Estate of Tower

470 A.2d 568, 323 Pa. Super. 235
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 22, 1984
Docket473
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 470 A.2d 568 (Estate of Tower) 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
Estate of Tower, 470 A.2d 568, 323 Pa. Super. 235 (Pa. 1984).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, Judge:

On May 21,1889, Charlemagne Tower, a wealthy industrialist and owner of coal lands, executed his last will and testament. He died shortly thereafter on July 24, 1889. His will was probated in Philadelphia County. A residuary trust was established under Mr. Tower’s will and the trust continues. In the course of the last ninety-five years, twenty-three accounts have been filed in the Orphans’ Court of Philadelphia County.

Under Item Fifth the testator gave his residuary estate to his trustees, in trust, to pay, after the death of his wife, which occurred several years ago, the income in equal shares to and among his five children, Charlemagne Tower, Jr. (now deceased), Deborah Taylor Lee, (subsequently Janney, now deceased), Emma Snyder (subsequently Reilly, now deceased), Henrietta Tower (subsequently Werts, now deceased) and Grace Tower Putnam (now deceased). Upon each of their deaths his estate was to be held in further trust, to pay income to and among the child or children surviving, and the issue of deceased children of the child so dying, per stirpes, for so long as the testator might prolong distribution of principal without violating the rule against perpetuities. 1 Testator provided for ultimate distribution of *238 principal which we are not concerned with at this juncture in the administration of the estate.

One of testator’s grandchildren was Geoffrey Tower who died on March 26, 1957, and who was survived by his wife *239 who died on December 4, 1959 and by two blood children, Charlemagne Tower, IV and Helen Tower Brunet. Geoffrey Tower was also survived by two adopted children, Annette Tower Ragsdale (formerly Annette Tower Earl) and Tripp Tower. The sole question on appeal is whether Geoffrey Tower’s adopted children, Annette Tower Rags-dale and Tripp Tower, are entitled to participate in the share of income that had been paid to their adoptive father during his lifetime. Since the death of Geoffrey Tower only his blood children have shared in the income.

The issue presently before this court has been raised and decided on prior occasions. It was originally raised in 1960 before the Orphans’ Court of Philadelphia County. At that time, Judge Lefever in an adjudication approved by the court en banc found that the testator intended, at the time he wrote his will, to include only blood relatives in the class of those who would share in income. Judge Lefever stated in Tower Estate, 27 Pa.D. & C.2d 114, 118 (1962):

Testator made constant reference throughout his will to members of his blood, i.e., “children”, “grandchildren”, “issue” and “lineal descendents”. The sole exceptions to “blood” relatives were his own wife and the surviving spouses of children and grandchildren, to whom he carefully and precisely authorized his children and grandchildren to appoint to the limit of one fourth of their respective shares of income. It is clear, therefore, that testator knew how to provide for blood relatives and for strangers to the blood; and that if he wished to include “adopted children” of a grandchild, he could have, and would have, expressly said so. Testator’s intention, affirmative or *240 negative, governs. Nothing in the will shows an intention to include the petitioners.

The Orphans’ Court analyzed the meaning that testator gave the term “lineal decendants” and stated at 27 Pa.D. & C.2d 123:

Moreover, testator directed that the remainder be divided among all of his “lineal descendants then living, to each an equal fractional share thereof without regard to their stock or the degree of descent from me”. As noted above, testator specifically described his lineal descendants as his children and his grandchildren. If these two points form a straight line, an extension of that line must include only great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren, etc., of the blood. To include adopted children of a grandchild within the term “lineal descendants” (which testator has so clearly defined), would require a variance of the straight line which testator drew between the two éssential points which he fixed, namely, children and grandchildren (and more remote lineal descendants). Furthermore, by his use, interchangeably, of “issue” and “lineal descendants” testator closed the door to strangers to his blood.

The court found that the testator’s manifest intent was to limit the class of income beneficiaries to the blood descendants of deceased grandchildren.

Tripp Tower and Annette Tower Ragsdale, the present appellants, appealed from the Orphans’ Court decision to the Supreme Court which affirmed the decree of the Orphans’ Court in Tower Estate, 410 Pa. 389, 189 A.2d 870 (1963), referred to hereafter as Tower I. Five Justices were in agreement with the Orphans’ Court’s finding that the testator intended only blood descendants of deceased grandchildren to share in income. Justice Roberts (now Chief Justice Roberts) filed a dissenting opinion in which Justice Musmanno joined.

It would appear settled that the adopted children of Geoffrey Tower do not share in the income formerly received by their deceased adoptive father. However, the *241 trustees filed their twenty-second trustees’ account in 1970 because of the death of one of the individual trustees, and the adopted children of Geoffrey Tower again claimed a one-quarter share each of the Geoffrey Tower share of income. The claim was disallowed by the Orphans’ Court on the basis that: “the clear language of the will” limited beneficiaries of principal and income to “blood descendants” and on the further basis of res judicata as the law of the case had been established in Tower I. The Orphans’ Court’s adjudication is reported at Tower Trust, 62 Pa.D. & C.2d 151 (1970). The present appellants took an appeal to the Supreme Court but before that Court decided Tower II it handed down its decision in Tafel Estate, 449 Pa. 442, 296 A.2d 797 (1972), opinion by Jones, C.J.; Pomeroy, J. did not participate, Mandarino, J. concurred in the result, and Egan and O’Brien, JJ. dissented. That case involved the interpretation of a 1935 will and the issue was whether the appellants, as adopted children, were entitled to take under a testamentary trust as “children” of the testator’s blood son, Adolph Tafel. The Supreme Court in Tafel adopted a presumption that the testator intended to include adopted children within the terms “child” or “children” unless a contrary intention appeared in the will. The Supreme Court stated at 449 Pa. 445, 296 A.2d 797, 799:

under our prior case law, in the absence of any testamentary language demonstrating the intent of the testator, our courts have presumed that the testator, in a will making a gift or bequest to a person or persons other than the testator’s “child” or “children,” intended to exclude

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470 A.2d 568, 323 Pa. Super. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-tower-pa-1984.