Donaldson Estate

67 A.2d 88, 362 Pa. 357, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 1949
DocketAppeals, 8, 9 and 10
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 A.2d 88 (Donaldson 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
Donaldson Estate, 67 A.2d 88, 362 Pa. 357, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 419 (Pa. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb¡ Justice Linn,

Next of kin appeal from an.order of distribution 1 made on the adjudication of the account of the executor of J. Allan Donaldson. The appellants are his adoptive first cousins. He died March 31, 1947, . about seven months after , his wife’s, death. They left no issue. The plan of his will was simple: to provide an income for his wife for life if she. survived him and to give the residue to the University of Pennsylvania and the Harrisburg Polyclinic. Hospital whether she survived him or not. He made one .other gift; he provided in paragraph 3 that his wife should receive “all of my jewelry, wearing apparel, automobile or automobiles and. other personal effects which I may own at the time of my decease. Should my wife predecease me, my executor shall have the power to distribute such personal .effects among my. next of kin ...” If. she survived (paragraph 4) “all of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal, or mixed” would go to the accountant to pay the net income to her for life. Paragraph 5 specified the terms of the trust created in paragraph 4. In paragraph 6, a residuary provision, he directed conversion of “all of the assets of the trust into cash as soon as can be done” after the death of his wife, if she survived him, and the payment of “the net proceeds thereof” to the University and the Hospital. In paragraph. 7, an alternative residuary provision, he directed that on his death, his wife having predeceased him, his executer should “convert all of the assets of my estate into cash . . .” and distribute to the two charities. Paragraph S.provided disposition in the event of their deaths in a Common disaster, etc.

1. Appellants contend that the gift in paragraph 3 óf “all of my jewelry,-wearing apparel, automobile or automobiles and other personal effects . . .” includes *360 household furniture and furnishings; though not mentioned in the gift. That conclusion is reached by contending that the words “and other personal effects” include, by the rule ejusdem generis, household furniture and furnishings. President Judge Richards properly rejected this contention as inconsistent with the apparent intention expressed in the will read as a whole. 2 Personal effects, on the one hand, and household furniture and furnishings on the other, may constitute two classes of objects and have been so considered in our cases. In Lippincott’s Estate, 173 Pa. 368, 371, 34 A. 58 (1896), it was said: “The phrase ‘personal effects’ has obtained, by frequent use, as distinctly a defined meaning as the phrase ‘household effects.’ It designates articles associated with the person, just as the opposite phrase denotes articles belonging to the house.” Household furniture may be and generally is personal property but not all personal property is included in the more restricted term “personal effects.” The rule ejusdem genéris, if applied to the words “all of my jewelry [and] wearing apparel,” would certainly not include the furniture and furnishings in testator’s residence; nor do the words “automobile or automobiles” suggest it. The phrase “and other personal effects” in the context obviously has a less comprehensive meaning than the broader phraseology considered in McGlathery’s Estate, 311 Pa. 351, 166 A. 886 (1933) in which the words were not “personal effects” but “all my personal property including jewelry, clothing, etc., and in addition thereto, I bequeath unto [the same beneficiary] the sum of three thousand ($3,000)” subject to paying burial expenses. In that case we adopted the opinion filed in the court below by Judge Gest, the auditing judge. He said, *361 (page 355) that the “words ‘et cetera’ following the enumeration of the particular thing, jewelry and clothing, are confined to articles ejusdem generis only and the household furniture would pass under the bequest . . . The meaning of ‘including’ is somewhat ambiguous . . . The use of the general term ‘personal property’ would, as above stated, include all her personalty in a strict legal meaning, but the following gift to [the same beneficiary] is, in my opinion, conclusive of the question, for she proceeds ‘and in addition thereto I bequeath unto [the same beneficiary] the sum of three thousand dollars . . . Now, the prior gift being of ‘all my personal property,’ it is in my opinion impossible to hold that the gift of $3,000, ‘in addition thereto’, did not, in its express language, indicate something else besides the gift of all her personal property including jewelry, clothing, etc., because the words ‘in addition thereto’, clearly referred to something besides that which had already been given. . . In Reimer’s Estate, 159 Pa. 212, 28 A. 186 (1893) the testator included the words “furniture etc.” while in Moore’s Estate, 241 Pa. 253, 88 A. 432 (1913) the words were “all my personal property.” Judge Bichards held that the testator’s household furniture and furnishings passed under the residuary words “all other assets” contained in paragraph 7.

2. Appellants’ second point is that there was partial intestacy under paragraph 7. They contend that the “gift to the University and the Hospital is limited to the proceeds of the conversion of assets other than real estate and business interests.” They argue that the only dispositive language, aside from paragraph 3 dealing with personal effects, is in paragraph 7. We shall therefore quote it. “7. If my said wife, Helen Bay Donaldson, shall predecease me, I direct my executor to convert all of the assets of my estate into cash. With respect to real estate, or any interest therein, which I may own at the time of my death, or any business enter *362 prise which I may own at such time, I direct my executor to dispose of the .same in the same manner and. with the same powers and authority as hereinbefore conferred upon my , trustees with respect , to such: items. All other assets shall, be converted into cash as soon as this can be accomplished without sacrifice'to the estate and the total net proceeds: shall be divided equally between the Trustees of the-University.-,of Pennsylvania located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital located in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, such funds to be used for-such capital improvements or endowment purposes. as may . be determined by the governing boards of said institutions.”

Appellants contend (1)-“that there is, no gift of the real estate holdings and business interests, nor of the proceeds of their sale; and.that, therefore, an intestacy, as to these assets of the. estate,results; (2) that, since only proceeds of sale ar.e. given to the two beneficiaries, there is no gift of cash and items equivalent to. cash, or of any income, that are not the: subjects of .sale or conversion, and that an intestacy as to those items results.” Those contentions ignore the comparatively simple plan of ■ testamentary disposition. Testator was obviously disposing of all his property not previously given in paragraph 3. Paragraph 6 was a residuary provision disposing of all. his property after the death of his wife, in case she survived him; paragraph 7 is the residuary provision applicable if-he.survived-his wife: compare Noble’s Estate, 344 Pa. 81, 82, 23 A. 2d 410 (1942) ;

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Bluebook (online)
67 A.2d 88, 362 Pa. 357, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donaldson-estate-pa-1949.