Kessler's Estate

135 A. 618, 288 Pa. 91, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 2, 1926
DocketAppeal, 230
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 135 A. 618 (Kessler'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
Kessler's Estate, 135 A. 618, 288 Pa. 91, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 422 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

Decedent left an estate of more than $840,000 and, like every other “jolly testator who makes his own will,” so badly worded that document as to invite if not compel litigation before his desires could be ascertained and carried into effect. He left surviving him a wife, five children and a grandson — the latter the only child of a deceased daughter who died eleven days before the will was made. By his will he gave the balance of his estate to his executors and trustees, in trust to pay to his wife an annuity of $12,000 for life, giving her also the use of their home and its contents; to pay to each of his five children, naming them as such, an annuity of $2,500 Avithout specifying how long the payments should continue, and then provided as follows: “I also authorize and direct my executors and trustees to pay unto the guardian of my grandson George Kessler Schaeffer such sum or sums of money from the income of my estate as they in their discretion may deem necessary for the proper support, maintenance and education of my said grandson, not exceeding $2,-000 yearly. immediately after the death of my dear Wife Elizabeth Kessler, I order and direct my executors and trustees to pay over to the Integrity Trust Co. Guardian hereinafter appointed for my said grandson, Geo. Kessler Schaeffer the sum of $80,000 in trust nevertheless to for and upon the following uses intents and purposes that is to say to invest and keep invested the principal of this trust fund and to pay from the income of this fund such sum or sums of money as my said guardian may in his consideration deem necessary for the proper support maintenance and education *94 of my said grandson George Kessler Schaeffer not exceeding $2,000 per annum, the balance of said income of said trust fund I direct the said guardian to add to the principal of this trust fund during the minority of my said grandson, immediately upon the arrival of my said grandson George Kessler Schaeffer at the age of 21 years I order and direct the said guardian to pay the principal and accumulated income of this trust fund unto my said grandson George Kessler Schaeffer absolutely. should my said grandson George Kessler Schaeffer die before he arrives at the age of 21 years, then I give and bequeath the principal and accumulated income of this trust fund to my children and their issue such issue taking by representation absolutely, immediately after the death of my dear wife Elizabeth Kessler I order and direct my executors and trustees or the survivor or survivors of them to make the following division and partition of my estate. Eighty Thousand dollars ($80,-000.00) to the guardian of my grandson George Kessler Schaeffer, the residue of my estate real and personal of which I may die possessed I give order and direct my executor and trustees or the survivor or survivors of them to my children who at the time may be living share and share alike, the issue of any of my children taking and receiving only the parent’s share, should any of my children die without issue then he or her share to be divided equally between the surviving heirs share and share alike.”

The widow elected to take against the will, the effect of which (there being nothing compelling a contrary conclusion) was to require distribution to be made exactly as if she had then died, the other gifts being accelerated so as to take effect at once: Ferguson’s Est., 138 Pa. 208; Disston’s Est., 257 Pa. 537. At the audit of the executor’s account, the guardian of the grandson claimed that he was entitled to have, under the above-quoted paragraph, two sums of $80,000 each, and also to share the residue of the estate with testator’s children. The *95 court below decreed against both of these contentions, and this appeal by his guardian followed.

As applicable to the first of those claims, it is said in 40 Cyc. 1560: “In the absence of internal evidence of intent, the following rules of construction have been generally adopted to determine whether a legacy be cumulative or substitutional.....2. Where two legacies of quantity of equal amount are bequeathed to the same legatee in one and the same instrument, the second bequest is regarded as mere repetition and the beneficiary takes but one legacy.” Thus, also, the rule is stated in Thompson v. Betts, 74 Conn. 576; Leighton v. Leighton, 193 Iowa 1299; Dickinson v. Overton, 57 N. J. Eq. 26; Underhill’s Law of Wills, 570.

Apparently this legal conclusion is not challenged by appellant, who claims, however, that there is, in testator’s will, “internal evidence of [a contrary] intent.” This is alleged to be found in the fact that, where the $80,000 is first referred to, there are elaborate provisions in regard thereto, including a gift over to testator’s children, should the grandson “die before he arrives at the age of twenty-one years,” whereas, where it is last referred to, the gift is absolute without any clogging conditions. It is, of course, conceded that where the will shows that two legacies are intended, it must be so construed; but the burden of showing this, under the authorities cited, is on the legatee, and it has not been carried in the present instance. If but one gift was intended, and the second reference was merely a briefly stated repetition of the first, as we think it was, then no evidence of a contrary intent appears in the second reference to it, and the so-called guardian (who is really a trustee) must carry out the trust in accordance with the detailed directions given when the gift was first stated.

The same conclusion is reached when the will is analyzed. In the first part of it, testator is dealing with the income from his estate. Until his wife dies, she is to get *96 $12,000 per annum out of it, each, of the five children are to get $2,500 per annum, and there is to be expended for the grandson, a sum not exceeding $2,000 per annum. This makes a total expenditure of $26,500, which is a little over three per cent on the value of the estate. As president of a bank he must have known that, in all human probability, a much larger income would be received. Evidently his great care was that as long as his wife lived his distributees should certainly receive the annuities provided.

Up to this time there is no gift of any definite sum to or for the grandson, but now testator takes up the question of distribution of the principal of his estate “immediately after the death of my dear wife,” and he first sets apart $80,000 out of the income, of which the trustee named was to expend “not exceeding $2,000 per annum” for the benefit of the grandson, the balance of the income to be cumulated with the principal and the gross sum paid to the grandson when he reached 21 years of age; whereas, if he died before attaining that age, it was to go to his, testator’s, children, and their issue. He then directs — using the same language as above quoted in relation to setting apart the $80,000, “immediately after the death of my dear wife” — his executors and trustees “to make the following division of my estate” (not the residue of his estate after deducting the $80,000 above referred to — the word “residue” being in fact used immediately thereafter in the ultimate gift to the children) : $80,000 to the guardian of his grandson, and the residue to his children and their issue.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 618, 288 Pa. 91, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kesslers-estate-pa-1926.