Wells v. Ritter

3 Whart. 207
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 10, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Whart. 207 (Wells v. Ritter) 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
Wells v. Ritter, 3 Whart. 207 (Pa. 1838).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The question to be determined here is, whether under the will of Eli Yarnall, and the conveyance from Walker Yarnall, the brother of the testator mentioned in the will, and the children of the testator’s sister Sarah, also mentioned therein, to the plaintiff, he has become invested with a good title in fee to the estate mentioned in, and disposed of by the will. The case has been very well argued by the counsel on both sides; and in such a way as to relieve the Court in a great measure fr°m labour, that *otherwise must have been en-countered in seaching and looking into the cases hitherto decided on this abstruse branch of the law.

First. It has been argued by the counsel for the plaintiff, that Alice the wife of the testator, took an estate tail under the will, according to the rule in Shelly’s case, (1 Co. 66); which is, that “if by any instrument, a freehold be limited to the ancestor for life, and the inheritance to his heirs, either mediately or immediately, the first taker takes the whole estate; for instance, if it be limited to the heirs of his body, he takes a fee tail, if to his heirs, a fee simple.” Prest. on Estates, 265.

Second. Supposing that in this they-are mistaken, and that Alice took only an estate for life, it has been contended then, that the limitation to her issue must be regarded as a contingent remainder, and consequently, the subsequent limitation to the testator’s sister Sarah’s children, and the children of his brother Walker Yarnall, is to be taken as a contingent remainder also, and not an executory devise; and the preceding particular estate [215]*215of freehold which supported it, having expired without Walker Yarnall’s having a child, the remainder of his children being an undivided moiety of the estate, is gone, and has become vested by descent in Walker Yarnall, and the children of the testator’s sister Sarah, as the heirs at law of the testator.

The words of the will, upon which the question arises here are, “ I give and devise to my well beloved wife Alice Yarnall, all my estate situate in the township of Edgmont, for and during her natural life, and to her issue, by me begotten, his or her heirs and assigns forever; but if no heir by me should live to the age of twenty-one years, or marry, my will then is, that my real estate shall be equally divided between my sister Sarah’s children and the children of my brother Walker Yarnall, provided he should have any ; my sister Sarah’s children taking one half, and the children of my brother Walker the other half part.” The will was made on the 27th of August, 1812, and the testator died on the following day. His wife was enciente at and for some time before the making of the will, and gave birth to the child shortly after his death. The child, however, died subsequently, on the 24th of March, 1831, about one year after the death of its mother, under the age of twenty-one years, and without having been married. From the testator’s dying the day after making his will, it is reasonable to conclude, that he made it under the prospect of almost immediate death; and as his wife had been pregnant for some time previously thereto, that he must have known it; and she having no other child by him, that he must have intended to provide for it. But as the child was not actually born then, he could not designate it either by its name or sex. Under these circumstances, it would therefore seem, as if he selected and used the word issue for this purpose; and that, after giving the estate to the mother for life, confident, no doubt, *that she AYOuld support and provide for the child out of it during that period, his great object was to make the child, if it should live until it attained the age of twenty-one years or got married, the absolute owner of the estate in fee. This conclusion would seem to be highly probable, if not irresistible, from the terms of the will and the situation of the testator’s family, at the time of making it. He knew that he had no issue by his wife then actually born, but that she was then with child by him; and believing, as it may reasonably be supposed, that death was waiting at the door, as it were, to take him off, he never could, in making his will, have thought that his wife was ever to have any other issue by him than the child of which she was then enciente. The most rational inference certainly is, that he introduced the word issue into his will in reference to what he then believed was the state of his family; intending [216]*216thereby to designate and provide for the child in ventre sa mere, by limiting the estate in fee to it, after the determination of the life estate given to his wife, subject, however, to be determined by the child’s dying before the age of twenty-one, or marriage.

But it has been objected here, that the situation of the testator’s family at the time of making the will, or other circumstances not appearing on the face of the will itself, are to have no influence upon its construction; it is contended, that it must be interpreted ex viseeribus suis. The late Mr. Justice Duncan, in delivering the opinion of this Court in Swift v. Duffield, (5 Serg. & Rawle, 89,) says, “Where the intention of a testator is ambiguously expressed, the time of making the will; the state of the property; and situation of the family, are often resorted to in aid of its construction.” Lord Talbot, also, in Stapleton v. Colville, (Talb. Ca. 208,) seems to intimate, where the question was, whether the testator intended by his will to charge his debt exclusively on his real estate, that the amounts of the debts, and quantum of the personal estate might be inquired into, by saying, that it might have thrown great light on the matter in that case had it appeared. This, however, is expressly denied by Lord Thurlow, in Ancaster v. Mayer, 1 Bro. Ch. Ca. 466, 467,) by Lord Northington, in Stephenson v. Heathcote, (1 Eden’s Ca. 43); by Lord Alvanley, in Brummel v. Prothero, (3 Ves. 113); by Lord Eldon, in Bootle v. Blundle, (1 Meriv. 216, 217,) and by Lord Chancellor Manners, in Aldridge v. Wallscourt, (1 Ball & Beat. 315). See also Cole v. Rawlinson, (1 Salk. 234, 235,) and O’Brien v. Inchiquin, (Ridg. Ca. 249). Still, however, notwithstanding it seems to be settled by a series of decisions in England,, that the condition of the testator’s estate cannot be inquired into and taken into consideration further than it shall appear from the face of the will itself, in order to determine the construction that shall be put on it, yet the condition of his family may. And Lord Chancellor Manners, accordingly, in Crone v. Odell, (1 Ball. & Beat. 480, 481,) in answer to an argument urged by (with a view to exclude the consideration of the state of the tester’s family,) that the Court could not travel out of the will for that purpose, said, “The contrary has been held to be the law from the time of Wilde’s Case, (6 Co. 16,) to the present time. In Goodinge v. Goodinge, (1 Ves. 231,) the same argument was urged and overruled by Lord Hardwicke; and his opinion upon that point has been confirmed by the uniform decisions of courts of equity ever since.” See also Radcliffe v. Buckley, (10 Ves. 201.) But here it is clear from the will itself, that the word issue is used in the singular number, and cannot be taken as

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Bluebook (online)
3 Whart. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-ritter-pa-1838.