In Re Estate of Rider

711 A.2d 1018, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 687
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 711 A.2d 1018 (In Re Estate of Rider) 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
In Re Estate of Rider, 711 A.2d 1018, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 687 (Pa. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

FORD ELLIOTT, Judge:

In this probate ease, appellant William G. Rider appeals from the trial court’s final decree dated August 18, 1997, which held, in effect, that appellant could not inherit sixty shares of stock from appellant’s brother because the stock was owned by appellees Joan B. Taylor and Harry E. Taylor III (“Objectors”). We affirm.

The facts of the case are as follows. Marion B. Rider (“Marion”) married appellant’s brother, Simon W. Rider (“Simon”). Simon was Marion’s second husband. Objectors are Marion’s grandchildren by virtue of her marriage to her first husband, John Buell Snyder. On the date of Marion’s death, October 5,1961, Marion was the record owner of sixty shares of stock in the Fayette Broadcasting Corporation (“FBC”), evidenced by stock certificate #15. The second provision of Marion’s duly executed will reads in pertinent part as follows:

Any and all shares of stock in the Fay-ette Broadcasting Corporation which I may hold at the time of my death I give and bequeath unto my said husband, Simon W. Rider, who shall have full power during his lifetime to vote said stock and receive all dividends thereon and exercise all powers, rights, and privileges of a stockholder in said corporation and he shall also have the right to sell, transfer, alienate, assign, pledge, encumber, or otherwise dispose of said stock as he may see fit, and shall have power to apply the proceeds therefrom to his own use, and no parties dealing with him in respect thereto shall be required to see to application of the proceeds. If said stock shall still be held by my said husband at the time of his death, I give and bequeath the said stock to such of the children of Harry Earl
*1020 Taylor, Jr. and the aforesaid Yvonne Snyder Taylor, of Brandywine, Maryland, as shall then be living, in equal shares. For the sake of clearness I state that the children of said parents now living are Joan Buell Taylor and Harry Earl Taylor III [Objectors], but that it is my intention to also include any children hereafter bom who shall be living at the time of my death.
If all of said children shall have predeceased my said husband, Simon W. Rider, said stock shall from and after the death of the last of such children to die be his property absolutely and pass as part of his estate.

R.R. 57a-58a.

Upon Marion’s death, her husband Simon was named executor of her will. Shortly thereafter, Simon transferred the sixty shares of stock from Marion’s name to Simon personally. On November 6,1961, FBC can-celled stock certificate # 15 (which had been issued in Marion’s name) and issued stock certificate # 24, also representing sixty shares of FBC stock, to Simon.

Simon kept stock certificate # 24 from November 1961 until his death on January 15, 1996. Simon died intestate, leaving his brother William G. Rider (appellant) as his sole heir. Appellant was named executor of Simon’s estate. On April 3, 1997, appellant listed sixty shares of FBC stock as a personal asset of Simon’s estate. The next day, Objectors filed an objection to this listing. They argued that pursuant to Marion’s will, they own the stock upon Simon’s death; as such, the stock should not be listed as a personal asset of Simon’s (and, by extension, become inherited by appellant).

After a hearing on the objections the trial court issued a decree nisi, holding in favor of Objectors. On August 18, 1997, the trial court denied appellant’s objections to the decree nisi and made the decree final. This appeal followed.

The trial court correctly framed the issue as whether Marion’s will granted Simon a fee simple (absolute) interest in the stock or merely a life estate with a remainder interest over to Objectors. In the former ease, Simon would own the stock absolutely, and would be able to pass the stock to his brother, appellant, through intestacy; in the latter case, Simon would own the stock during his lifetime, and Objectors would take the stock upon Simon’s death. The court determined that Marion had granted Simon only a life estate with power of consumption. We find no legal error or abuse of discretion in this ruling.

First, we set forth our standard of review and relevant principles pertaining to the interpretation of wills.

The findings of a judge of the orphans’ court division, sitting without a jury, must be accorded the same weight and effect as the verdict of a jury, and will not be reversed by an appellate court in the absence of an abuse of discretion or a lack of evidentiary support.
This rule is particularly applicable to findings of fact which are predicated upon the credibility of the witnesses, whom the judge has had the opportunity to hear and observe, and upon the weight given to their testimony. In reviewing the Orphans’ Court’s findings, our task is to ensure that the record is free from legal error and to determine if the Orphans’ Court’s findings are supported by competent and adequate evidence and are not predicated upon capricious disbelief of competent and credible evidence. However, we are not limited when we review the legal conclusions that Orphans’ Court has derived from those facts.
The testator’s intent is the polestar in the construction of every will and that intent, if it is not unlawful, must prevail.
In order to ascertain the testamentary intent, a court must focus first and foremost on the precise wording of the will, and if ambiguity exists, on the circumstances under which the will was executed, only if the testator’s intent remains uncertain may a court then resort to the general rules of construction. The words of a will are not to be viewed in a vacuum but rather as part of an overall testamentary plan.
*1021 When interpreting a will, we must give effect to word and clause where reasonably possible so as not to render any provision nugatory or mere surplusage. Further, technical words must ordinarily be given their common legal effect as it is presumed these words were intentionally and intelligently employed, especially where they are used by someone learned in probate law.
Courts are not permitted to determine what they think the testator might or would have desired under the existing circumstances, or even what they think the testator meant to say. Rather, the court must focus on the meaning of the testator’s words within the four corners of the will. Finally, a court may not rewrite an unambiguous will.

In re Estate of Harrison, 456 Pa.Super. 114, 120-22, 689 A.2d 939, 942-43 (1997) (citations and quotations omitted).

A fee simple absolute is a form of ownership in which a party has unlimited power to sell, transfer, alienate, or bequeath the property in any lawful manner. Summ. Pa. Jur.2d, Property, § 5.5. “[Restraints upon the power of the owner of an absolute estate to determine its devolution by will or by intestacy have been generally struck down. Thus, the forfeiture, by gift over [to remaindermen], of an absolute estate upon failure to dispose of the property during life or by will is invalid.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
711 A.2d 1018, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-rider-pasuperct-1998.