Stoner v. Wunderlich

47 A. 945, 198 Pa. 158, 1901 Pa. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1901
DocketAppeal, 101
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 47 A. 945 (Stoner v. Wunderlich) 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
Stoner v. Wunderlich, 47 A. 945, 198 Pa. 158, 1901 Pa. LEXIS 751 (Pa. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Mestbezat,

This was an action of assumpsit to recover the first payment of purchase money alleged to be due for certain real estate sold by the plaintiff to the defendant by articles of agreement dated October 31, 1899. The contract required “ the deed and title to be marketable and free from all incumbrances.” The single defense is that the “ plaintiff has not now nor has he at any time had a marketable title free from all incumbrances.” A rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense was made absolute and judgment entered against the defendant. This action of the court below is assigned for error.

Christian Stoner, the father of the plaintiff, was seized in fee simple of certain real estate in Allegheny county, and died testate on June 22, 1871. By his will probated July 8, 1871, he directed his real estate to be divided into four lots, and he devised to the plaintiff the land in controversy in the following language: “ Lot No. 2 I give and devise to my son Frederick. He to pay to his mother during her natural life sixty dollars per annum .... and if the said Frederick die without issue, and his wife survives him, she shall have the use of the said lot No. 2 with the appurtenances during her natural life, and at her death the said property shall revert to all my surviving heirs.” Lot No. 1 he devised to his wife for life and then absolutely to his daughter, Elizabeth, Lot No. 3 he devised absolutely to his daughter Catharine Swartzwelder and directed her to pay $'500 in cash. Lot No. 4 he devised absolutely to his daughter Mary Mellon, out of which she was to pay her mother during her natural life $40.00 per annum. He bequeathed $2,000 to his daughter Barbara Stotler.

Mary Stoner, the wife of Christian Stoner the testator, sur[161]*161vived her husband and died February 6, 1876. The annuity charged against the plaintiff: in the testator’s will was regularly paid to his mother by the plaintiff and was fully discharged at the date of her death. The plaintiff has had no issue.

The right of the plaintiff to recover depends upon whether under his father’s will he took a fee simple estate in the premises in dispute. If he did, the learned court below was right in entering judgment against the defendant; if he did not take such an estate the action of the court was erroneous, and the judgment must be reversed.

Our first duty is to ascertain the intention of the testator which must be carried out, unless hi so doing it contravenes some established rule of law.

It is undoubtedly true that by virtue of the act of 1833 the first sentence in the devise to Frederick Stoner gives him an estate in fee simple in the land in dispute. Had the testator added nothing to it beyond the description of the property, his son would have taken an indefeasible estate and held the devise by as complete and unassailable title as his sisters took the property devised to them by their father. But it is apparent that the testator did not intend that Frederick should hold his lot by a title unrestricted and clear of conditions. Had such been his intention it could and would have been manifested by using language in creating his estate in the promises similar to that employed in the devises to the daughters of the testator. The reason the testator had for making the distinction between his children is not entirely clear. His son was married when the will was written but had no children. The will is dated June 20, 1871, and was probated July 8,1871. The testator doubtless anticipated the death of his son without children. In that event he desired at the death of his son and that of his wife, that the land devised to the former should be enjoyed by his other children. With this in view and for this purpose he placed the restriction on the devise to his son. It was clearly the testator’s intention that if his son had issue at the latter’s death his title should be indefeasible.

But when did the testator contemplate that such an event would occur ? In a definite or indefinite period ? Before or after his own demise? The language of the will furnishes a solution of the question. The testator says that “ if the said [162]*162Frederick die without issue, and his wife survives him, she shall have the use of said lot No. 2 with the appurtenances during her natural life, and at her death, the said property shall revert to all my surviving heirs.” It must be conceded that under the well settled rules of construction, if the fee given Frederick in the first instance had been followed by the direction that if he died without issue then over to another in fee, that the limitation over would have depended on an indefinite failure of issue and that Frederick would have taken an estate tail. This was so held in Eichelberger v. Barnitz, 9 Watts, 447, which is the leading case on the subject in this state, and the doctrine there enunciated has been followed by this court ever since. But that case lays down with equal authority exceptions to the rule which have, like the rule itself, stood unimpeached as the law of the state since the date of the decision. These exceptions are in the language of Mr. Justice Sergeant, who delivered the opinion, “ either in cases of personal estate, in which the construction is more liberal in favor of executory devises; or when the time at which the devise over is to take effect, is expressly or impliedly limited to a particular period, within a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years after; as where the contingency is if the first taker die without issue before arriving at twenty-one or if he die unmarried and without issue, or if he die without leaving issue behind him, or living at the time of lfis decease, or if the devise over be of a life estate, which implies necessarily that snch devisee over may outlive the first estate.” In all these cases, says the court,the testator has been considered as meaning the failure of issue-within a fixed period, and not an indefinite failure of issue. In Hill v. Hill, 74 Pa. 176, after stating the rule that a devise in fee with a limitation over upon the death of the first taker, leaving no issue, reduces the estate in fee to an estate tail, Mr. Justice Sharswood says: “ On the other hand it is equally clear that if there is anything in the will which indicates an intention of the testator that this word ‘ issue ’ shall not mean ‘ issue definitely ’ but children, then tMs construction does not apply. The rule has been well expressed by Mr. Smith in his valuable essay on Executory Interests, 584: ‘ When the limitation over is to take effect not on an indefinite failure of issue of the prior taker, but on a failure of children only, or on a fail[163]*163ure of issue within a given time; then the limitation over will not raise an estate tail by implication in the prior taker, but he will have a life estate with a limitation over of a springing interest or a fee with a conditional limitation over as the case may be.’ ”

In Christian Stoner’s will the first ulterior devise in default of issue is the life estate to Frederick’s wife who was in esse. As is said by Justice Sergeant in Eichelberger v. Barnitz, supra, this implies necessarily that the devisee over may outlive the first estate. The reason the testator in such cases contemplates a definite failure of issue is stated by Mr. Smith (Executory Interests, 559) to be “ because it is not likely in such case that the testator was contemplating an indefinite failure of issue as that might, and most probably would not happen until many years after the death of the object of the ulterior limitation.” After the life estate given to Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A. 945, 198 Pa. 158, 1901 Pa. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoner-v-wunderlich-pa-1901.