Kemble's Estate

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

These appeals involve the proper construction to be placed on the will, dated April 13, 1891, and a codicil executed in the same month, of William H. Kemble, who died September 16, 1891. The exact terms of so much of the will and codicil as are involved in the present case will be found in the notes of the reporter, published in connection with this opinion. The court below decided that appellants, the widow and the executors of a deceased grandchild of testator, took no interest in a share of income which had been enjoyed by the grandchild during his life, and that such income vested, at the *372death of the grandchild, in his sister as the survivor of a class.

Testator placed his residuary estate in a trust to endure until the death of the survivor of his wife (who has since died), of his children (three in number, all of whom are likewise deceased) and of his grandchildren living at his death (some still survive), at which time the trustees are directed to convey the real estate and assign the personal estate “to such persons as would then take if I had died intestate at said date.” The widow having died, the trust for the income is, in the meantime, to pay to each of his children one-third thereof, “or if any child shall die leaving children [living] at my death to pay said child or children the income the parent would have been entitled to hereunder if he or she were living at the time of the payment.” (The word “living,” bracketed above, does not appear in the will at the place indicated, but it occurs almost immediately thereafter, and the opinion of the court below, from which the above correct outline of the will is taken, states it was conceded by all parties in interest that the insertion of the word as bracketed brings out and rightly expresses the intention of testator.) The codicil states that, if any of testator’s children die, his or her surviving husband or wife are to be paid, for life, one-third of the income bequeathed to the children of such deceased child, and “the remaining two-thirds only [are to] be distributed among my grandchildren” as provided in the will.

One of testator’s children, Clay Kemble, died leaving a widow, who, under the codicil, is admittedly entitled to one-third of his share of income, and two children, William and Florence; William died without issue, but Florence still lives, and the question presents itself whether she is entitled to the income received by her brother, during life, or whether that share is payable to the executors of William, or, his estate having been settled, to the latter’s widow as devisee under his will.

*373The court below concluded that, so far as the gifts of income to children and grandchildren were concerned, the primary intention, evidenced by the will and codicil, was to confine these to two sets of beneficiaries, namely, testator’s own children and, upon their deaths respectively, the share enjoyed by each of them to be paid to their children living at testator’s death, in the manner provided by him and with the usual right of survivor-ship which pertains to members of a class; this conclusion is sustained by the writings in the case.

William H. Kemble evidently anticipated that which subsequently came about, the passing of his children leaving children to survive them; when the will was made, and at his death, five months later, he had living children and grandchildren, who became the beneficiaries of the income from his residuary estate, now enjoyed exclusively by the latter.

The will provides that only the grandchildren who survive their father or mother, as the case may be., shall be entitled to participate in the “quarterly payments” of' income, which are to continue until the death of all the children and the grandchildren living at the time of testator’s death; and it is contended by appellants that, since the will fails to state in terms what, on the death of a grandchild, becomes of the share of income theretofore enjoyed by that beneficiary, relevant rules of construction require the court to hold testator intended to vest this share in the grandchild for the full life, or period, of the trust, so that, on the prior death of such grandchild, it would become payable to the latter’s personal representatives, or, if the beneficiary had previously disposed of the income, or subjected it to the claims of others, then to the assignees or creditors.

The rules invoked by appellants have no application to the present will, because, as found by the auditing judge, the language employed clearly, discloses an intention to confine the payments of income (after the death of testator’s widow, and with the slight exception made by *374the codicil in favor of the surviving spouses of deceased children) to the individuals composing the sets of beneficiaries designated by him, namely, his children and his grandchildren living at the time of any distribution. When carefully read, the words of the residuary devise sufficiently show this intent, and the terms of the codicil reenforce the construction of the will adopted by the learned court below. For instance, as previously pointed out, testator includes as beneficiaries of income only those grandchildren who survive their parent, the child of testator; if he wished to vest the interests of his grandchildren for the entire period of the trust, and thus provide for their respective spouses, why should he have discriminated as between grandchildren who survived and those who might predecease their parent? Then, testator failed altogether to provide for possible grandchildren born after his death; it seems unlikely, with these ignored, that he intended to provide for the husband or wife, heirs, creditors or assigns of grandchildren born in his lifetime. His scheme of distribution also rebuts an inference that he contemplated, in any contingency, strangers to his blood, after the death of a grandchild, becoming distributees of his bounty, since he stipulates that the trustee shall make “even quarterly payments as near as may be” to his wife, children and grandchildren, as they respectively become entitled to their shares of income under the will, and he confines the distribution so far as grandchildren are concerned, not to those born in his lifetime, but impliedly to those so born and still living when the shares of income allotted to them become distributable; for grandchildren living at testator’s death take under the will “the share the parent would have been entitled to thereunder” if he or she had been alive at the time of payment, and the provision is “to pay said child [grandchild] or children [grandchildren] the income in question. A legacy cast in the form of the present testamentary disposition, — a direction to pay at given times to designated classes,— *375while not always conclusive evidence that the payee or payees are intended as the sole beneficiaries, to the exclusion of others claiming through him or them, is a circumstance showing a purpose not, in any manner or degree, to treat the legatee or legatees as sources of succession. Then, again, the will states that, on the death of a child leaving children [living at testator’s death] the latter are to be paid the income the parent would have received if he or she were alive at the time of payment, not that each child of a child shall take share and share alike with his brothers and sisters, but, rather, that such children, as a class, shall take their deceased parent’s share of income; evidently meaning that each grandchild is to take subject to a right of survivorship in the others, or for life only. There is further indication of lack of intent to vest the income in a grandchild for a period beyond his life, in the failure to vest the remainder of the principal of the estate either in grandchildren or in their descendants except as the latter might be testator’s heirs at law at the time of the decease of the last survivor of the children and grandchildren living at his death. Finally, aside from the provisions therein contained for the surviving spouses of his children, the language of the codicil strongly suggests that, after his wife and children, testator had in mind, as distributees of income, grandchildren and grandchildren alone; directing that this income was to “be only distributed among” them, his “grandchildren,” as provided in the will, or, in other words, as members of a class.

When the terms of the will and codicil are considered as a whole, it appears that, after providing an income for his widow, testator’s real interest was centered on his children, and his grandchildren living at his death. His desire was to benefit these persons, known to him (and to a limited extent the surviving spouses of his children), by the income from his residuary estate; his descendants generally, or those then entitled as his heirs under the intestate laws, to recéive the principal at the *376death of the last of these primary beneficiaries. This, the scheme of his will, is expressed with sufficient clearness to be understood without the aid of rules of construction or the citation of authorities. Accordingly, on the death of the widow, the income was payable to two sets of beneficiaries, — children, and grandchildren of testator living at his death who might survive their parents, these latter, in each instance, taking, between or among, them as a class, the share of their deceased parent; such being his manifest purpose, the present distribution must be so confined. Thus, Florence Kemble, appellee, a grandchild of testator, became entitled to the whole share of income of her deceased father, after the death of her brother, and the orphans’ court was right in denying the claims to participate with her in this share made by the executors and the widow of the brother.

While the present will interprets itself without the need of authorities, yet the court below correctly cites, and follows the principle of, Maxwell’s Est., 261 Pa. 140; for the documents before us and the facts at bar more nearly approach the writings and facts involved in that controversy, and those in the cases there followed, than they do those covered by the earlier decisions relied on by appellants. As to testator’s intention to deal with beneficiaries in classes, Maxwell’s Est., supra, (p. 146), is enlightening; see also Johnson’s Est., 276 Pa. 291, 293, 295.

The decree appealed from is affirmed, costs to be paid out of the estate.