Opinion by
This appeal is from a decree of the court below distributing the fund realized from a sale under proceedings in partition. The question to be determined is whether Edna E. Hogg took an estate in fee simple or a defeasible fee in the land, under the devise by her grandmother. The primary devise to the appellant passed an estate in fee simple, under the act of 1833, unless it appear from the other provisions of the will that the testator intended to devise a less estate. The only question is whether such intention appears in the item which follows: “ In case of the death of Edna E. Hogg, without an heir, the one-half interest of Rachael J. Hogg, interest in farm, bequeathed to Edna E. Hogg, goes to R. Treat Hogg and Maggie Keech.” This language would be sufficient to sustain an executory devise, if such was the testator’s intent, but such an intent must appear from the words ; it will not be presumed. “ A fee presumed by the act of 1833, as well as a fee expressly given by. will, can only be defeated by a subsequent provision which shows clearly that the testator intended not to give a fee, though he used language which standing alone would have been effective for that purpose : ” Coles v. Ayres, 156 Pa. 197.
There is no necessity in this case for inquiring whether the testator intended by the devise over to provide for an indefinite or a definite failure of the issue of Edna; the same result must be reached in either case. If it was her intention to provide for an indefinite failure of issue, the consequence was to reduce Edna’s estate in fee devised by the will to an estate tail, enlarged by the Act of April 27, 1855, P. L. 368, into a fee simple : Hill v. Hill, 74 Pa. 173; Hoff’s Estate, 147 Pa. 636; Hackney v. Tracy, 137 Pa. 53; Corrin v. Elliott, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 449.
Should it be held that the devise over was intended to provide for a definite failure of issue, then under the provisions of this will that devise was manifestly substitutionary in its character, and was not intended to operate by way of limitation. The devise then is, in the first instance, to Edna, and in the event of her dying without issue over to alternative beneficiaries. Dying without issue was thus made the contingency upon which the substituted beneficiaries could take. But death when? We seek in vain in this will for anything to indicate an intent adverse to the construction which the law puts upon such a devise, standing alone. Where the gift is immediate and there is nothing to indicate an adverse intent,
The learned court below charged against the share of the appellant certain costs in a former proceeding in partition. The appellant now expresses a willingness to pay all of those costs except $31.40, the amount of costs incurred upon an inquest, which was set aside for irregularities in the manner in which it had been executed. The notes of trial do not indicate that any record was offered in evidence which would have warranted the charging of these costs against the share of the appellant. The notes of the audit, as certified by the learned judge of the court below, indicate that a claim was made and objected to, but they do not show that the record was offered in evidence. The costs objected to, amounting to $31.40, ought not, upon the case as presented, to have been charged against the share of this appellant.
The decree is reversed and the record remitted to the court below, with direction to make distribution in accordance with this opinion.