Spencer Estate

30 Pa. D. & C.2d 68, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Chester County
DecidedOctober 9, 1962
Docketno. 122 of 1962
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Pa. D. & C.2d 68 (Spencer Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer Estate, 30 Pa. D. & C.2d 68, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

MacElree, P. J.,

In the above entitled matter, Howard T. Pratt and Viola Pratt, executors under the will of C. Harry Spencer, deceased, have filed their petition in a proceeding for declaratory judgments under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act....

Decedent left a will dated December 3,1955. . . .

By the terms of said will, decedent provided, inter alia, as follows:

[69]*69“Item IV. I give, devise and bequeath unto Bertha Fulton the premises known as #118 West Evergreen Street, West Grove, Pennsylvania, for and during her life or so long as she may desire to live in the same, whichever may be the shorter period, upon the condition that she shall pay all the expenses of maintaining and insuring said premises, the land taxes and other taxes and assessments thereon which may accrue or become payable during her life; and, upon noncompliance with any of said conditions, or upon her death, or when she vacates said premises, I direct my Executors to sell the said real estate and distribute the proceeds thereof in accordance with Item V hereof.

The questions will be discussed in the order in which they have been stated:

(1) Is Bertha Fulton entitled to use during her lifetime or during the time that she lives at said premises, or entitled to live at said premises, the household goods belonging to said decedent?

Counsel for Mrs. Fulton predicates her right to use such household furniture upon the decision of the late Judge Van Dusen, in Ritchie’s Estate, 4 D. & C. 455.

While we do not feel obliged to follow the conclusions of law reached by Judge Van Dusen, assuming him to have been right in the conclusions which he reached in Ritchie’s Estate, this court believes the situation there to be clearly distinguishable from the subject situation.

By the terms of his will, William J. Ritchie provided: “My sister is to occupy her present home during the balance of her life.”

Judge Van Dusen reasoned that the picture in testator’s mind could have been that of his sister going on after his death just as before. He concluded that under such circumstances the word “home” implied something more than the bare house.

In reaching this conclusion he cited Graham v. Heidrick, 204 Pa. 238. Significantly enough the language in [70]*70Graham v. Heidrick was “that after my decease my wife Hannah will occupy my present home and residence during her natural lifetime and also my daughter Elizabeth as long as she remains single.”

Even the late Mr. Justice Dean, speaking for the Supreme Court in Graham v. Heidrick, conceded that such language was susceptible of conflicting interpretations. In the instant case, we are not confronted by the use of the word, “home.”

Whether Item Y of decedent’s will creates a life estate as contended by counsel for Mrs. Fulton, or whether it gives Mrs. Fulton merely a conditional right to occupy, amounting to but a license or personal privilege as contended by counsel for the executors, we are of opinion and so decree that the will gives no right to Bertha Fulton to use the furniture of the decedent during her lifetime or any shorter period.

(2) Is Bertha Fulton entitled to receive and convert to her own use the rents from the apartment on the second floor of said premises at 118 West Evergreen Street, West Grove, Pennsylvania?

Ordinarily, the answer to this question would depend upon whether or not the will of decedent created a life estate for Bertha Fulton.

It is contended by counsel for Mrs. Fulton that if she has a life interest she is entitled to the rents and profits from the premises and it is conceded by counsel for Mrs. Fulton that if she has only a license or privilege she has no right to the rents and profits.

It is contended by counsel for the executors under decedent’s will that Bertha Fulton is not entitled to the rents because she does not have a life estate in the premises, but merely a right to occupy.

The situation here is further complicated by a stipulation that in the event Bertha Fulton is not entitled to rents and profits during her lifetime or during the time she lives in the premises she will elect or express [71]*71her desire not to live in the same, and a further stipulation that in the event Bertha Fulton is held to be liable for more than $200 of the total cost of the sewer assessment, the connection fee and costs of internal plumbing, she will not elect to live in the premises and express her desire to remove therefrom.

In effect, the position of Bertha Fulton is that under the will she is entitled to the rents and profits during her lifetime or during the time that she lives in the premises, but that she is not liable for the cost of the sewer assessments, the connection fee and costs of internal plumbing, in excess of $200.

This court, in its opinion, is not concerned with whatever election Bertha Fulton may make, but is merely to determine her right to receive and convert to her own use the rents from said apartment.

We must first determine the nature of the estate to which Bertha Fulton is entitled.

The language used by the decedent in Item IV of his will is, in the opinion of this court, free from ambiguity.

“I give, devise and bequeath unto Bertha Fulton the premises known as 118 West Evergreen Street, West Grove, Pennsylvania, for and during her life, or so long as she may desire to live in the same, whichever may be the shorter period,” states precisely what decedent intended.

Had he intended an estate for life, he would not have added the provision “or so long as she may desire to live in the same, whichever may be the shorter period.”

Decedent further added conditions which would ordinarily be incidental to a life estate, but which he saw fit to impose in the event that Bertha Fulton should desire to use and occupy the premises.

He also provided that upon noncompliance with any of said conditions, or upon her death, or when she should see fit to vacate the premises, the premises should be sold by his executors and distribution of the [72]*72proceeds should be made in accordance with Item V of his will.

Counsel for both contesting parties have cited Sinnott’s Estate, 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 383, and Davis Estate, 22 D. & C. 2d 755.

Paraphrasing what the late Judge Porter said in Sinnott’s Estate, had testator directed that Mrs. Fulton should be permitted to occupy the premises, 118 West Evergreen Street, West Grove, Pennsylvania, for the term of her life if she so desired, there might possibly be room for argument that it was his intention to give her more than a mere privilege to occupy the residence, and that a life estate was to be created which it was within her power to alienate.

In such a case, as pointed out by Judge Porter, those who asserted that her right in the property was merely to occupy it for her personal residence, and that she could not while making her home elsewhere convey her right to another, would have been compelled to rely on a mere implication arising from the peculiar words used by the testator.

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Related

Graham v. Heidrick
53 A. 1002 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)
Sinnott's Estate
53 Pa. Super. 383 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Pa. D. & C.2d 68, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-estate-paorphctcheste-1962.