Reiff v. Pepo

139 A. 144, 290 Pa. 508, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 18, 1927
DocketAppeal, 178
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 139 A. 144 (Reiff v. Pepo) 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
Reiff v. Pepo, 139 A. 144, 290 Pa. 508, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 679 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

The' court below entered judgment for defendant on a case stated and plaintiff has appealed. The facts agreed upon are briefly as follows: Catherine Naylor made her will, dated September 23, 1910, with a codicil dated January 14,1911, and died on December 6,1911, leaving to survive her a son, Francis M. D. Reiff, a daughter, Catherine E. Hutton, and two grandchildren. Plaintiff, George Francis Reiff, is one of the latter; at the time of filing the case stated he was past twenty-one years of age, unmarried, and without issue. Testatrix provided in her will, inter alia, as follows: “I give...... to George Francis Reiff all that certain house and lot [the property in controversy]. He......not to sell such house and lot......, and after his death the same to belong to and invest in and become the property of his children, share and share alike, to be theirs absolutely.” Plaintiff took possession of the property in question, and, August 1, 1926, entered into a contract to sell it to defendant, agreeing to deliver to the latter “a title in fee simple, free and clear of all encumbrances.” Defendant refused to perform his contract of purchase, alleging that “plaintiff does not own the said real estate *511 in fee simple and is unable to make and deliver......a deed that will vest title in fee simple.” The case stated contains an agreement that, if the court should be of. opinion “that the said will of Catherine Naylor under the law vests in plaintiff a fee simple title, then judgment to be entered in favor of plaintiff......, and if the court be of the contrary opinion, then judgment to be entered in favor of defendant, with costs of suit,” each party reserving the right to appeal.

It is quite clear that, under section 9 of the Act of April 8, 1833, P. L. 249, reenacted by section 12 of the Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 403, 407, the first words of the above-quoted devise to plaintiff, read alone, would be ample to vest a fee; but the act in question particularly provides that devises, without “words of inheritance,” shall vest a fee “unless it appear by words of limitation or otherwise in the will, that the testator intended to devise a less estate,” and we agree with the court below that such intention does appear in this case. Here testatrix, immediately after the words of devise, and in the same paragraph with them, provides that the devisee is “not to sell such house and lot,” then the following words occur, “and after his death the same to belong to and invest in and become the property of his children ......, to be theirs absolutely.” If the provision against a sale were all that followed the gift to plaintiff, it could well be construed as not sufficient to cut down a fee, and be dismissed from consideration as inconsistent with the previous devise of what, standing alone, would be an absolute estate (Pattin v. Scott, 270 Pa. 49, 52, 53); but the entire clause in question must be read (Schuldt v. Reading Trust Co., 270 Pa. 360, 363; Edwards v. Newland, 271 Pa. 1, 4; Wettengel's Est., 278 Pa. 571, 573; Deeter’s Est., 280 Pa. 135, 141), and we cannot disregard the provision which states specifically that the property devised shall, at the death of the first taker, belong to his children absolutely. When the will is read as a whole, as it must be (Hollinshead’s *512 Est., 273 Pa. 573, 576; Williamson v. Greene Imp. Co., 278 Pa. 358, 361; Fairman’s Est., 287 Pa. 334, 336), and its general structure given due consideration, it becomes plain that the last-mentioned provision is part of the devise under which plaintiff claims, and it shows that he is not to have more than a life estate.

Where words sufficient to vest a fee are first used in a devise, and those which follow apparently indicate a contrary intention, the court must, in each case, after considering the whole will, decide as to the primary or general intent of the testator; if it be to give an absolute estate, then subsequent words expressing a secondary and particular intent cannot restrict the gift or strip the fee of its ordinary attributes (Walker v. Vincent, 19 Pa. 369, 371, 372; Doebler’s App., 64 Pa. 9, 17; Sanders v. Mamolen, 213 Pa. 359, 361; Breinig v. Smith, 267 Pa. 207, 210, 211; Pattin v. Scott, 270 Pa. 49, 51; Smith v. Bloomington C. Co., 282 Pa. 248, 251; Cross v. Miller, 290 Pa. 213), but if, after considering the will as a whole, the court finds that the devise expresses an unequivocal intent to give less than a fee, and that what otherwise might be construed as a fee was intended only as a less estate, it must be held accordingly: Sheets’s Est., 52 Pa. 257, 263; Urich v. Merkel, 81 Pa. 332, 335; Boulevard from Second St., 230 Pa. 491, 495; Field’s Est., 266 Pa. 474, 477; Wettengel’s Est., 278 Pa. 571, 573; Deeter’s Est., 280 Pa. 135, 141; Kirkpatrick’s Est., 280 Pa. 306, 310-11; Fairman’s Est., 287 Pa. 334, 336.

The case of Williams v. Leech, 28 Pa. 89, 93, 94, as set forth in appellant’s brief, appears much like the one now before us; it may, however, be readily distinguished. There testator devised real estate to his daughters, without either words of inheritance or a statement that the gift was for life, and to this extent the case is like the present one; but the subsequent provisions, which were there held to show no intention to give less than a fee, are expressed quite differently from those in the present will. Then, again, the structure of the *513 will in that case differs from the structure of the document now before us; there, in a subsequent and separate clause, testator provided that his daughters should not sell the property devised to them, but should receive the income therefrom and “after their or either of their deaths, their portion shall be equally divided among their children and their heirs, and if either [of such daughters] should die without issue” then over. We said that, by virtue of the Act of 1833, the original devise gave an absolute estate to the daughters in. question, and that the last-mentioned provisions, coming after a grant of an absolute estate, were “not inconsistent with a fee......, for they [were but] limitations to the heirs of the devisee, first to the lineal heirs, and second to the collateral heirs, that is, all together, to [the first taker’s] heirs general.” Therefore she took a fee under the rule in Shelley’s Case. When we compare that will with the one now before us, significant differences at once appear. Here, the provision as to what shall happen at the death of the first taker is not contained, as a second or subordinate thought, in a subsequent provision of the will, as in Williams v. Leech, but is found as part of the original devise, in the very clause making the gift to plaintiff; and following, as it does, immediately after the words of devise, it limits the extent of the gift itself. While this fact is not controlling, it has force. Then we have the further fact that, in the present will, the clause in question states plainly that the first devisee’s children (without description of such children as “heirs,” or reference to them as “issue,” as in Williams v. Leech) are to take at his death; and “children” is a word of purchase, not of limitation, unless the will plainly denotes otherwise (Lancaster v. Flowers, 198 Pa. 614, 619; Crawford v. Forest Oil Co., 208 Pa. 5, 19; Manning v. Bader, 224 Pa. 575, 576; Chambers v. Union Trust Co., 235 Pa. 610, 617), which the one before us does not do.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A. 144, 290 Pa. 508, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiff-v-pepo-pa-1927.