Vandergrift Estate
Vandergrift Estate
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
J. J. Vandergrift, a resident of Pittsburgh, died testate on December 26, 1899, survived by his second wife and five children.
" Disposition of most of the present appeals depends, iü large part, on the construction of Article XI which provides, inter alia: “Akticle XI. I will and direct that all- the remainder of the rest and residue of my estate, real,' personal, and mixed, be divided ■ into two parts or portions by my executors, leaving the character of- the property and the amount to be assigned to each portion to the discretion of my executors, and that one portion of such estate be given, transferred, and paid over to James I. Buchanan, my son Samuel H. Yandergrift, my son in law John A. Johnston: and a Trust Company located in the City of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to be selected by my executors, and that the other portion of said estate be given, transferred and paid over to the said James I. Buchanan, my son Samuel H. and my son in law John A. Johnston and another and different Trust Company located in the said City of Pittsburgh to be selected by my executors, each portion
“To my son Samuel H. Vandergrift the one equal fifth part thereof.
“To my son Joseph B. Vandergrift the one equal fifth part thereof.
“To my daughter Kate V. Bingham, the one equal fifth part thereof.
“To my daughter Henrietta V. Johnston the one equal fifth part thereof.
“To my daughter Maggie F. Murphy the one equal fifth part thereof; and upon the death of each of my said sons and daughters, to pay, transfer, deliver and convey the one fifth of the principal of said trust funds or estates freed and discharged from this trust to the child or children of such deceased son or daughter, living at the time of the death of such son or daughter, and the issue, if any, of any deceased child or children. If any of my said sons or daughters shall die leaving but one child to survive him or her, and no issue, of a deceased child, then such child shall receive the whole one fifth of said two trust funds or estates; if any of my said sons or daughters, shall die leaving more than one child to survive him or her, but no issue of a deceased child, then, the said one fifth of said trust funds or estates, shall be divided equally between or among said surviving children share and share alike; if any of my said sons or daughters shall die leaving a child or children and the issue of a deceased child or children*21 surviving him or her, then the said one fifth of said trust funds or estates shall be divided equally among such surviving child or children and the issue of a deceased child or children, the issue of a deceased child, counting as. one in said division and taking the share his, her or their parent would have taken if living.
“If any of my said sons or daughters die either before or after my decease without leaving any child or any issue of a deceased child surviving him or her, then, the income from said share shall be paid to his or her surviving brothers and sisters for and during the natural life of each surviving brother and sister, and, upon the death of any one of said surviving brothers and sisters, the share of the principal of the said trust funds or estates to be paid over to the children and issue of children of such deceased surviving brother or sister shall be proportionately increased, that is to say, if any of my said sons or daughters shall so die without leaving any child, or any issue of a deceased child to survive him or her, then the share of the income to be paid to each of my surviving sons and daughters shall be increased to one fourth, and the said share of the principal of said trust funds or estates to be paid over upon the death of any one of such surviving sons, or daughters, to his or her children, and issue of deceased children shall be increased to one fourth and so on.”
Certain factual background is vital to an understanding of the instant controversy. Kate V. Bingham, a daughter of testator, died April 7, 1900 survived by Helen B. Mercer who is still living. Joseph B. Vandergrift, a son of testator, died May 23, 1915 survived by two sons, J. M. Yandergrift and J. Jay Vandergrift; the former died July 29, 1939
The last surviving child of Vandergrift, Margaret F. Murphy, died July 3, 1959 ■without issue and her death gave rise to the instant controversy.
The Pittsburgh National Bank filed in the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny - County its final account in the trusts set up under Article XI. for Margaret F. Murphy. At the audit three exceptions were filed.to the account)
The auditing judge (Rahauser, J.) dismissed the exceptions filed to the account, determined that no intestacy arose under the trust provisions, sustained the claim of the trustee in bankruptcy to the J. Jay Van-, dergrift share in the estate, dismissed the claim to the J. Jay Vandergrift share in the estate by his former, wife and judgment creditor and directed the distribution of the principal of the trusts “to the children, of the five deceased children of the testator mentioned in Paragraph XI of the Will and to the issue of deceased children of testator’s children, per stirpes”. The court en banc affirmed the conclusions of the auditing judge with one important exception: whereas the auditing judge found that the interests of testator’s various grandchildren and great grandchildren vested on the date of death of Margaret F. Murphy, the court en banc found such interests vested on the date of death of the respective parents of the several grandchildren subject to being divested by the death of Margaret F. Murphy with issue surviving her.
From the decree of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County six appeals were taken.
In Article XI testator created two trusts alike in every respect, except the corporate trustees were to be different. Of the net income from the trusts, “one equal fifth part” was to be paid to each of his five named living children “for and during the natural life of each”. Testator then provided a scheme of distribution of one fifth of the principal of each fund upon the death of each one of his children and such distribution varied according to the descendants which said child dying should then leave: (1) if one child and no issue of a deceased child or children, the one child would take all; (2) if more than one child and no issue of a deceased child or children, then an equal division between such children; (3) if one child or more than one child and issue of a deceased child or children, then, the one fifth share would go to the child or children and the issue of a deceased child or children, the latter taking per stirpes. Up to this point in the will testator’s intent is clear; he directed a distribution along blood lines, required that the takers be alive when his sons or daughters died, provided equality of distribution and a per stirpital distribution for the issue of any deceased grandchild or grandchildren.
Next and most important are the provisions for the contingency which might arise if one of - testator’s children — before or after testator’s death — should die leaving no child nor issue of a deceased child. In such a contingency, the income from such deceased child’s share was to be paid “to his or her surviving brothers and sisters” for life. Testator then provided that “upon the death of any one of said surviving brothers and sisters, the share of the principal of the said trust funds oí* estates to be paid over to the children and issue of children of such deceased surviving brother or sister shall be proportionately increased . . . .” Desirous to
Two questions must be resolved: (1) upon the death of Mrs. Murphy, testator’s last surviving child, did an intestacy occur as to the principal of her trust fund?; (2) if not, does the class of takers include only those who survived Mrs. Murphy?
In resolving these questions certain well established principles of law must be kept in mind: (1) the intent of the maker of this will must be ascertained by a consideration of the entire will, read in the light of the circumstances surrounding the maker when the will was made: Conlin Estate, 388 Pa. 483, 131 A. 2d 117; Beisgen Estate, 387 Pa. 425, 128 A. 2d 52; Weaver Estate, 390 Pa. 128, 134 A. 2d 675; (2) a will must be so construed, if possible, as to give effect to every word employed by the testator and a construction which renders any of the words nugatory and futile must be rejected: Siple v. Greumelli, 357 Pa. 237, 53 A. 2d 607; Carmany Estate, 357 Pa. 296, 53 A. 2d 731; Collins Estate, 393 Pa. 519, 143 A. 2d 45; Hollenbaugh Estate, 402 Pa. 256, 167 A. 2d 270; (3) there is a presumption that: “One who writes a will is presumed to intend to dispose of all his estate and not to die intestate as to any portion thereof [citing cases]. If possible to do so, a will must be construed to avoid an intestacy [citing cases]”: Carmany Estate, supra, 357 Pa. 296, 299, 53 A. 2d 731. See also: Grier Estate, 403 Pa. 517, 170 A. 2d 545; Frambes Estate, 382 Pa. 398, 115 A. 2d 165; Lyle
One thing is self-evident — testator fully recognized that a contingency might arise in which a son or a daughter might survive him leaving neither a child, children nor issue of a deceased child or children, just as Mrs. Murphy did. It so happened that this contingency arose on the death of the last of testator’s children and at a time when all testator’s other children had long since been dead. That testator contemplated that such a contingency might arise on the death of his last surviving child is evident for he stated “If any of my said sons and daughters”, etc. He did not state if “any but the last surviving child die”, etc. — testator’s use of the word “any” included the first to die as well as the last to die.
When. Mrs. Murphy died she had no “surviving” brothers or sisters if the word “surviving” be inter
In Lapsley v. Lapsley, 9 Pa. 130, testator devised certain land among his four sons equally, further providing “ ‘if any of my sons should die without issue, their part or portion shall be divided between the surviving brothers ....’” This Court construed the word “surviving” to mean “other”. The Court quoted (p. 131) with approval the following language in 2 Pow. on Dev. 723: “If . . . property be given to several persons, with a proviso that, in case of the death of any without leaving children at their death, their shares shall go to the survivors, but in the case of the death of any leaving children, then their shares to belong to such children; if one of the devisees die leaving issue, and then another die not leaving children, the share of the latter will go as well'to the surviving objects as to the children of the deceased objects; and, by parity of reasoning, if all the legatees were then dead, leaving children, so that there were in fact no survivors, the children would take the whole”; In Lewis’ Appeal, 18 Pa. 318, testatrix devised certain real estate to a niece
In Fox’s Estate, 222 Pa. 108, 70 A. 954, testator left his residuary estate in trust to pay one quarter of the income to each of his four daughters for life; upon the death of each daughter, one quarter of the principal was to be conveyed to her issue; and if any of his daughters died without leaving issue, the share of the daughter so dying was to be held for the use and benefit of “her surviving sisters” in the same manner as their original shares. Two daughters died with issue and the principal of each such daughter’s original share was distributed to such issue. A third daughter died without issue. The Court held the share of the daughter so dying should be distributed in equal parts between the surviving daughter and the children, per stirpes, of the two daughters who died first. The Court said (p. 113), inter alia: “That the issue “of a sister dying first should ... be cut off from participation in the share of a sister dying subsequently without issue, would be
In Galli’s Estate, 340 Pa. 561, 17 A. 2d 899, parties interested in an estate entered into an agreement whereby the property was placed in trust to pay the income to named nephews and nieces of decedent in equal shares during their lives, with remainders to their children ; if any nephew or niece died without issue in trust “for the surviving nephews and nieces” and their issue on the same terms. Two nephews died leaving children and then another nephew died without issue. Later the other two life tenants died leaving children. This Court held that the children of the two life tenants who predeceased the life tenant who died without issue were entitled to participate in distribution of the principal of the share of the childless life tenant. All of these authorities construed the word “surviving” as “other” in situations closely apposite to the case at bar.
An examination of this will reveals clearly that testator intended an equality of treatment of his children and their children; that the terms of Articles X and XI reveal an intent to restrict so far as possible the distribution of his estate along blood lines; that, by the use of the word “any”, testator intended to include the
Our next inquiry is whether the interests of the grandchildren and great grandchildren of testator in the principal of this trust vested upon the death of their respective parents — children of testator — subject to being divested only if Mrs. Murphy died with issue or whether such interests were contingent, the contingencies being the death of Mrs. Murphy without issue and the survival by the particular grandchild or great grandchildren at the time of Mrs. Murphy’s death. The auditing judge was of the opinion that the class of takers was to be determined as of the date of Mrs. Murphy’s death and that the interest of the takers vested as of that date. The court en banc was of the opinion, relying on Straus Estate, 351 Pa. 136, 40 A. 2d 402, that the interests of the various grandchildren vested on the date of death of the respective parent of the various grandchildren.
In Straus, supra, the testator provided for certain trusts for his children for life, the trusts to end upon the death of each life beneficiary and the principal to be distributed to the life beneficiaries’ living' child or children or the issue of a deceased child. The will further provided that if a life beneficiary died without issue such share should become part of the same trust. This particular item of the will reads as follows: “. . . In Trust, during the lifetime of my said children respectively, so that upon the death of each of my said
We believe that Straus is most apposite to the present situation. From an examination of this will, particularly Article XI, we are of the opinion that those grandchildren and great grandchildren who were alive at the time of the death of their respective parents or grandparent received a vested interest in the one-fifth equal part of the trusts created for Margaret F. Murphy for life, subject to being divested however if at the time of Mrs. Murphy’s death she died with issue. In summary, upon the death of Mrs. Murphy without issue an intestacy did not occur: on the contrary, when Mrs. Murphy’s brothers and sisters died each of the descendants of such brothers and sisters alive at the time of such deaths received a vested interest subject to being divested only if Mrs. Murphy died with issue.
Three of these appeals attack the reasonableness and propriety of the trustee’s counsel fee and the trustee’s commission allowed by the court below and seek to surcharge the trustee for $65,554.48, the amount of a capital gains tax which, it is alleged, the trustee needlessly incurred.
The attack on the $10,000 counsel fee is two-fold: (1) that it is excessive and (2) that counsel’s services
In Good’s Estate, 150 Pa. 307, 310, 24 A. 623, we stated: “The amount of fees to be allowed to counsel, always a subject of delicacy if not difficulty, is one peculiarly within the discretion of the court of first instance.
Initially, it is urged that this $10,000 fee exceeds the Allegheny County minimum fee bill in respect to services rendered by an attorney to a trustee; such fact, however, does not per se make excessive the present counsel fee for that fee bill sets the minimum, not the maximum, fee to be charged and the amount of counsel fees must be based, as always, on the character and extent of the services rendered as well as the responsibility involved. Furthermore, it is contended that some of the services for which counsel has charged were in connection with several proceedings wherein the trustee was named as garnishee and that such services should be charged only against the share of the distributee involved and not against the trust estate. With that contention we disagree. In Kutz v. Nolan, 224 Pa. 262, 265, 266, 73 A. 555, we said: “A garnishee who is a trustee under a valid deed of trust is not a mere stakeholder, nor simply a debtor or one who has in his
Next, the trustee’s $35,000 commission is challenged on the ground that, since the trustee liquidated the
Ordinarily, the request of distributees to receive in kind the assets of a trust or an estate must be honored if the sale of such assets “is not reasonably necessary to pay debts or to make distribution”: Minichello Estate, 368 Pa. 639, 644, 84 A. 2d 511. However, such a rule must yield to the exigencies of the particular situation which exists in the trust or estate. In the instant trust, a very serious question was presented to the trustee in the construction of this will, particularly Article XI; until that question could be determined by the court neither the identity of nor the share of the ultimate distributees of the corpus of that trust should be known. In addition, part, if not all, of the share of one possible distributee might be subject to the claim of his creditors. Faced with this situation, the trustee sought the advice of its counsel.
Lastly, does the interest of J. Jay Vandergrift, vested on the death of Joseph B. Yandergrift, subject to being divested on Mrs. Murphy’s death with issue surviving, go to his former wife, an attaching creditor, or to his trustee in bankruptcy?
We believe the auditing judge in his opinion correctly and adequately resolved this question: “The attachment execution creditor contends that her attachment has priority over the claim of the party in bankruptcy. She contends that her claim as an attachment execution creditor is based on an obligation that is not discharged under Section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act. She contends in addition that the Bankruptcy Act did not contemplate that the proceeding would be open indefinitely and that the proceeding in bankruptcy could not be held open for 22 years, in order to collect, reduce to money, and distribute this estate. She contends also that the valuation of the debtor’s property in the Bankruptcy Act means the amount of property that can be made available for payment of debt within a reasonable period of time from the inception of the bankruptcy proceeding, citing Syracuse Engineering Co. v. Haight, 110 F. 2d 468.
“The Court is of the opinion the case last cited is not applicable here, and that whatever interest J. Jay Yandergrift had in this trust estate passed to his Trustee in Bankruptcy on April 20, 1938. The trustee of this trust estate was properly notified of the interest of the Trustee in Bankruptcy, November 22, 1938. This action was taken prior to any action that was commenced by the attachment execution creditor.
“J. Jay Yandergrift had a transmissible interest in the Trust Estate created under Section XI of the Will
“In Brooke’s Estate, 214 Pa. 46, 63 A. 411 (1906), the testator left his real estate in trust for his daughter, Emeline, for life with remainder to her surviving children and in default of such child or children then to testator’s daughter, Sarah. Sarah predeceased Emeline, leaving Emeline and a brother as her only heirs at law. Emeline had one child who survived Sarah, but predeceased Emeline. The trustee petitioned under the Price Act to sell real estate. Emeline and her brother joined in the petition. The residuary heirs under testator’s will objected to the .sale on the ground that Sarah never took an interest in the real estate because she predeceased Emeline’s child and the remainder fell into the residuary estate. The Court held that Sarah’s remainder may have been technically contingent, but it was nevertheless transmissible and passed to her heirs at law — her sister, Emeline, and her brother. The lower court (affirmed per curiam by the Supreme Court) said at page 48: ‘But the distinction [between contingent and vested subject to being divested] is of little importance, since the chief difference between a vested remainder and one that is contingent is that the latter may be destroyed by determination of the particular estate before the happening of the contingency . . . while a vested remainder would simply be accelerated; and unless the contingency is one which affects the capacity to take, a contingent remainder or Other contingent interest is transmissible, even though not, in the technical sense, vested: Gray on Perpetuities, sec. 118; . . . Upon this subject the law is thus stated by Chancellor Kent: “It is well settled that all contingent interests of inheritance . . . where the person who is to take is certain, are transmissible by descent and are devisable and assignable.” ’
“The interest here of J. Jay Vandergrift being a transmissible interest passed to the Trustee in Bank
“The pertinent part of the opinion is stated on page 372 and page 373 as follows: ‘The life tenant, Arthur G. Dickson, died on March 17, 1957. Samuel Dickson’s testamentary trustees thereafter filed a final account, at the audit of which Arthur’s executor claimed that his estate was entitled to part of the principal by virtue of an intestacy which occurred because five of the seven nieces of testator’s wife who survived the testator predeceased Arthur. The Orphans’ Court dismissed this claim, and correctly held (1) that all seven nieces of testator’s wife who were living at the death of the testator were entitled to take under his will; (2) that there is no intestacy; and (3) that in any event Arthur’s executor had no interest in the estate because of Arthur’s bankruptcy proceeding in 1982.’
“In Dickson Estate, 378 Pa. 48, 105 A. 2d 156, Arthur G. Dickson claimed at the audit of the Fourth Account of the trustee under the will of Samuel Dickson, his father, that he was entitled to four-sevenths of the principal of the trust because an intestacy arose by virtue of a combination of two facts — (1) at 79 years of age and in his physical condition he was unable to have any children or issue, and four of the nieces of his father’s wife who were living at the time of testator’s death had since died. This Court dismissed these contentions and said, inter alia (pages 49, 51) : ‘. . . Dickson no longer has a life estate ....
“ ‘Dickson went into bankruptcy in 1932. The trustee in bankruptcy sold at public auction all the right, title and interest of the bankrupt under the will of his father, Samuel Dickson, including his Ufe estate in the net income therefrom.’
. a) The trustee of- • the ..estate of a'bankrupt and hissuecessor or - successors) if any, upon Ms .or-; their appointment , and .-.qualification, -shall in turn 'be vested by operation .-of law with the title Of the. bankrupt as of- the; date of the filing-of the petition initiating a proceeding: under this title, except insofar as it is-.to property; which:is-.held, to .be exempt* to..all of the.following kinds of property wherever located . ; -(5) property,' including rights of' action, -which prior to the filing of th.e petition ..he -could by .-any- means have transferred, or-which' might have been. levied, upon and sold under, judicial--.process against Mm, or otherwise- seized, impounded or sequestered . .
■. “The- Court is*.- therefore, of the opinion that the claim of the Trustee in Bankruptcy, has priority here, and; that it.-must ;be- satisfied - before; that -, of.- -Marjorie Holmes Vandergrift-, .the attachment execution creditor.’’ ■
Decree affirmed.
By his first marriage, Vandergrift had nine children. Pour of these children predeceased him; of the four children, only one, Benjamin W. ■ Vandergrift, left issue, a daughter — then not less than nine years old — named Henrietta Vandergrift, later Henrietta V. McKay. She was Vandergrift’s only living grandchild when he made his will on December 1, 1898. Of his second marriage, no children were born.
When John M. Vandergrift died he was survived by his second wife, Norma L. Vandergrift who later married one George Dixon. Norma later died and her husband, i.e., the husband of the second wife of J. M. Vandergrift, claims a part of this estate.
In 1928, J. J. Vandergrift and bis wife, Marjorie Holmes .Vandergrift, were divorced; the latter is a judgment creditor and lias issued two foreign' attachments and an attachment execution' upon these judgments totalling $184,584.60, naming as garnishees the trustee of the Jacob Vandergrift estate. -In 1938, j. Jáy Vandergrift went into bankruptcy' and was later discharged. The. trustee in, bankruptcy claims the share of J. Jay Vandergrift, if any, in the Jacob Vandergrift estate.
Dolores S. Kelchner was an adopted child. The court below held she was not entitled to share in this estate; from that ruling no appeal was taken.
These exceptions filed on behalf of Alice V. Gordon and - Helen Mercer, only living grandchildren of testator, questioned the $10,000 fee of trustee’s counsel, the $35,000' commission of the trustee- and sought to surcharge the trustee for $65,000, the- amount of a capital gains tax arising from the post-mortem sale by the trustee of the securities in the trust.
For the sake of convenience we summarize these appeals.
Appeal 121 was taken by Marjorie Holmes Vandergrift; sbe •takes the position that the interest in this trust fund of J. M. Vandergrift was contingent upon his survival of Mrs. Murphy and, since he predeceased her, no interest passed to his estate, but instead the entire one fourth interest went to J. Jay Vandergrift who survived Mrs. Murphy; moreover, since the interest of J. Jay Vandergrift during Mrs. Murphy’s lifetime was contingent it never passed to the trustee in bankruptcy and is now subject to her attachments.
Appeal 129 was taken by the executors of Henrietta V. McKay whose, father predeceased testator. They take the position that, as to the remainder interest in this trust fund,- testator died intestate
Appeal 133 was taken by the executrix of J. Jay Vandergrift. She takes the position that the remainder interest vested at the -time of Mrs. Murphy’s death in the then living grandchildren and the then living issue of testator’s deceased grandchildren and, therefore, in 1938 J. Jay Vandergrift did not have when he became bankrupt such an interest as would pass by operation of law to his trustee in bankruptcy.
Appeal 184 was taken by the administrator of Prances G. Vandergrift, deceased second wife of testator. He takes the position that testator died intestate as to the remainder interest of this fund.
Appeals 131, 138 and 139 were taken by Alice Gordon and Helen Mercer, testator’s only living grandchildren, and Virginia S. Sullivan, a great, great grandchild. In addition to attacking the counsel fee and trustee’s commission and seeking to surcharge the trustee, they take the position that there was no intestacy but that the court en banc erred in not ruling that only those descendants .of the children named in Article XI who were living when Mrs. Murphy died could take the remainder interest.
If -there was an intestacy, the share which would go to the estate of testator’s second wife might have been forfeited -by the pre-marriage settlement referred to in Article III of the will or by the release signed by her on June -4, 1901. By- the same token, if there is an -intestacy, two great grandchildren of testator- — daughters of Henrietta McKay would take, whereas otherwise they would not.
The determination of this question ■ is particularly important -to the.J. M. Vandergrift estate, the J. Jay Vandergrift-estate, Alice Gordon, Helen Mercer and Virginia Sullivan.
See also: Broum’s Estate, 343 Pa. 19, 30, 21 A. 2d 898; Berkowitz’s Estate (No. 2), 344 Pa. 485, 486, 26 A. 2d 295; Ward Estate, 350 Pa. 144, 38 A. 2d 50.
See also: Huffman Estate (No.3), 349 Pa. 59, 64, 36 A. 2d 640,
To this trustee replied that a judicial accounting was necessary.
Counsel was notified by the trustee on October 7, 1959 that distribution of the trust assets would have to be made by the court, ■that it was possible an intestacy might result, that the share of one of the probable distributees had been attached and that the trustee was proceeding' with the liquidation of the investments and preiraring to file an account.
To this the trustee replied that questions of distribution had arisen which must be submitted for court determination and that, under 'the circumstances, the trustee considered it necessary to liquidate the investments and that the trustee was “now proceeding with such liquidation.”
Where a fiduciary acts upon the advice of counsel, such fact is “a factor to be considered in determining good faith, but is not a blanket of immunity in all circumstances”: Borden Trust, 358 Pa. 138, 143, 56 A. 2d 108; Corr Estate, 358 Pa. 591, 600, 58 A. 2d 847. Of: Kohler Estate, 348 Pa. 55, 33 A 2d 920.
Concurring in Part
Concurring-And Dissenting Opinion by
We -have'-repeatedly- said-that' a Court has'no right to rewrite a^ testator’s will. It is not what wé think téstát'óí should' have said, dr" whaf we think he would have-: said if hé had foreseen the present situation, or even what the'Court thinks he meant to say — it is what iS the meaning of his words: Althouse Estate, 404 Pa. 412, 172 A. 2d 146; Cannistra Estate, 384 Pa. 605, 121 A. 2d 157; Sowers Estate, 383 Pa. 566, 119 A. 2d 60; Britt Estate, 369 Pa. 450, 87 A. 2d 243.
Barely will one find a testamentary trust whose dispositive provisions are a:s minutely and aptly drawn.
Just try to substitute the word “other” for the word “surviving”, as the majority opinion advocates, and the result is a conglomeration of meaningless language.
Then there follows the gift which gives rise to the present appeal. Testator provided: “If any of my said sons or daughters [Maggie] die either before or after my . decease without leaving any child or any issue
How can we interpret the word “surviving” in this gift to mean “other” when in this and in every other part of his will testator clearly meant “surviving” when he said “surviving”, and “then living” when he meant “then living”, and “to survive him or her” when he meant “to survive him or her.” Testator used the word “survive” several times, and he used the word “surviving” ten times, and in each instance he clearly and accurately demonstrated that he knew and meant what he said, viz: “survive” meant “survive”, and “surviving” meant “surviving” — it didn’t mean “other”, or anything except “surviving”.
The one contingency which, testator did not foresee and provide for happened, namely, the death of his last surviving child, Maggie, without leaving a child or issue, or even a brother or sister surviving her. To interpret the word “surviving” as “other” is impose sible, unless we ignore of distort his clear language and rewrite his will.
The majority opinion, ignoring the clear and apt language of Vandergrift’s will, gives this trust prin
-The majority invoke the presumption- against' intestacy, but. there is another presumption of equal force and effect,namely; the presumption that an heir is not to be disinherited except- by:plain words or necessary-implication; "and'When'both can apply they offset each other: Conlin Estate, 388 Pa. 48-3, 492, 131 A. 2d 117; Beisgen Estate, 387 Pa. 425, 128 A. 2d 52; Bigony Estate, 397 Pa. 102, 152 A. 2d 901: The truth of'the matter is, ■ irrespective of the aforesaid presumptions,, that nearly everyone abhors an intestacy and conscious-' ly or unconsciously seeks to avoid'it, and this is espe-' dally true where'as here testator ■ undoubtedly wished tb ¿dispose by'■ will of ‘his -entire estate.' But' similar cases freqüéntly arise where" this Court has held that' an' intestacy exists' even though- testator -unquestionably intended to dispose by will'of his entire estate. Many examples ebuld-ber- given, but one or two simple ones will suffice.': A husband with no issue leaves- all-Ms-property- to-his wife, his wife'predeceases-.him; .a' widow leaves everything to her child-or children, they predecease her without leaving-issue ; or a testator-intending to bequeath and-devise his entire estate creates a residuary estate which violates the rule againstperpetuities,' .Or gives his residuary: estate to -charity within 39 days. of -his • death. We cannot, just in - order;
:.... Considering the plain and -unambiguous language of bis entire will, it is clear that in the situation which has arisen testator failed to dispose of this one-fifth ■Share of' his residuary trust estate and consequently as to this share he died intestate and the principal, goes to his next of kin under the intestate law’s.'
With respect to (a) the'counsel fee and (b) the trustee’s .commission and (e)' the claim off the trustee in bankruptcy, I agree with the majority opinion.
Any of Ms said sons or daughters, i.e.
Italics throughout, ours.
Reference
- Cited By
- 56 cases
- Status
- Published