Springman Estate

220 A.2d 817, 422 Pa. 258, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 24, 1966
DocketAppeal, 218
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 A.2d 817 (Springman Estate) 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
Springman Estate, 220 A.2d 817, 422 Pa. 258, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 558 (Pa. 1966).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Bell,

Christina K. Springman died testate March 19, 1945. In Paragraphs Seventeenth to Twentieth of her *260 will, dated July 31, 1939, she provided in detail for the disposition of the principal of and the income from her residuary estate. Appellant Scott Reckefus, * who is an income beneficiary thereunder, appeals from a final Decree of the Orphans’ Court which confirmed an adjudication which appellant contends misinterpreted his share of income.

In the first 16 paragraphs of her will, testatrix made some specific and pecuniary gifts to relatives and friends. In the Seventeenth paragraph, she gave all her residuary estate to her trustees upon certain trusts, including permission to her sisters and brothers to occupy premises 1233 South 52nd Street rent-free during their lifetime, and upon the death of the survivor to convey said property unto Scott in fee simple. She then gave a specific monthly annuity to her sisters and brothers with direction to pay the balance of the net income quarterly to her husband for his life.

In the Eighteenth paragraph of her will she provided that upon the death of any of her brothers or her sister Gladys before the death of her husband, the income theretofore paid to him or her should be paid to her husband for his life, and if her sister Irma predeceased her husband, the income theretofore paid to her should be paid to her son Scott not for his life, but only until the death of her husband.

There then follow these very important paragraphs:

“Nineteenth : At and immediately upon the death of my said husband, ** I order and direct my Trustees ... to pay the net income from my entire residuary estate, in even and equal parts, unto such of my four brothers and sisters who may be living at that time, in quarter-yearly installments, for and during the term of their natural lives. Provided, however, that if my sister, Irma Reckefus, shall have predeceased my hus *261 band, or if she shall have survived him, then upon her death, I desire that her son, Scott Rechefns, shall receive the share of income [not which Irma was then receiving, but] which she would have received had she been living at the time of his [her husband’s] death— which said share shall be paid to the said Scott Reckefus for and during the term of his natural life, without augmentation, after the death of his mother, by virtue of the death of any of his said uncles or aunt, as hereinafter provided.

“At and immediately upon the death of my said brothers, Robert Klee and Herbert Klee, and my sister, Gladys Woelpper (and of my sister, Irma Reckefus, should her son Scott predecease her) the income theretofore paid to the one so dying shall be added, in equal shares, to that then received by my said brothers and sisters.

“Twentieth: At and immediately upon the death of the survivor of my husband, my brothers, Robert Klee and Herbert Klee, and my sisters, Gladys Woelpper and Irma Reckefus, if my nephew, Scott Reckefus, shall then be living, I order and direct my Trustees, and the survivor of them, to set aside for the use and benefit of the said Scott Reckefus assets sufficient to produce an income approximately equal to that which he shall then be receiving, and to pay the income from such assets (or any properly substituted therefor) unto the said Scott Reckefus for and during the term of his natural life.

“Upon the death of the said Scott Reckefus, my Trustees, and the survivor of them, shall transfer and assign the principal or corpus of said fund [the assets set aside for Scott] unto The Pennsylvania Institution For The Instruction Oe The Blind, now located at Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and its successors, absolutely.

*262 “Of the balance of the corpus of my residuary estate (upon the death of the survivor of my husband, brothers and sisters) I give and bequeath, as follows:

(a) Lankenau Hospital $ 5,000

(b) The Children’s Seashore House $ 3,000

(c) Betty Bacharach Home for Crippled Children $ 3,000

(d) Northern Home for Friendless Children $ 2,000

(e) Woman’s Club of Philadelphia $ 1,000

(f) Wiley Mission $ 1,000

(g) University of Pennsylvania $25,000

(h) And all the rest, residue and remainder of my residuary estate, I give, devise and bequeath unto The Pennsylvania Institution For The Instruction Of The Blind, now located at Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and its successors, absolutely.”

Testatrix’s husband predeceased her- — an event apparently not contemplated by testatrix; her two brothers and two sisters as well as her nephew Scott Reckefus, the appellant, survived her. Her sister Gladys died January 15, 1952, her brother Herbert died June 20, 1954, and her brother Robert died November 4, 1960. Neither Gladys nor Herbert nor Robert ever had any issue. Testatrix’s other sister, Irma Reekefus, who was the mother of appellant, died May 31, 1964.

The Orphans’ Court, sur the audit of the account of testatrix’s trustees (which showed a balance of personalty of $318,765.84 and of real estate carried at $3,-750) made the following awards: (1) To appellant— the real estate which had been specifically devised to him; (2) To the testamentary trustees — (a) One-quarter of the principal of her residuary estate in further trust to pay the income therefrom to appellant for his life, and upon his death to transfer “the principal or the corpus of said fund” to Overbrook School for the *263 Blind, formerly known as the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind; and (b) to pay out of the balance of the corpus of her residuary estate (not after the death of Scott but) “upon the death of the survivor of my husband, brothers and sisters,” the above mentioned pecuniary legacies which were specifically bequeathed to each of the seven named charities enumerated in Paragraph Twentieth of the will; and (c) “all the rest residue and remainder of my residuary estate” to the Overbrook School for the Blind.

Appellant contends that these awards were erroneous and that — except for the $40,000 in pecuniary legacies which were bequeathed to the seven named charities on the death of the survivor of testatrix’s husband and brothers and sisters — the entire balance of the residuary estate and not merely a quarter thereof, should have been awarded to the testamentary trustees in trust to pay all the income therefrom to him.

The law governing the interpretation of wills is well and clearly settled. In Wachstetter Will, 420 Pa. 219, 216 A. 2d 66, the Court said (pages 222-223) : “The law is aptly stated in Hoover Estate, 417 Pa. 263, 207 A.

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Related

Hopkins Estate
56 Pa. D. & C.2d 355 (Philadelphia County Orphans' Court, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 A.2d 817, 422 Pa. 258, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springman-estate-pa-1966.