McKee's Estate
This text of 82 Pa. Super. 407 (McKee's Estate) 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.
Opinion
These appeals are from the decree of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County, awarding the estate of the decedent to the children of Fannie K. Winfield, the only lineal descendants of David McKee. Appellant states the questions involved as follows:
1. Whether the auditing judge did not err in finding as a matter of fact that Fannie K. Winfield was a daughter of James G. McKee, and consequently her children entitled to inherit as the great-grandchildren of David McKee, the testator.
2. Whether the language of the will of David McKee, the testator, did not include collaterals and lineals as residuary legatees.
3. Whether one-half of the estate of the testator, David McKee, did not vest in his son, James G. McKee, at the time of the death of the testator and not at the time of the death of the last annuitant, and the said James G. McKee could not dispose of the same by his will. The first question was not pressed because appellant conceded that the question had been decided adversely to and was res adjudicata as to all the appellants under the opinion and decree of the late President *409 Judge Over of the court below. The will to be construed provided as follows:
“April 2nd, 1886.
“I, David McKee of the 18th Ward City of Pittsburgh being of sound mind and memory do make this my last will and testament. First I give & bequeath to my grandson John D. McKee all my Homestead on which I now live Houses & grounds fourteen acres more or less bounded by lands of John Herron Stanton Ave. &e. the same to be his forever for his own proper use' but not to be sold until he is thirty years of age but he to have the use & income from the time of my decease. I appoint Harry Mason Guardian until he is of age he and his family to live on the place until that time.
“To my sisters Nancy & Margaret & Brother John three hundred Dollars per year during their lives to be paid from the time of my decease semi-annually that will be One Hundred dollars each one per year.
“To my daughter Bell McCroskey Fifty Dollars per month during her life to my son James McKee Fifty Dollars per month during his life & the house now occupied by him free of rent.
“I appoint as executors to this my last will & testament my brother Jas. McKee & Revd. Sands Pastor of U. P. church on 44th St. City Pittsburgh.
“On the death of my heirs herein named all property and Bank Stocks to be sold and divided among all the heirs. Should my Grandson John D. McKee die before he is thirty without leaving any heirs his estate to be divided pro ratio among the heirs.
“I give in addition to my Grandson John D. McKee one-half of the income of my Bank Stock in the Bank of Commerce to my brother James McKee of the twelfth Ward City of Pittsburgh the other half of the income from this same stock in the Bank of Commerce Wood & Sixth St. the stock is seventy shares.
“The balance of the income after paying these legacies and taxes to be spent in keeping up the houses in good *410 condition should there be more than will do this the money to be placed in bank to accumulate.”
The following quotation from the opinion of President Judge Miller of the court below contains all that need be said in affirming:
“It will be observed that the testator named the following persons as beneficiaries in different degrees in his estate, to wit, his grandson, John D. McKee, who was given the homestead, fourteen acres of land, and the income from half of his bank stock, and that John D. McKee died before arriving at the age of thirty, intestate and without issue. It will be observed, further, that testator named his sisters Mary and Margaret and his brother John as annuitants of $100 per year during their lives, his daughter, Bell McCroskey, and his son, James G. McKee, as annuitants of $50 per month during their lives; and further, that he gave to his brother, James McKee, the half of the income of the bank stock, for how long is not stated, and that the ultimate disposition of his estate must be ascertained from the following language: ‘On the death of my heirs herein named all property and bank stock to be sold and divided among all the heirs.’
“The gift over must be found in the direction to divide; this division could not take place until the death of his heirs named in his will. This was the construction placed upon his will by the Supreme Court in this case of McKee’s Est., 198 Pa. 255, where James McKee, testator’s brother, and the father of the collaterals now claiming a share, was the. actor in an application for a decree terminating the trust. The opinion of Judge Over, late President Judge of this court, which was affirmed per curiam, concluded ‘that the testator intended to give the residue of his estate upon the death of all the annuitants to such persons as then answered to the description of his heirs,’ and refused the petition to declare the trust terminated. The opinion refers to the case of Yost v. The Dwelling House Insurance Company, 179 *411 Pa. 381, where the construction of this will as to the interest of John D. McKee was before the Supreme Court, and in which the court said, inter alia, ‘It is quite clear that by “my heirs herein named” the testator meant the annuitants.’ The opinion of Judge Over goes on to say, ‘The testator intended then that distribution should not be made until after the death of his two children, his sole heirs at the time of his death who were also annuitants (here referring to Isabella Mc-Croskey and James G. McKee)......He gave them directly the annuities only, and although he would expect naturally that they would survive their aunts and uncles, the other beneficiaries, he expressly provided that the annuities should be paid to his children during their lives, and that conversion and distribution of his estate should not be made until after their death......and that his heirs were to be ascertained as of the period of distribution.’
“It must further be observed that James McKee was not an annuitant in the class and in the sense that testator made his sisters, his brother, his daughter, ánd his son annuitants; James McKee was given the income of one-half of certain bank stock only, and fixed no time. He was not an annuitant.
“Whom had testator in mind as the heirs when final distribution should be made, as between the descendants of his children, testator’s lineal descendants, and the collateral descendants of his brother James, it being admitted that neither testator’s two sisters nor his brother John had lineal descendants? In what sense did he use the words ‘my heirs herein named’? Certainly only in the technical sense recognized by the law could he have intended those who under the law were his heirs, to wit, his lineal descendants. The ‘heirs herein named’ referred only to the annuitants. The heirs to inherit finally were those fixed by law. He did not say that his estate shall be divided among his heirs herein named, admitting that James McKee as a legatee *412
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
82 Pa. Super. 407, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckees-estate-pasuperct-1923.