Estate of Tyson

43 A. 131, 191 Pa. 218, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 806
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1899
DocketAppeal, No. 427
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 43 A. 131 (Estate of Tyson) 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 Tyson, 43 A. 131, 191 Pa. 218, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 806 (Pa. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Mitchell,

This is in form a petition for a citation to account, but in substance it is a bill in equity by the surviving executor of Charles Tyson against the executors of Mary Tyson for the conveyance and transfer of property, real and personal, held by the respondents as part of the estate of their testator, but claimed by plaintiff as part of the estate of Charles Tyson. The court below dismissed the petition on the ground that as to the realty it was an ejectment bill and not within the jurisdiction of the court, and as to the personalty that the title was in Mary Tyson in her lifetime, and passed by her will to her executors.

The distinction as to jurisdiction between real and personal estate is not well taken. While ejectment for the real estate as such is the remedy in ordinary cases for heirs or devisees, yet in the present case the executors are charged by the will of Charles Tyson with the administration of his real estate, as well as his personalty, and the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court to assist executors and administrators in obtaining possession and control of the decedent’s assets is very extensive: Brooke’s Appeal, 102 Pa. 150; Odd Fellows Savings Bank’s Appeal, 123 Pa. 356; Lafferty v. Corcoran, 180 Pa. 309. In Mulholland’s Est., 154 Pa. 491, the very basis of the order to pay over or secure the money was that it was the proceeds of decedent’s real estate, and must be dealt with as such.

In the present case the property in controversy admittedly had been Charles Tyson’s. At his death it passed into the possession of his widow, Mary, under his will. At her death her executors took possession of it as part of her estate, and appellant claimed it as part of' Charles Tyson’s. The title to it depends on the will of Charles Tyson, and both parties are in the orphans’ court for supervision and control of their management of their respective trusts under his will and hers. It is a case for the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court, and such was the decision when the case was here last year: Tyson v. Rittenhouse, 186 Pa. 137.

[224]*224It is quite true that the courts of Pennsylvania have no jurisdiction to declare the construction of a will and rights under it by way of advice in limine, and without adverse litigants actually before them. It is not desirable that they should have. Notwithstanding some convenience, as remarked by Sharswood, J., in Willard’s Appeal, 65 Pa. 265, such practice would be contrary to the whole fundamental theory of our law under which courts do not advise but decide, and for decision there must be an actual contest. No man and no court can foresee the state of facts that may occur in the future, and ex facto oritur jus. In no class of cases is this truer than in those arising under wills. It is the unexpected, the condition of facts unforeseen, and therefore unprovided for, that gives rise to most of such litigation. And no judge can have failed to observe, not only in will cases, but in all others, how the-knowledge and self-interest of parties actually contending for success conduces to precision and accuracy in the judicial result. Hence the very noticeable fact that with all the disadvantages of inexperience, want of learning, etc., on the part of counsel that sometimes embarrass a case, it is only in the rarest of instances that the true ground of determination fails to be developed in the argument. Nothing sharpens the wits for the presentation of every possible view like the interest of opposing parties dealing with known facts in a genuine contest for victory. It is that which gives the superior value to the decision of a court of even moderate ability, over the ex parte opinions of the most learned and experienced counsel.

The jurisdiction of the orphans’ court in the present ease is not contrary to these principles. What the petition seeks is the aid of the court to the executor in obtaining possession of the assets of his testator’s estate. If his title were admitted, the cases already cited show that this is the proper court for him to come to. If the property were held on a clearly adverse and unconnected title, the holder could not be deprived of it except by the judgment of the ordinary common-law tribunals. But here it is admitted that the property was Charles Tyson’s, but it is claimed that it passed to his widow under his will. As already said both estates are in the orphans’ court, and that is the tribunal to settle this title. What the petitioner asks is not a construction of the will in advance and by way of advice, but the as[225]*225sistance of the court to obtain what he claims as the property of his testator. That is the jurisdictional fact, though in showing title thé petitioner must as an incident rely on his construction of the will. It has been already held that his bill will -not lie in the common pleas and that he must come into the orphans’ court for his remedy. In so doing he is not obliged to wait until property that may be finally adjudged to be his is sold and turned into an account by the executors of Mary Tyson. If his claim is valid he should have the assistance of the court to get the property now, and not be turned over to a surcharge of the other executors hereafter.

Secondly, the court below held that by the will of Charles Tyson the personalty passed to his widow absolutely, on the ground that a bequest of personalty with power to consume, sell and dispose of carries an absolute and unrestricted title to it. That such is the general rule cannot be disputed. It is not however a rule of law, but a rule of construction in aid of reaching the intent of the testator, and where a different intent is clear, the rule cannot be applied to defeat it. It was said by Sharswood, C. J., in .Fox’s Appeal, 99 Pa. 382, that “ every will is to be construed from its four comers to arrive at the true intention of the testator. Decisions upon other wills may assist but cannot control the construction.” This is but one of the hundreds of expressions of the cardinal rule in the interpretation of wills, to find the testator’s intent, and by that is meant his actual, personal, individual intent, not a mere presumptive conventional intent inferred from the use of a set phrase or a familiar form of words. “ With the desire to reduce to a minimum the perplexity and uncertainty inseparable from the subject, courts have established certain artificial and arbitrary canons of construction, by which certain forms of expression are presumed to have certain meanings, and in doubtful cases these presumptions are held to be decisive. But all these canons are subservient to the great rule as to intent, and are made to aid, not to override it. As in all such cases care is required that tools shall not become fetters, and that the real end shall not be sacrificed to what was intended only as the means of reaching it: ” Woelpper’s Appeal, 126 Pa. 562. This Court has in numerous cases pointedly indicated its determination to restore or preserve the cardinal rule as to intention in [226]*226its original and proper prominence, and to let every will stand on its own terms as every contract has always been construed to do.

Of the actual intent of Charles Tyson in his will the court below had no doubt, nor have we.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hallinan v. Kijakazi
D. Alaska, 2021
Gramm Estate
218 A.2d 342 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1966)
Lanigan v. Commissioner
45 T.C. 247 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)
Security-Peoples Trust Company v. United States
238 F. Supp. 40 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1965)
Strite v. McGinnes
330 F.2d 234 (Third Circuit, 1964)
Strite v. McGinnes
215 F. Supp. 513 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1963)
Hoffman v. Mcginnes
277 F.2d 598 (First Circuit, 1960)
Hoffman v. McGinnes
277 F.2d 598 (Third Circuit, 1960)
Ellis v. Commissioner
26 T.C. 694 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)
Seacrist Estate
66 A.2d 836 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Johnson Estate
59 A.2d 877 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)
Colison Estate
52 A.2d 184 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1947)
Degenkolv v. Daube
18 A.2d 464 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Rebmann's Estate
12 A.2d 350 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Sharpe v. Commissioner
38 B.T.A. 502 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1938)
Hober's Estate
180 A. 140 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Sharples's Estate
156 A. 243 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Cole's Estate
15 Pa. D. & C. 655 (Centre County Orphans' Court, 1930)
Endsley v. Hagey
151 A. 799 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A. 131, 191 Pa. 218, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-tyson-pa-1899.