Haydon's Estate

6 A.2d 581, 334 Pa. 403, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 650
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1939
DocketAppeals, 232, 233 and 241
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 6 A.2d 581 (Haydon'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
Haydon's Estate, 6 A.2d 581, 334 Pa. 403, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 650 (Pa. 1939).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

These appeals involve the construction of certain portions of the will of James C. Haydon who died May 27, 1915. ' By his will the testator made bequests of $50,000 to each of his two daughters. The gift to his daughter Mary, which is the subject of the present controversy, reads as follows: “I give to my daughter Mary Haydon the same amount, Fifty thousand dollars to be placed in trust with the Girard Trust Company of Phila., the interest on which to be paid her semi-annually during her life. If she dies without issue the said sum of Fifty thousand dollars will revert to her sister Bertha H. Morris.” Immediately preceding this gift there was a like provision bequeathing $50,000 to the other daughter, Bertha, with a gift over to Mary in case Bertha should die without issue. The residuary clause gave the residue to his wife for life and provided that upon her death the executors should divide the residue between the two daughters or their direct heirs in blood relation.

Both the daughters survived the testator, but Bertha died intestate and without issue on March 14, 1925. Upon her death, the trustee filed its account of the first trust provided for in the will, and the Orphans’ Court awarded the principal to Mary absolutely in accordance with the gift over to her. Mary then died without issue on October 17, 1937. The trustee thereupon filed its account of the second trust set up by the will and presented its petition for distribution of the balance to such parties as the Court should find entitled thereto. The court below concluded that the fund was distributable under the residuary clause of the will, and entered a decree of distribution awarding one-half the fund to the Estate of Bertha Haydon Morris and one-half to the Estate of Mary Haydon Hansen.

From this decree three appeals were taken. One appeal is by the Estate of Mary Haydon Hansen which claims the entire fund on the ground that Mary’s interest was an absolute fee and was not divested on her *406 death without issue. The Estate of Bertha Haydon Morris likewise claims the entire fund on the ground that Mary’s interest was divested upon her dying without issue. Edith Haydon Gregory, a niece of the testator, has also appealed and bases her claim to the entire amount on the ground that the court below correctly ruled that the fund passed by the residuary clause but that under that clause the gift to the residuary legatees was contingent upon their surviving to the time of distribution, and that accordingly, since both Bertha and Mary were dead at the time of distribution, she is entitled to the fund as “a direct heir in blood relation.”

There can be no doubt that the interest which Mary took under the will was a fee rather than a mere life estate. The principle is well settled that an absolute estate will not be cut down by subsequent provisions in the will unless the testator has expressed a clear and unambiguous intention to do so: Buechley’s Estate, 283 Pa. 107; Cross v. Miller, 290 Pa. 213; Byrne’s Estate, 320 Pa. 513. Here the testator by providing, “I give to my daughter Mary Haydon . . . Fifty thousand dollars,” used words that constitute an absolute bequest. He then directed that the sum should be held in trust during the daughter’s lifetime. The sole purpose of this provision was to place in the hands of a competent trustee the duty of properly administering the fund and thus relieve the daughter of these obligations. It cannot reasonably be said that this shows an intention in the instant case to cut down the gift to a life estate. We have frequently held that the mere fact that the testator places a bequest in trust during the beneficiary’s lifetime does not, in the absence of a clear intent to the contrary, reduce the absolute interest to a mere life estate: Boies’ Estate, 177 Pa. 190; Kelly v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., 226 Pa. 540; Gunnell’s Estate, 269 Pa. 343. In Kling’s Estate, 86 Pa. Superior Ct. 312, the testatrix bequeathed all the remainder of her estate to her son “in trust, he to receive the income *407 of the same during his lifetime ...” In holding that this was an absolute gift, the court said (p. 315): “The mere statement that he shall receive the income during his lifetime is not sufficient to reduce to a life interest, what would otherwise be an absolute bequest . . .” It is thus apparent that on the death of her father Mary received an interest in fee subject only to the condition that if she died without issue her interest should pass to her sister.

Since Mary’s interest was a fee, upon her death it must pass either to her estate on the ground that the gift over did not become effective, or to Bertha’s estate on the ground that the gift over did operate to divest the fee. Under no circumstances can it therefore be said to have passed under the residuary clause, and hence the claim of Edith Haydon Gregory cannot be sustained.

The question then is: Does the gift over of Mary’s share take effect upon Mary’s death without issue where Bertha has already died without leaving issue? It must be borne in mind that in deciding this question the expressed intention of the testator is controlling, for, as we have frequently stated, “all mere technical rules of construction must give way to the plainly expressed intention of a testator, if that intention is lawful”: Reck’s Appeal, 78 Pa. 432, 435; Eichelberger’s Estate, 135 Pa. 160; Byrne’s Estate, supra.

Where an absolute estate is devised followed by a gift over in the event of the death of the donee without issue, the rule of construction that is applied in the absence of a contrary intention is that the gift over will be construed as referring to death without issue in the lifetime of the testator: Mickley’s Appeal, 92 Pa. 514; Lerch’s Estate, 309 Pa. 23. But where the will indicates that the testator contemplated that the death of the legatee without issue might occur after his own death this rule of construction does not apply. As we said in Mebus’ Estate, 273 Pa. 505, 516: “The rule *408 is never applied where the first takers referred to are treated as living at a period subsequent to the death of testator.” In the instant case the provisions that the trustee should pay the interest from the two funds to the daughters during their lives indicates conclusively that the testator regarded them as surviving him, for it is obvious that the duty to make the payments could not arise until after the testator’s death.

Hence it is apparent that the testator did contemplate that-the event of dying without issue might occur after his own death. But it is equally clear that he did not intend that when one daughter had died and her share had passed to the survivor, and the surviving daughter then died without issue, that the second gift over should operate to divest her interest and vest it in the estate of the daughter who had been dead for many years. This is true since an examination of the instant will as a whole leaves no doubt that the testator intended that the words “die without issue” as used in each gift should mean die without issue after his own death but within the lifetime of the other daughter.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.2d 581, 334 Pa. 403, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haydons-estate-pa-1939.