Mayhew's Estate

160 A. 724, 307 Pa. 84, 83 A.L.R. 149, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 499
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 4, 1931
DocketAppeal, 309
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 160 A. 724 (Mayhew'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
Mayhew's Estate, 160 A. 724, 307 Pa. 84, 83 A.L.R. 149, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 499 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

The sole question for our consideration in this case is the construction of the word “issue.” It arises in the following manner: Lavinia M. Mayhew died seized of real estate in Philadelphia and elsewhere, which she devised as follows: “I give and bequeath to my said daughter Gertrude Estelle Mayhew all my personal property and the interest of all real estate belonging to me, as long as she lives, but if my said daughter Gertrude Estelle Mayhew should marry, then at her death the interest of my real estate goes to her issue.

“But in the event of my daughter’s death, without issue, all my property shall go to the Home for Destitute Colored Children, located at Maylandville on the Darby Road.”

Gertrude Estelle Mayhew afterwards married Charles Pike, and was survived by six children at her death. Eleanor, one of the six, instituted proceedings to parti *87 tion the real estate; in this she was joined by four of the other children. Gertrude P. Kuser, the sixth child, objected to it because her children, five in number, were not made parties to the proceeding, claiming that they had an interest in the estate and that unless they were so made parties a proper partition could not be had. The basis of her claim was that the word “issue” used in the will of her grandmother, “without explanatory or qualifying words, or the will failing to indicate a different meaning, means that descendants of all degrees of consanguinity” are to share equally, or per capita.

The life tenant was survived by six living children and no issue of deceased children. Of these six living children, Mary had one child, Charles two, Margaret four, Francis none, Eleanor none, and Gertrude, the real appellant, five. The children and grandchildren of the life tenant together number eighteen, and it will readily be seen that under the appellant’s contention as to the testatrix’s meaning of “issue,” Gertrude Kuser and her children would receive six-eighteenths or one-third of the whole estate, and the other branches of the family varying shares in proportion to the number of children in each at the death of the life tenant. Eleanor, the unmarried child of the life tenant, and Francis, married but without children, would each receive but one-eighteenth. The court below denied appellant’s claim and held that “issue” as used by the testatrix meant that where there are children of the life tenant and also living children of these children (grandchildren of the life tenant), such children of the life tenant were intended to take to the exclusion of their issue. In other words, that the proper distribution is per stirpes and not per capita. Gertrude Kuser, by the guardian of her children appointed ad litem, has appealed.

The intention of a testator is to be gathered from the meaning of the words used in his will. Where words used might under a given construction lead to a result that is highly improbable, the court will lean toward q *88 construction that will carry out the natural intention of the testator. See 6 Illinois Law Eeview 230. But, of course, where the meaning of the testator may be ascertained from the will, it must govern. Here the word “issue” is neither qualified, explained nor modified by any context, and this court must for the first time fully decide the construction to be given the word when used as it .is in the will now before us. The courts of other states and of England have considered this matter, and two conflicting rules have been evolved as a result.

Testatrix created a life estate, with a remainder to the “issue” of the life tenant. See this same estate, 80 Pa. Superior Ct. 404. Did she mean that the remainder was to be divided equally among the living children of the life tenant, and if a child was deceased, go per stirpes to its issue; or did she mean, as appellant contends, that the remainder should be divided into equal parts and distributed indiscriminately per capita among all of the children, grandchildren, or perhaps great-grandchildren alike? Did she by “issue” mean that all descendants of every degree of consanguinity should share alike per capita? It seems that to state the latter question is to answer it, for anything more contrary to a presumed testamentary intent can' scarcely be imagined; yet there is authority of note which supports the affirmative of this proposition'.

The English decisions appear to be uniform that where “issue” or “descendants” is used unconfined by any indication of intention, children take concurrently and per capita with their parents: Leigh v. Norbury, 13 Ves. Jr. 340; Maddock v. Legg, 25 Beav. 531; In re Jones’s Trusts, 23 Beav. 242; Freeman v. Parsley, 3 Ves. Jr. 421; Cancellor v. Cancellor, 2 Dr. & Smale 194; In re Burnham, Carrick v. Carrick, [1918] 2 Ch. 196.

The rule, however, is not without criticism even in English courts which follow it. Thus in Cancellor v. Cancellor, supra, it is stated: “It is certainly not very *89 probable, a priori, that a testator should intend that parents and children and grandchildren should take together as tenants in common per capita; and the court will not very willingly adopt that construction,” and in Freeman v. Parsley, supra, it is stated: “I very strongly suspect, that in applying that to this will, I am not acting according to the intention; but I do not know what enables me to control it.”

The New York Courts held strictly to the English rule until the legislature by statute (Consol. Laws, chapter 13, section [a] ) changed the rule so that “issue,” if in equal degree, take per capita, but if in unequal degree, per stirpes, unless a contrary intent is shown. Prior to this act, one of the courts of that state expressed its opinion that its construction of “issue” did violence to the intent of the testator. See Petry v. Petry, 186 N. Y. App. Div. 738.

Rhode Island, in two early eases, held that the word “issue” in the context of a will meant all descendants, but in the recent case of Rhode Island Hospital T. Co. v. Bridgham, 42 R. I. 161, 106 Atl. 149, the authority of these two previous cases is seriously questioned, The court stated: “It is apparent that courts generally have a strong feeling that, in directing the' distribution per capita of a gift to issue, they may be defeating the real intention of the testator where such distribution will result in giving to issue of a more remote generation an equal share with those of a nearer generation,” and the courts of that state now say that, upon the slightest indication of such an intention, issue shall be made to import representation, — a meaning in conformity with that expressed by a majority of the states in the Union.

In Ridley v. McPherson, 100 Tenn. 402, 43 S. W. 772, the English rule was squarely followed, although granting that the testator probably intended the opposite results. But see Lea v. Lea, 145 Tenn. 693, 237 S. W. 59. It is there pointed out that the whole tendency of the modern decisions is to get away from the per capita rule *90 which has been followed in this country only because a few courts “have continued a definition of ‘issue’ which the courts of England adopted with reluctance.”

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 724, 307 Pa. 84, 83 A.L.R. 149, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayhews-estate-pa-1931.