Eichenlaub's Estate

161 A. 317, 307 Pa. 357, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
DocketAppeal, 27
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 A. 317 (Eichenlaub'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
Eichenlaub's Estate, 161 A. 317, 307 Pa. 357, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 540 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Dbew,

Primarily, this appeal involves the construction of the last will and testament, dated October 5, 1907, of Eva Eichenlaub, widow, deceased, of Pittsburgh — who died *360 December 27,1907, — in order to determine whether Clarence, one of the designated seven children of the testatrix, took an estate absolute or an estate terminable upon his death without leaving living issue to inherit his share.

After providing for two of her children, in full, by specific legacies, and after attempting to outline a fair and equitable method for the equalization of the shares of the remaining seven children (two of whom were entitled to share in their father’s estate because they were born after the execution of their father’s will), the testatrix directed in the fourth paragraph that the said seven children should share equally under her will. At least six times in the will, these seven children, four sons and three daughters, designated in the fifth paragraph, are named as the particular objects of the bounty of the testatrix. The eighth and important paragraph reads as follows:

“Eighth: In the event of the death of any of my said children named in fifth paragraph, without leaving issue living to inherit the share of such deceased parent, I will and devise such deceased child’s portion under this will to his or her surviving brothers and sisters named in said fifth paragraph, share and share alike.”

Other provisions are made in the will touching the minor children, the real estate, and the operation of the business of the testatrix.

After the death of the testatrix, the business was carried on by her heirs, and all four of the sons were engaged in positions connected with it until the death of Clarence. Clarence died at the age of thirty-two in 1927, without leaving living issue. All children were of full age when he died. His widow, Catherine, remarried and is now Catherine Eichenlaub LeSueur. After the audit of the first and final account, filed approximately twenty-three years after the death of the testatrix, the decree of distribution gave, inter alia, to the widow of Clarence one-seventh of, the balance of the estate. Exception is *361 taken to this item of distribution, and we are called upon to pass on this as the principal point in this appeal, although other items are involved.

We are of opinion that the decree below should be affirmed for the reason that the estate given by the testatrix to Clarence vested in him absolutely before his death. We come to this conclusion from a careful consideration of the wording of the entire will and of all the circumstances connected with it. In the fifth paragraph, the testatrix provided that, upon the youngest child’s arriving at full age, the Friendship Avenue “real estate or the proceeds of the sale thereof shall go to and vest, share and share alike,” in her seven named children. That contingency occurred before Clarence died and, therefore, that estate vested absolutely. Later in the same paragraph, she provided that if the Friendship Avenue property should be sold during the minority of the youngest child, the.proceeds should be invested in a suitable home which should, upon the arrival of her youngest child at full age, vest in the seven children as hereinbefore provided. If these proceeds were actually so invested, the estate thereby given and intended to be given, vested absolutely, because the youngest child did reach full age before the death of Clarence as we have already observed. In the sixth paragraph, the testatrix directed that the proceeds of the furniture business on Butler Street should be divided and invested as specified, that is, equally. In.the same paragraph, she provided that the rents, issues and profits of the remaining real estate be equally divided among the seven children, and still later, she provided that the proceeds of the sale of the real estate should be divided in equal shares among the seven children. Again in the same paragraph she directed that one year after each minor reached full age, his or her share, invested as provided, should be paid over • to him or her by the executors together with the balance, if any, in the hands of the guardian. And in the seventh paragraph, she gave and devised the estate which she *362 received from her father, to her children in equal shares. In all these later provisions, the gifts and devises were absolute; nowhere in them or in their context is there any language which reduces the estates thus given, and we, therefore, conclude that the only fair interpretation of the first seven paragraphs of the will is that an estate absolute was intended to be given and was given to the children named in the fifth paragraph. Then comes the eighth paragraph, above recited. Following this, in the eleventh paragraph, the testatrix gives and bequeaths all other estate, not before disposed of, share and share alike, to her seven children, again using language importing an absolute and unqualified estate.

The eighth paragraph does not reduce or qualify the estate given. The language therein is unusual in that it says, “In the event of the death of any of my said children named in the fifth paragraph, without leaving issue living to inherit the share of such deceased parent, I will and devise such deceased child’s portion” to the survivors, etc. The words “to inherit the shares,” particularly, cannot be reconciled with appellants’ contention; but whatever way we interpret that phrase, we are satisfied that the language of that paragraph does not cut down an estate given, either by the fair meaning of the exact words used or when those words are construed in the light of our former decisions. In addition to the thought which the testatrix is legally held to have had in mind, the possible death of a child before her own death, it seems clear to us that the words “without leaving issue living to inherit the share of the deceased parent” must be further construed to mean “without leaving issue living to inherit the share intended by me for such deceased parent ” in order to give the language of the testatrix meaning, because we do not believe that the testatrix intended that a child, born to one of her children years after her death, should "inherit the share” of that child’s parent. To hold so, would be to hold that *363 every first taker would be compelled to keep and to preserve intact the share of the estate given by the testatrix. That is, all present enjoyment of the estate would be forbidden to all first takers because no first taker could be sure that he would die leaving living issue to inherit his share; literally and strictly construed, inheritance of his share would be impossible if he consumed any of his estate during his lifetime. Such a result would, of course, be contrary to the normal intention of any fair and right thinking person; and such a conclusion is clearly contrary to what this testatrix said and intended, because all of the other provisions of the will state expressly or by necessary implication that the seven children, or the survivor among them, shall take and use and enjoy the estates given them by the testatrix.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 317, 307 Pa. 357, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eichenlaubs-estate-pa-1932.