Opinion by
Wulliam W. Porter, J.,The will of Michael Snyder provided: “ First, I will and bequeath to my wife, Nancy, all my real and personal property to have and control as she shall think best during her life.”
“ It is also my will and desire that after the death of my wife that my real and personal property shall belong to my grandson, Snyder Brown.”
“ It is also my will and desire that my grandson, Snyder Brown* shall, after the death of my wife, pay to my daughter, Julia. Anne Brown, the sum of $300, to be paid in yearly payments; of $100, without interest, — the payments to commence in one year after the death of my wife.” Then follows a paragraph directing similar payments to be made to Mary Jane Shepard, —the first payment to be made one year from the last payment to Julia Anne Brown ; followed by another paragraph directing similar payments to be made to Leann Glasgow, — the first payment to be made one year from the last payment to Mary Jane Shepard. This is practically the whole will, — there being no appointment of executors. Mrs. Shepard is dead. The legacy to her has not been paid by Snyder Brown. This proceeding is to enforce its payment as a charge upon the land devised to Snyder Brown.
It is not contended that the legacies are made a charge by expressed direction, but, in the absence of expressed intent, by implication from the provision of the will blending the real and personal estate in the gift to Snyder Brown. In McLanahan v. McLanahan, 1 P. & W. 96, it is said : “ It is a principle of English jurisprudence, as well as the unquestioned law of Pennsylvania, that when the real estate is blended by the testator with the personal, the land is charged with the payment of legacies. And the reason assigned is that the whole will may take effect, and all the legacies be paid, which is justly supposed to be the intention of the testator when both funds are put into one.”
The learned judge of the court belpw .was .of opinion that *512this rule of law was only applicable where the blending is in the gift of a residue. In such case the rule has been often applied, but it is not limited to such application. His conclusion is in direct conflict with the case of Tower’s Appropriation, 9 W. & S. 103, in which Mr. Chief Justice Gibson, affirming the rule above quoted, says: “We went a step further in McLanahan v. McLanahan, 1 P. & W. 96, when we inferred a design to charge a particular legacy, from a blending of the real and personal estate in a devise not of the residue, particular parts of the estate being excepted, and this, too, though other legacies were expressly charged. That case has become a rule of property, and it is, therefore, not to be shaken, nor ought there to be a desire to shake it. That the devisee of a residue is to have nothing till the legacies are paid, is certainly a legal inference; but it would seem to follow as naturally from any devise that confounds the land with the personal estate, which is the natural fund.” See also Mellon’s Appeal, 46 Pa. 165, 175; Wertz’s Appeal, 69 Pa. 173, and Davis’s Appeal, 83 Pa. 353; Watters v. Steele, 11 Pa. Superior Ct. 303.
In referring to the case of McLanahan v. McLanahan, the learned judge of the court below suggests that it may be possible that the court there treated the devise as a residue. The plain language of the opinion above quoted refutes this suggestion. It is also suggested that there has been no recently expressed indorsement of the rule. The absence of such judicial reaffirmance does not militate against the existence of the rule. Such a condition would lead rather to the conviction that the soundness, clearness and existence of the rule have been so generally accepted as to deter attack.
We are unable to find anything in the will before us indicating an intent on the part of the testator overruling the legal implication of intent, which made the legacies a charge upon the land, by reason of the blending of the real and personal property. We have found nothing in the cases cited to us, which overthrows thé rule of property, affirmed and reaffirmed by the Supreme Court.
The decree of the court below is reversed, and it is ordered that the record be remitted, in order that the cause be proceeded with pursuant to the views hereinabove expressed.