Waldron v. Wahl

133 A. 252, 286 Pa. 237, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 18, 1926
DocketAppeal, 137
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 133 A. 252 (Waldron v. Wahl) 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
Waldron v. Wahl, 133 A. 252, 286 Pa. 237, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 534 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Sadler,

William S. Waldron, called senior here for convenience, since the plaintiff and appellant in the present proceeding bears the same name, was the owner of a tract of land in Butler County, containing 120 acres. On April 20, 1888, he leased fifty acres to one Phillips for oil and gas purposes. It will be noticed that the contract did not constitute a sale of the minerals in place (Prager’s Est., 74 Pa. Superior Ct. 592), but merely granted the exclusive right to operate for five years, and so long thereafter as found to be profitable. By assignment, this right became vested in the South Penn Oil Company, which continued the working' of wells drilled, removing the product found, and paying the royalties provided for by the contract.

On September 3, 1896, the lessor executed his will by which he devised the farm to his son, U. S. G. Waldron, providing, however, that his widow should have her home with the latter on the premises. By codicil, dated July 10, 1905, a modification was made, and testator then directed, in part, as follows: “I give and devise [the above land] to my son Ulysses S. G. Waldron for and during the term of his natural life and at his death to go to his oldest son and entailed on his children and *240 children’s children. In case said Ulysses 8. G. Waldron dies without leaving any male issue, then the same is to go to my grandson Wm. 8. Waldron [the present plaintiff] and his children’s children.” There follows a provision that if the one first named shall not assume charge of the home property, it is to be taken over and managed by the grandchild referred to. This was evidently done to assure a proper place of residence for the testator’s widow during her lifetime.

To reach a proper solution of the question now presented on appeal, it becomes necessary to first determine the estate of Ulysses as fixed by the codicil. In view of the words used, he was of the belief that an estate tail had been created, and, having survived his father, this became one in fee simple under the Act of April 27,1855, P. L. 368. To bar the entail a deed was made in 1910, as permitted by the Act of January 16, 1799 (3 Sm. L. 338), and the grantee subsequently reconveyed to him. Of course, this was ineffective to enlarge his interest if the estate granted was only a limited one. It will be seen that, in express terms, Ulysses was given the farm for life only, with provision for other disposition of the land in case no male heir should be living at the time of his death. The limitation over was after a definite failure of issue, and the particular intent expressed is not to be defeated by implication of an estate tail. In a will, “dying without issue,” — in the present case, it is only one of possible issue, the male heir (Harris v. Potts, 3 Yeates 141), — standing alone means an indefinite failure of issue. But the construction will always yield to an apparent intent, on the face of the will, that the words were to have a more restricted meaning, and to be applied to descendants of a particular class, or at a particular time, and not to all the descendants of every generation: Beckley v. Riegert, 212 Pa. 91; McDaniel v. McDaniel, 219 Pa. 371.

The Act of July 9, 1897, P. L. 213, subsequently incorporated in section 14 of the Wills Act of June 7,1917, P. *241 L. 403, provides that the words “die without issue,” or words of similar import, shall, in the absence of a contrary intent, be construed to mean a definite, and not an indefinite, failure of issue. The question is, “Did the [testator] contemplate and intend to provide' for the event of [his] children dying after [him], without leaving any issue surviving them at the time of their death, or did [he] merely intend to provide for the contingency of their death in [his] own lifetime”? (Mebus’s Est.,273 Pa. 505, 512.) It is true that, if an absolute estate is given to one, and provision is. then made for the contingency of dying without issue, it will be held that reference was had to death during the lifetime of testator and not thereafter: Seewald’s Est., 281 Pa. 483. But where, as here, a life estate alone is given, and the right of a male heir to take is to be determined by the existence of such a person at the death of the first taker, a limited estate alone will pass: English’s Est., 270 Pa. 1; Lewis v. Link-Belt Co., 222 Pa. 139; Donovan v. Woodworth, 234 Pa. 507. That death during the lifetime of the father was not the intention in the present case is further made evident by the fact that the will provided the son should keep the home for the mother after the decease of the testator, and, by the codicil, which directed that if he failed to maintain the farm for the purpose indicated, the land should pass directly to the grandson as a testamentary trustee. »

Ulysses, now deceased and leaving no child, had but a life estate. Appellant frankly states in his argument that this question has been decided in the same way twice before by the Butler County courts, and, in this proceeding, for the third time, and “is not now in controversy.” As tenant for life, an estate separate and distinct from that of the remainderman existed. There would have been no right on the part of the former to open oil and gas wells, had this not already been done by the testator: Marshall v. Mellon, 179 Pa. 371. Nor could he have leased the interest in the land acquired *242 from the testator for any purpose, which would extend beyond the term of his life, and bind the remainderman (Fee v. Lutz, 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 188), or surrender rights which the latter possessed, without consent.

On June 29,1913, Ulysses made an adjustment and settlement of differences which had arisen between him and the South Penn Oil Company, assignee of the original lease made by Waldron, Sr., in 1888, which corporation was in possession of the land, and operating the wells. This was called a surrender and release of the right to occupy thirty of the fifty acres, covered by the first contract, the remaining portion, on which paying wells were located, being reserved by the lessee. A few months later, he re-leased the thirty acres to Phillips and others, the rights thereunder being subsequently assigned to the defendants in the present proceeding, for fifteen years, and so long as oil and gas were found in paying quantities, in consideration of the payment of certain royalties. The present plaintiff, grandson and remainderman, insists that the life tenant had no power to let for a period beyond his own existence, and, therefore, brought this action to evict those occupying the thirty acres, holding under the grant of Ulysses.

The defendants claimed that the interest acquired by their lessor, by agreement with the South Penn Oil Company, constituted an estate separate from the life interest in all the land, subject to the rights granted by his father in 1888 to the whole fifty acres, and that his acquisition of a portion of the leased property in no way altered his life estate, nor was there any merger into the same of the privileges secured by the agreement of 1913, above referred to. It was, therefore, insisted that the lease of the separately secured right was properly made, and did not terminate with the death of the life tenant, but continued in force so long as its terms were complied with. In the action of ejectment brought by the remainderman, the court gave binding instructions for

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 252, 286 Pa. 237, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldron-v-wahl-pa-1926.