DocketNumber: Appeal, 127
Judges: Kephart, Schaffer, Maxey, Drew, Linn, Stern, Barnes
Filed Date: 4/21/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued April 21, 1937. We are called upon by the appeal in this proceeding to construe a clause in the will of William M. Lloyd and in doing so to determine whether his son, John E. Lloyd, took a vested estate under it.
The clause in question passed all the testator's estate to a trustee in trust to "pay over the net income thereof unto my beloved wife, Ruth Ann Lloyd, for and during the term of her natural life, . . . and at and after the decease of my said wife, then in trust to be equally divided between my children and the issue of any deceased *Page 232 child as they respectively arrive at the age of twenty-one years, share and share alike, absolutely and in fee, but so, however, that the issue of any such deceased child shall stand in the place of and only take the same share which said decedent would have taken, if living, the income of said respective shares to be paid to said children, or grandchildren, if any, during their respective minorities."
The testator was survived by his widow and two children, John E. Lloyd and William M. Lloyd, Jr. The son, John E. Lloyd, died, having attained the age of twenty-one, during the lifetime of the widow, never having had any issue. The son, William, is living and of age.
John E. Lloyd assigned his interest in the estate to certain banking institutions as collateral security for loans made to him. After the death of the life tenant, at the audit of the father's estate, these banking institutions made claim to one-half of the net estate on the ground that John had a vested interest under his father's will. The son, William, claimed that, as a result of the death of John before the death of his mother, the entire estate vested in him, William. The orphans' court awarded one-half of the fund for distribution to the banking institutions, sustaining their position that John's share was vested. From this determination William M. Lloyd, Jr., appeals.
Appellant bases his contention upon the proposition that there was no specific devise of John's share, that the bequest is to be implied only from the direction to divide after the death of his mother and as John did not survive her and left no issue his interest never vested. To sustain this contention appellant relies largely upon what is said in Smith on Executory Interests Sec. 314: "Where there is no gift but in a direction to pay or transfer or divide among several persons, at a future period; though the future period is annexed to the payment, possession, or enjoyment, yet it is also annexed to the devise or bequest itself. For, in this *Page 233
case, the direction to pay or transfer or divide constitutes the devise or bequest itself; and, therefore, the vesting in interest is postponed, and not merely the vesting in possession or enjoyment." Appellant cited in support of the ruleRosengarten v. Ashton,
As was said by Judge GEST of the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia, whose learning in that branch of the law with which he dealt was second to none, in Buckman's Est., 13 Pa. D. C. 653, 655, "It will, however, readily be perceived from a consideration of the context and of the cases cited by Mr. Smith that the contingency was inferred not merely from the direction to pay or to divide, but upon some language in the wills construed which indicated that the payment was to be made only upon the devisee's attaining a certain age or the like. . . . The above remark of Mr. Smith does not seem to be intended as a general canon of construction. And why should it be? What substantial difference is there between a devise after life estate to the testator's children (which is clearly vested) and a direction that the estate should be divided among them." As long ago as McClure's Appeal,
335, 46 A. 495, where we said: "There is no provision made in the will for the disposition of the interest of any brother or sister who might die prior to the death of the life tenant without leaving a child or children. In such an event, there is no divestiture of the title acquired by the general bequest."
In Alburger's Est. (No. 2),
Jennings's Est.,
Other cases which are precedents for holding that the interest here involved is a vested one are Marshall'sEst.,
The determination of the court below that John took a vested interest is consonant with our decisions.
Decree affirmed at appellant's cost.