Anderson's Estate

Henderson, J.,

concurring. — These exceptions raise the question, Does this will create a trust? If so, for whom? Unless the widow remarries, there is no gift in remainder, and, hence, no estate to preserve for remaindermen. If it be said the trust is for the widow, there being no spendthrift clause, the trust is dry and the fund should be paid to the widow. Can a trust be set up in favor of the children? Not without rewriting the will. What would be the rights of the children? Could they claim an accounting? What is the *611share of each child? What is the duty of the mother under the alleged trust? These questions must be answered before a trust can be fastened on this fund. Her duty in the forum of her conscience is large, but this would not be sufficient to support a trust. In Pennoek’s Estate, 20 Pa. 268, our Supreme Court definitely refused to follow the doctrine of the Roman law in supporting trusts arising in the conscience'.

It has been suggested that the language of this will should be construed as a trust, because in the third paragraph he expresses the desire that the estate shall be held “intact” for the wife and children, and that the only way of holding it “intact” is by a trust. The purpose of this direction was to assure two-thirds of the estate to the children should the widow remarry. This direction may be satisfied by reducing the fee given to the widow to a defeasible one; and, in this connection, we should remember that this is a gift to a widow — deservedly favored in the law — in lieu of dower, and not to be cut down unless the meaning is clear and indubitable.

But let us assume that the direction to hold the estate “intact” is sufficient to raise up a trust — we are then just where we started. Por whom is the trust? If dry, the fund should be awarded to the widow. The rights of the children are, as we have seen, only enforceable in the forum of the conscience.

Remembering that the earlier parts of the will gave the widow an absolute estate, we cannot say that the use of the word “intact” should be regarded as sufficiently clear and explicit to cut down what had been absolutely given.

Paisley’s Estate, 70 Pa. 153, is in point, and parts of the opinion are illuminating. The essential paragraph in the will in that case was as follows:

“I, Samuel Paisley, do make this my last will and testament. I give and bequeath to my wife, Ellen Everretta, the rents and profits of all my property during her natural life, for her support and the support and education of my children, under the direction of my executors. . . .”

The court below awarded the estate in trust and an appeal to the Supreme Court was sustained, Judge Sharswood saying (inter alia,):

“The object of this devise to her is expressed to be ‘for her support and the support and education of’ his children. We must give the words of the will a reasonable construction. He certainly never could have intended that in the support of herself and the support and education of his children she should be under the direction of his executors. They were not to have rule in the household — to direct how or where she should live — how the children should be fed and clothed — to what schools they should be sent. Undoubtedly he meant that as long as his family continued to live together she should preside as the mistress and have the control of it herself. ... If we read the will as if these words, ‘for her support and for the support and education of my children,’ were in a parenthesis, this construction becomes very evident. These words created no trust, then, either in the widow or the executors for the children, which could give the Orphans’ Court jurisdiction to call them to account or to make a decree in favor of the children for the future administration of the estate. ... If, however, in the will before us, this was a trust for the children, when did it commence? On the children’s attaining majority? The will says nothing about it. It must have been on the death of the testator. Is it conceivable that he meant her to account to each child and show that his or her share had been wholly expended in support and education? What was her share and the share of each child? The decree of the court below assumes that the rents and profits were to be distributed just as if Samuel Paisley had died intestate, or as if the widow had elected against the will to take her dower at common law. But what authority is *612to be found in any expression of the will for any such assumption? Even if we adopt the unreasonable construction that it was the support of the widow and the support and education of the children which were subjected to the direction of the executors, it is evident that it was subjected to their discretion as well as their direction. Such a distribution as that decreed might be most unjust and inequitable. It might leave the widow with all the cares and responsibilities of the household upon her without an adequate support for herself. It may well be doubted whether such a discretion would not be a personal-confidence reposed in the executors, though given to them by that name — which could not be exercised by a stranger to the testator — an administrator de bonis non. However that may be, we think that the words, which expressed the object for which the devise of the entire property was made to the wife for life, meant to repose that discretion in her, did not vest any present interest in the children as cestuis que trust of any particular share or shares, and in that respect the principles of construction adopted in Pennock’s Estate, 20 Pa. 268, are applicable. . . . Here, the main object of the testator was the benefit of his widow, to whom he devises the whole estate during her natural life, with the expression of his confidence that she would apply the rents and profits during that period to her own support and the support and education of his children. Doubtless she will be solemnly bound in f oro conscientim to assist any of them, if they should ever need it, as far as her means will permit. But it would be unreasonable and evidently in contravention of the will of their father to hold that she must pay to them two-thirds of her income without regard to their circumstances or her own comfort. Upon her death, the entire estate will devolve to them under the intestate laws, and for that event they must learn patiently to wait.”

The Paisley will merely gave the widow a life estate, and, hence, the only question was whether she must share it with the children.