Harrison's Estate

18 Pa. Super. 588, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 Pa. Super. 588 (Harrison's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison's Estate, 18 Pa. Super. 588, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5 (Pa. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion by

W. D. Porter, J.,

The testatrix died September 28, 1897. Her will was executed October 3, 1896, and there were two codicils dated August 14, 1897. The fund for distribution by the court below in this proceeding was a portion of the residuary estate of the testatrix which had been devised to the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities, in trust to invest the same and pay certain annuities out of the income, and the surplus of such income is to be distributed under the following clause of the will: “ From the balance, if anjq of said net income, the trustee shall reserve sufficient to insure the payment of said annuities, and pay over the remainder until the termination of this trust, to the children of my sisters, in equal shares.” The appellant asserted a right to participate in the distribution of this surplus, under these facts, which were found by the learned auditing judge and are undisputed. At the date of the will and of the codicils thereto, the only living children of the sisters of the testatrix were Susan Beach, daughter of Mary Francis, a sister of testatrix, and John Beard, James Beard and Sarah Barnicoat, children of Grace Beard, who was likewise a sister of testatrix. Mary Francis, the mother of Susan Beach, died many years before the testatrix, leaving, beside Susan, two other daughters, Teresa L. C. Anderson and Julia Millard, both of whom had died long before the execution of the will, viz: Mrs. Anderson, who was the mother of the grandnieces Clara H. Stoops and Yiolet A. I. Huston, the appellant, in 1883, and Mrs. Millard, whose daughter Julia M. Fuller has not appealed from the decree of the court below, at a date which is not definitely stated, but which clearly appears to have been long prior to the execution of the will. [591]*591Mrs. Anderson, who was the mother of appellant and a daughter of the sister of the testatrix, lived with the testatrix until her death in December, 1883, her children, the appellant and her sister, continued to make their home with Mrs. Harrison until each of them respectively was married, the last of said events occurring prior to the execution of the will. The testatrix made Violet A. I. Huston and her sister Clara H. Stoops the chief objects óf her bounty, and in each one of the clauses of the original will by which that bounty was conferred, she designated said persons as her “ grandnieces,” which was the true relationship in which they stood to her. It is true that the last codicil is, “I give to my beloved niece Violet Huston my husband’s and my own pictures; oil paintings.” This use of the word “niece” in the codicil falls far short of what would be required to justify us in holding that when the testatrix used the words “ children of my sisters ” in the residuary clause of her will, it was her intention to include grandchildren of her .sisters. The terms of the will can be satisfied, and all its provisions carried into effect, without any such forced construction. The will itself affords strong affirmative evidence of the intention to use the word “ children ” in its literal sense. The testatrix knew that the mother of her grandnieces, Clara H. Stoops and Violet A. I. Huston, was dead; in the body of her will she devised to them valuable real estate and bequeathed personal property to them for life, with powers of appointment by will, largely exceeding in value the entire residuary estate; and every time their names are mentioned in the carefully drawn original instrument, they are coupled with the designation of their true relationship, “ grandnieces.” It would be difficult to believe, therefore, that when she came to dispose of the small residue of her estate, by creating a trust, she intended to include in the designation children of her sisters, the persons whom she had so repeatedly and accurately' designated as “grandnieces.” The use of the perhaps familiar designation “ niece,” in connection with the name of the appellant, in the informal codicil disposing of two family portraits is certainly not sufficient evidence of an intention on the part of the testatrix to use the term “ children of my sisters,” in the residuary clause of her will in any other than its literal sense : Estate of Joshua Hunt, 133 Pa. 260. The appellant could not take as [592]*592an original and substantive legatee under the residuary clause in the will, and, although the claim seems .to have been urged upon that ground in the court below, that contention has been practically abandoned here. That the testatrix understood the difference between the meaning of the words “ children” and “ issue” is made apparent in the second clause of her will, for in the condition to which the devise to Mrs. Huston in that clause is made subject, the devisee is required to convey certain property to the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities in trust; “ to pay the net interest and income to my grandniece Violet for the term of her life, for her sole and separate use, free from all interference or control of her husband, and upon her death then to pay the principal to the children or issue of my grandniece Violet, and in default thereof to her next of kin, excluding, however, her husband.”

The appellant now contends, however, that being of the issue of Teresa L. C. Anderson, the daughter of a sister of the testatrix who died during the lifetime of the latter and prior to.the execution of the will, she is entitled to participate in the distribution of this fund by force of the provisions of the Act of July 12, 1897, P. L. 256: “ No devise or legacy hereafter made in favor of a brother or sister, or of brothers or sisters of any testator, or in favor of the children of a brother or sister of any testator, whether such brothers or sisters, or children of brothers or sisters be designated by name or as a class, such testator not leaving any lineal descendants, shall be deemed or held to lapse or become void by reason of the decease of such devisee or legatee, in the lifetime of the testator, if such devisee or legatee shall leave issue surviving the testator; but such devise or legacy shall be good and available in favor of such surviving issue with like effect as if such devisee or legatee had survived the testator, saving always to every testator the right to direct otherwise.” This legislation has not and was not intended to have any bearing upon the interpretation of wills; its effect is confined to the manner in which the intention of the testator, as ascertained from the words of the will shall be carried into execution. Whether the person within the class designated by the act, who has died during the lifetime of the testator, was a legatee or devisee within the intention of the testator, must first be ascertained from the language which he used in disposing of [593]*593Ms property. When the devise is to a person by name, it is concMsive as to the intention of the testator that that person should take, and the intention of the testator being established, the subject of the devise or bequest will, upon the death of the testator, be good and available in favor of the issue when the primary devisee or legatee has died during the lifetime of the testator. TMs is the effect of legislation of this character, even in a case when the primary devisee was dead at the time the testator specifically designated him as the object of his bounty: Minter’s Appeal, 40 Pa. Ill; Winter v. Winter, 5 Hare, 306. The legislation in question was no doubt enacted for the purpose of changing the law, as it had been determined M Gross’s Estate, 10 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. Super. 588, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrisons-estate-pasuperct-1902.