DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 73
Citation Numbers: 272 Pa. 135, 116 A. 107, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 789
Judges: Frazer, Kepiiart, Moschzisker, Sadler, Schaefer, Walling
Filed Date: 1/3/1922
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
Almatia L. Reel died possessed of a small amount of personalty and encumbered real estate. By her will she
The appellant had a claim, the justice of which does not seem to be disputed. It was presented at the audit of the first account of the executors, and allowed by the orphans’ court. No steps were taken, however, at any time to secure and maintain a lien on the decedent’s real estate, it being apparently assumed that the will worked a conversion, and that the proceeds of the sale of the testatrix’s land would be considered personalty. Subsequently, the property was disposed of, and the sum received was brought before the court for distribution. Clearly, the debt is not payable therefrom unless there was a conversion, as first indicated by the auditing judge. Though the orphans’ court had authority to adjudicate what sums were due by the decedent, and to order the land sold for the payment of debts, yet an award by it will not obviate the necessity of complying with the conditions fixed by statute, if the creditor is to share in the proceeds of the realty. Reference need be made only to the recent discussion of this proposition in Kirk v. Van Horn, 265 Pa. 549, 555.
The right of the appellant must rest therefore on the determination of the character of the fund for distribution. Upon reconsideration, the orphans’ court found that no conversion was worked, and that the proceeds of the sale were in effect realty, with the result that cred
As was said in Hunt’s and Lehman’s Appeals, 105 Pa. 128, 141, and has been repeated frequently, there must be either, “1st, a positive direction to sell; or, 2d, an absolute necessity to sell in order to execute the will; or, 3d, such a blending of real and personal estate by the testator in his will as to clearly show that he intended to create a fund out of both real and personal estate, and to bequeath the said fund as money.”
In the present case, there is no positive direction to sell, nor is there even a power of sale for the payment of debts, which, in itself, would be insufficient to work a conversion: Davidson v. Bright, 267 Pa. 580. We find no discretion lodged in any one to dispose of the realty: even this would not be enough: Chamberlain’s Est., 257 Pa. 113. The only theory on which the change into personalty could be sustained would rest on an absolute necessity to sell for the purpose of paying debts and legacies. It is argued that, in view of the small amount of personalty, the testatrix must have been conscious of the fact that the sale of her lands would be required; from this, an intention that this be done is inferred. “The question of conversion is to be determined from the will itself, and is not affected by the accidental fact that the personal estate may prove insufficient for the payment of the legacies”: Chamberlain’s Est., supra. The necessity must have been contemplated in order that the scheme of the will could be carried out, and not be merely a necessity as a matter of fact arising out of the actual circumstances of the estate after death.
An examination of the will before us does not justify the conclusion that the testatrix had in mind the disposal of her realty. On the contrary, it was her purpose that it be conserved for memorial purposes. She may have believed that the residuary legatee would pay the
This case is not ruled by Vanuxem’s App., 212 Pa. 315; Severns’s Est., 211 Pa. 65, or Keim’s Est., 201 Pa. 609, cited by appellant, where directions to sell appear, and such action became necessary for the purpose of distribution; but by the principles enunciated in Chamberlain’s Est., supra, and Davidson v. Bright, supra. No conversion was worked, and the fund in hand was properly distributed to those creditors who had secured a lien upon the land, and the legatees whose claims were a charge thereon.
The assignments of error are overruled, and the decree of the orphans’ court is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.