects, all of which were bequeathed to the dutiful children “share and share alike.” As bearing upon the supposed intention contended for it is likewise significant that in directing division of the residuary estate into shares testatrix declared the share set apart, for Howard’s children “shall be and is hereinafter dealt with, treated, and separately disposed of”; that she at all times referred to such share as an “additional share”; and that *251 when she came to dispose of this share, in a separate paragraph, she described it as “the said ‘additional share’, to be computed and determined as hereinbefore provided.” If testatrix had intended appellants should receive also one-sixth or an “additional share” of the shares given the children other than Howard, in the event of their deaths without issue, it is not unlikely that she would have so stated, providing that the same restrictions should. apply, including postponement of payment of principal until age 35, as in. the case of appellants’ original share. Clearly the most that could possibly be said from a consideration of the entire will is that the matter is left in doubt and, hence, the whole basis of appellants’argument fails. “Words and phrases may be supplied or rejected when warranted by the immediate context or the general scheme of the will, but not merely on a conjectural hypothesis however reasonable, in opposition to the plain and obvious sense of the instrument”: Bender v. Bender, 226 Pa. 607, 613, See also Jacobs’ Estate, 343 Pa. 387, 392. Nor is it a valid argument to support appellants’ position, in the circumstances disclosed, that the contrary view necessitates an inference that testatrix intended to die intestate in the remote possibility that all of her children, excepting Howard, should die without issue, even though her three grandchildren by him might still be living. As said in Nebinger’s Estate, 185 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
29 A.2d 700, 346 Pa. 247, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daviss-estate-pa-1942.