Judges: PER CURIAM, May 23, 1949:
Filed Date: 4/15/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/9/2017
The facts are stated in the opinion by HUNTER, J., of the court below, SINKLER, P. J., KLEIN, BOLGER, LADNER and HUNTER, JJ., as follows:
The testator died in 1926 and by his will gave the residue of his estate upon the decease of the survivor of his widow and daughter, his daughter having died without issue, "unto the heirs and legal representatives of my brother James Love and my sister Emily B. Stone living at that time."
The testator's daughter, the surviving life tenant, died without issue in 1948.
James Love and Emily B. Stone were deceased at the date of the will, and their "heirs", if determined at the death of the testator, were nine children.
James had three children, of whom two are living, and one died without issue.
Emily had six children, of whom one is living, one died without issue, and four died leaving issue. These issue in the several stirps are thirteen grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren, the children of a deceased grandchild. *Page 107
The Auditing Judge awarded the fund per capita to the three living children of James Love and Emily B. Stone, and excluded the issue of deceased children.
The conclusion of the Auditing Judge was that the gift was to the nine children, subject to the qualification that they be living at the time of the death of the life tenant. The exceptants, who are the issue of deceased children, contend that the "heirs" were not the persons who were heirs at testator's death, but were those who were heirs at the life tenant's death.
There are two statutes which require that "heirs" be determined at the time of distribution, the Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 914,
These Acts do, however, throw light on the problem of a gift to "heirs", because as was said by Mr. Chief Justice MAXEY inLaughlin's Est.,
The rule generally recognized by the courts prior to the death of this testator was that the heirs of a person other than testator must be determined at that person's death, or more exactly, as applied to the facts of this case, at the death of the testator, the named persons having died in testator's lifetime: Milligan's Est.,
The direction of this will is that the heirs be "living at that time", the death of the life tenant. This we are *Page 108 persuaded indicates a gift to a class ascertained at the death of the life tenant, composed of those who answer the description at that time. A contingent gift to a "then living" class of "heirs", "issue", "descendants", or any other class subject to fluctuation, requires the postponement of both vesting and membership.
The appropriate rule is that a legacy to a class, as set forth in Billings's Est.,
In our opinion, the rule that the "heirs" of a person other than testator are those living at such person's death, is overcome by the express direction of the testator that they be "living at that time", the death of the life tenant:Stewardson's Est., 16 Pa. D. C. 195, supra.
We conclude, therefore, that the "heirs" of James Love and Emily B. Stone, entitled under the provisions of the will, are the three children who were living at the death of the life tenant and the living issue of those who predeceased.
The second question is whether the heirs shall be divided into two classes and each class receive one-half of the estate, or whether they shall be treated as one class and each child receive a per capita share, the issue of a deceased child taking the parent's share?
In Lenhart's Est.,
Our testator's will comes within the clearer illustration of the two given above, that of a gift to the "heirs of A and B" which indicates a single class.
There is a further principle that when legatees stand in the same degree of relationship to the testator, the distribution is per capita and not per stirpes. In Scott's Est.,
See also in support of a per capita distribution: Garnier v.Garnier,
In a distribution among "issue" (Mayhew's Est.,
We agree with the Auditing Judge that the distribution is per capita, among the nieces and nephews, but we include among the "heirs" the issue of deceased nieces and nephews who take a deceased parent's share.
The exceptions are sustained, and the adjudication as modified is confirmed absolutely.
Testator's children living at death of life tenant appealed. *Page 110 Decree affirmed on the unanimous opinion of the learned Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County.