McCrea Estate

78 Pa. D. & C. 145, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 111
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedNovember 2, 1951
Docketno. 228
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 78 Pa. D. & C. 145 (McCrea Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCrea Estate, 78 Pa. D. & C. 145, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 111 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

The facts appear from the following extracts from the adjudication of

Sinkler, P. J., Auditing Judge.

— Charles McCrea died June 24,1883, and the trust arises under his will, by which he gave his residuary estate to his trustee, in trust for his wife and two daughters for life, and further provided for distribution of the principal on their deaths.

The reason for filing the account, as set forth in the statement of proposed distribution, is the death of Nathalie Denby McCrea, also known as Nathalie Denley McCrea, the last surviving life tenant, on October 30, 1950. . . .

[148]*148The sixth paragraph of decedent’s will is now operative. By it he provided that “In the event of the death of my wife and of both of my children without children or descendants of children, then I direct my said trustees that they divide my estate into three equal shares and transfer and convey one such share to my sister Anne P. Wirgmann or if deceased to her descendants, another such share to my sister Mary M. Smith or if deceased to her descendants, and the remaining such share unto and among the children of my late brother Henry McCrea and their descendants, ‘per stirpe’.”

It is noted that this is the spelling and the punctuation of the original will which was probated.

It is unnecessary to set forth the family history of decedent, as counsel for the accountant has submitted a chart of the family tree which contains all pertinent details. . . . For the present, it is sufficient to state the following pertinent details relevant to the family lines of decedent and of Anne, Mary and Henry, named in the will.

The line of decedent is extinct, as both daughters died without issue, the last dying October 30, 1950.

The line of Anne, who died in 1887, is now represented by a granddaughter of Anne, Ethel W. Stokes, and by two great-grandchildren of Anne, who are children of the same grandchild, now deceased, of Anne, namely, Atlee L. Wayne Wirgman Baulsir and Mary Elizabeth Wayne Birgman Kittelle.

The line of Mary was represented on the date of death of the last life tenant by a daughter of Mary, namely, Emily Stewart Smith. She died November 8, 1950, following the death of the last life tenant, so that the line of Mary is now represented by the estate of Emily Stewart Smith, deceased.

[149]*149The line of Henry is extinct, as both his children died without issue. The last of his two children to die bequeathed his residuary estate to Matilda Whomsley, who now claims to represent the line of Henry.

The representatives of the lines of Mary and Anne contend that by the sixth paragraph of the will the interest of all distributees was conditional upon their surviving the death of the last life tenant, and that, accordingly, the representatives of those two lines are entitled to take the share distributable to those two lines to the exclusion of those members of those lines who had died before the termination of the trust. The representatives of the lines of Mary and Anne further contend that, as there is no descendant of the Henry line, the Henry share should be awarded to them on the theory that there was a class gift, by virtue of which they now have the right of survivorship.

The representative of the Henry line contends that the child of Henry last dying had such an interest in the Henry share that it was not defeated by that child’s death prior to the termination of the trust, and that accordingly the Henry share passed by virtue of the residuary clause of that child’s will to the present alleged representative of the Henry line.

The claim is also made by the next of kin of testator that all interest in the Henry share was defeated or divested by the death of his children before the termination of the trust, and that, as no provision was made by decedent for that contingency, the Henry share now passes by intestacy to the next of kin of decedent, determined as of the date of his death.

1. “Descendants” as a Word of Purchasé

\a) Factual Background of the Testamentary Disposition. — Of great importance,in determining the meaning of the words used by testator in writing his will is the factual situation existing when he made the [150]*150will. An examination of those facts is of assistance, because the court is better enabled to determine what testator had in mind and what he was seeking to do by the words of his will.

This is not a question of forcing the will into a construction suggested or made necessary by the facts as they developed subsequent to the death of testator. It is merely viewing the facts as they existed when the will was drawn.

Testator was married in 1865. He wrote his will in 1882. His two daughters were then minors. By contrast, his sister Anne was then 67 years old and his sister Mary was 60 years old. Each of them had a number of children, and one, a grandchild. Under these circumstances, it is most likely that testator contemplated that the gift of income to his wife and children would last for many years, and that the gift over to the collateral lines for want of children or descendants of his daughters would not occur, if at all, until a comparatively remote period, at which time it would be likely that his sisters, as well as his brother, would be dead, and that the substitutionary gifts would take effect as to the children or descendants of deceased children rather than as to the sisters themselves.

It is thus most probable that testator intended that the bequest by the sixth paragraph was to take effect with respect to any brother, sister, children or their descendants who were alive at the time when the event specified in that paragraph should occur, namely, the death of his wife and daughters without any surviving descendants.

(6) General Meaning of “Descendants”.— “Descendants” does not have the technical meaning of “heirs” or “heirs of the body”. “At most, (it) is only the equivalent of ‘issue’ which, when used with reference to personalty, is a word of purchase”: Penrose, J., in Wain’s Estate, affirmed by the Supreme Court upon [151]*151the opinion of the lower court in 189 Pa. 631. See also Lee v. Sanson, 245 Pa. 392. “Descendants” has been held a word of purchase in these two cases and a word of limitation in Burkley v. Burkley et al., 266 Pa. 338. It is a term which does not have a fixed meaning but, as in the case of “issue”, will be given such meaning as testator intended it to have. See Lippincott Estate, 349 Pa. 538; Butler Estate, 364 Pa. 279.

(c) Exclusion of Estates of Deceased Beneficiaries. —That decedent intended “descendants” as a word of purchase is deduced from the fact that he intended living persons to receive the estate. Thus, upon the death of his wife and children without children or descendants of children, testator makes the substitutionary gifts to collaterals. He does not make the gift to the estates of deceased lineals nor even confer upon them the power to appoint the principal. Moreover, he makes the gift by paragraph 6 to Mary, Anne and the two children of Henry. The fact that he does not include the estate of Henry, rather than the children of Henry, indicates that he did not intend the participation by Henry’s estate, even if the sixth paragraph should take effect while Mary and Anne were living.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Pa. D. & C. 145, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrea-estate-paorphctphilad-1951.