Lockhart's Estate

159 A. 874, 306 Pa. 394, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1932
DocketAppeals, 338, 347 and 356
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 159 A. 874 (Lockhart'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
Lockhart's Estate, 159 A. 874, 306 Pa. 394, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 458 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaerer,

In this proceeding we are called upon to construe the will of Josephine Lockhart. The court below determined that in certain features it violates the rule against perpetuities and awarded the estate under the intestate laws. It is contended by the various appellants that this adjudication is wrong.

It has been said that no will has a brother. It is doubtful whether this one has even more distant relatives. Its complexities have bothered counsel and courts in the past (see Lockhart’s Est., 267 Pa. 390) and still continue to do so. We are now asked to determine finally what it means and whether it violates the rule referred to. It has been said that precedents are of little value in will cases: Swentzell’s Est., 294 Pa. 261; Tarter’s Est., 291 Pa. 458. This is a convenient expression when they are many and confused, or when the will defies classification under any of them.

The paragraphs of the will necessary to be considered appear in the reporter’s notes. What can be gathered from it as to the intent of the testatrix? Wherein does it conflict with the rule against perpetuities prohibiting the creation of future interests or estates which by possibility may not become vested within a life or lives in being at the death of the testator and twenty-one years thereafter, together with the period of gestation? gee 21 R. C. L. 282; Hillyard v. Miller, 10 Pa. 326, 334; City of Phila. v. Girard’s Heirs, 45 Pa. 9, 26; Yard’s App., 64 Pa. 95, 98; Coggins’s App., 124 Pa. 10; *401 Rhodes’s Est., 147 Pa. 227; Barton v. Thaw, 246 Pa. 348; Lilley’s Est., 272 Pa. 143, 151; Feeney’s Est., 293 Pa. 273; Gray, Rule against Perpetuities, 3d edition, section 214; Foulke, Perpetuities, etc., in Pennsylvania, section 329. The test in applying the rule is whether the prescribed contingency or event upon which vesting is to take place may not arise until after the time allowed by the rule of law within which the gift over must take effect: 21 R. C. L. 289; Foulke, Perpetuities, etc., in Pennsylvania, section 335. The rule is not one of construction, but a positive mandate of law to be obeyed irrespective of the question of intention. The proper procedure is to determine the true construction of the will, just as if there was no such thing in existence as the rule, and then to apply it rigorously in complete disregard of the wishes and intention of the testator: 21 R. C. L. 294; Bender v. Bender, 225 Pa. 434, 438; Gerber’s Est., 196 Pa. 366, 375; Gray, Rule against Perpetuities, 3d edition, section 629. Where the gift is to a class, the class must be such that all the members of it must necessarily be ascertained and take absolutely vested interests within the period. If the gift is to a class and it is void as to any one of the class, it is void as to all: 21 R. C. L. 303, 308; Coggins’s App., supra; Wickersham’s Est. (No. 1), 261 Pa. 121,127; Gray, Rule against Perpetuities, 3d edition, sections 373 et seq.; Foulke, Perpetuities, etc., in Pennsylvania, section 445. We will now endeavor to construe the will before us in the light of the testatrix’s manifested intent and then apply the foregoing principles.

The eighth paragraph creates a trust of the residue of the estate and gives one-half of the income for life to William Gardner Crowell, stepfather of the testatrix, now deceased, and the other half for life to her mother, Virginia A. Crowell, who predeceased the testatrix. In the ninth paragraph, it is provided that, upon the death of these two life beneficiaries, two-thirds of the income is given to her half brother, Wilmer Gardner Crowell, *402 who is living, and one-third to his issue “for his, her, or their education, maintenance and support.” At the time of testatrix’s death, Wilmer Gardner Crowell had two living children, William Gardner Crowell and Robert H. Crowell.

First to be determined is what interests testatrix sought to create in the ninth paragraph of her will by-providing that two-thirds of the income from the trust estate should go to Wilmer Gardner Crowell and one-third to his lawful issue for'edueation, maintenance and support. In this connection the further dispositions with reference to income contained in paragraph ten must likewise be considered. In the latter clause testatrix declares that “in the event of the decease of the said Wilmer Gardner Crowell” the net income shall be paid to his issue for education, maintenance and support, his son William to receive his father’s two-thirds share and his other lawful issue to divide equally the remaining one-third. Finally it is provided that the trust is to cease absolutely “in the event of the decease of Wilmer Gardner Crowell and his lawful issue,” followed by a gift to certain named charities “subject to the conditions and provisions heretofore mentioned.”

The contention is urged upon us that the intent of testatrix, as evidenced by paragraphs nine and ten of the will, was to benefit Wilmer Gardner Crowell and his children, and that Wilmer’s “issue” must here be interpreted to mean simply his “children” and no descendants in remoter degree. Appellant cites the Acts of 1897, P. L. 213, section 1, and 1917, P. L. 403, section 14, providing that where real or personal estate is devised or bequeathed the words “die without issue,” or similar words importing a failure of issue on the death of any person, shall be construed to mean a definite failure of issue, in the lifetime or at the death of such person, and not an indefinite failure of issue, unless a contrary intent shall appear from the will. We agree with the learned judge of the court below, however, that “issue *403 means generally descendants ad infinitum ” and that, no contrary intent appearing, this must be its meaning here. The statutes referred to can have no application to the present case, where no question of the “failure of issue” is involved.

It is said that the gift of two-thirds of the income to Wilmer and one-third to his issue, in the ninth paragraph, is without limitation in time, and that consequently, under the rule established in Garrett v. Rex, 6 Watts 14, and reaffirmed in Thompson’s Est., 234 Pa. 82, the principal must also be considered as bequeathed. This contention, however, wholly overlooks the further provisions in paragraph ten that “in the event of the decease of the said Wilmer,” the income is to go to his lawful issue, and further, that “in the event of the decease of Wilmer Gardner Crowell, and his lawful issue,” the trust is to cease and absolutely determine. It was expressly decided in Ammon’s Est., 269 Pa. 159, that where the gift of income was without limitation in time but on the death or remarriage of the legatee the income was to go to her son, this was sufficient to cut down to a life interest what would otherwise have been an absolute gift in fee. But it is urged further that the limitations over “in the event of the decease” of Wilmer and of Wilmer and his lawful issue must be construed as intended to take effect only in case Wilmer or Wilmer and his issue died prior to the death of testatrix or the first life beneficiaries, now deceased, under the rule established by Mickley’s App., 92 Pa. 514, and the multitude of cases decided by this court both before and after it affirming this principle, and it is said that, if this be so, the rule of Thompson’s Estate, supra, would confer upon Wilmer an absolute interest.

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159 A. 874, 306 Pa. 394, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockharts-estate-pa-1932.