Seybert v. Hibbert

5 Pa. Super. 537, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 177
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Pa. Super. 537 (Seybert v. Hibbert) 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.

Bluebook
Seybert v. Hibbert, 5 Pa. Super. 537, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283 (Pa. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Smith, J.,

Under the will of his father, John Phillips, Sr., David Phillips took an estate in the land in controversy, which he devised to his sister, Margaret Hibbert. His only surviving child, Minnie Seybert, contends that under his father’s will he took but a life estate, and the remainder in fee vested in her. His sister contends that he took a fee tail, which, converted into a fee simple [543]*543by the act of April 27,1855, passed by his devise to her. The rights of the parties, therefore, depend on the quantum of estate devised to David Phillips.

The devise is in the following terms : “ I leave and bequeath to my four younger sons, Jonathan T. Phillips, David Phillips, Timothy Phillips and John Phillips, all the residue of my farm together with the coal scaffold at the river and lot belonging to it during their natural lifetime to be equally divided amongst them in quantity and quality and providing any of them dies without heirs the share of the deceased shall be divided amongst the surviving ones and at their death to be divided amongst their children and so on from one' generation to another.”

From the variety of purposes and modes of expression found in wills, it is measurably true that each will is in the nature of a law unto itself, and that the construction given to one is no absolute guide to the meaning of another. The import of particular phrases, and even the effect of technical language and words of art, are so largely controlled by the context, the situation of the parties, and the evident purpose of the testator in its entirety, that language which in one will may be held to indicate a certain intention may in another, from differences in the context and the attending, conditions, receive a different interpretation. Nevertheless, there are some principles, definitely fixed, and invariable in their application, which are to be followed in the construction of all wills. “ Where well considered and unimpeached adjudications have assigned to certain forms of disposition a determinate result, we are bound by it as an ascertained law of construction: ” George v. Morgan, 16 Pa. 95, Bell, J. It is through the application of the rules thus ascertained that the question arising in the present case is to be determined. The principles to be applied here relate to the limitation of the estate given to the first devisee, the devise over upon his death, and the interpretation of the language employed in defining or describing the estates devised. A brief review of the authorities will exhibit the bearing of these principles on the case in hand.

While a will is to be so construed as to carry out, as far as practicable, the testator’s intention, it not infrequently happens that the intention is defeated by the inexorable legal effect of the language employed. Usually this result is due to the rule [544]*544iii Shelley’s case. “ When a testator uses words, without explanation or qualification in the context, which, according to a settled rule of law, import an estate tail, the legal meaning of the will is to prevail over the actual intention of the testator: ” Vaughan v. Dickes, 20 Pa. 509, Woodward, J. The rule is the same when words are used that import a fee simple. As the testator cannot create estates that are inconsistent or incompatible with each other, a particular intent must yield to a general intent, when necessary to preserve the compatibility of the estates created. Where the general intention is that the first devisee shall be the root of a new succession, and that those in remainder shall take as his heirs either general or lineal, they take by descent from him; consequently the estate given to him must be a fee, since nothing but an inheritable estate can be taken by descent. A life estate in the first taker, who is to become the root of the new succession, is incompatible with the transmission of an estate of inheritance to his heirs. His estate, therefore, though from a particular intent limited in terms to his life, is by operation of law enlarged to an estate of inheritance that effect may be given to the general intent. No expression of intention, however explicit and absolute, can hold his interest down to a life estate when the further intention appears that those in remainder shall take as his heirs; hence, as was said by Mr. Justice Trunkey in Blair v. Miller, 30 W. N. C. 486, “ Wills have been turned upside down by the rule in Shelley’s case.”

A devise for life may be enlarged to a fee simple by a limitation, upon the death of the devisee, to his heirs, or to a fee tail by a like limitation to the heirs of his body. Such limita.tion will arise not only from the use of the words “ heirs,” or “ heirs of the body,” but from any equivalent expression not restrained in effect by a different intent appearing from the will as a whole. Examples of these results are numerous.

Thus, a fee simple has been created by the following limitations upon the death of the life tenant: “ With remainder over to his heirs in fee: ” Doebler’s Appeal, 64 Pa. 9; “ To the lawful heirs of them the said A. and wife in fee simple: ” Auman v. Auman, 21 Pa. 343; “ To be equally divided among them the right heirs of my said niece: ” Physick’s Appeal, 50 Pa. 128 ; “ Reversible after her death to her children, if any surviv[545]*545ing, or issue of such children: ” McKee v. McKinley, 33 Pa. 92; “ To such persons as at the decease of the said E. shall and may be her heirs or legal representatives : ” Ralston v. Wain, 44 Pa. 279; “ To such person or persons as should be her right heirs, their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns forever, in such proportions as they would be entitled to in case she had died intestate seized and possessed of the property in her own right:” Nice’s Appeal, 50 Pa. 143; “To such person or persons as would be entitled to the same if the said PI. had died intestate seized of the said premises in fee simple, and in such manner and for such quantity of estate as such person or persons would in such case be entitled to by law:” Dodson v. Ball, 60 Pa. 492; “To such person or persons as would be entitled to the same in case my said daughters had survived their respective husbands and departed this life intestate seized thereof in fee: ” Yarnall’s Appeal, 70 Pa. 335; “ At their death shall descend to their children, if any, if no children, then to descend to the brothers and sisters and their children: ” Potts v. Kline, 174 Pa. 513.

A fee tail has been created by the following limitations upon the death of the life tenant: “ To my daughter R., and she shall have it as her own during her life, and then it is to come to the heirs of her body for their own use: ” Bender v. Fleurie, 2 Grant, 347; “ To W. my son, and to J. my son, and to their children after them: ” Blair v. Miller, 30 W. N. C. 486; “ When the children or legal heirs of the said W. come to the age of twenty-one years or more, then the one half of the said farm to belong to the children or legal heirs of the said W. forever: ” Sheeley v. Neidhammer, 182 Pa. 163; “To the heirs male of the body of my son E. lawfully begotten, and the heirs and assigns of such heirs or heir male forever: ” Carter v. McMichael, 10 S. & R. 429; “If he shall have lawful issue, then to them, their heirs and assigns forever: ” Paxson v. Lefferts, 3 R. 59; “To the heirs of his body lawfully begotten and to their heirs forever: ” George v. Morgan, 16 Pa. 95 ; “ To descend to his legitimate offspring forever: ” Allen v. Markle, 36 Pa. 117 ; “To descend and go to the child, and if children, share and share alike: ” Haldeman v. Haldeman, 40 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. Super. 537, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seybert-v-hibbert-pasuperct-1897.