dissenting. — I am unable to join with the majority. The intention of the testator is the polar star in the construction of wills: Sarver’s Estate, 324 Pa. 349. Such intent is to be gathered from the whole will: Williamson’s Estate, 302 Pa. 462. Canons of construction cannot defeat clear and unequivocal expressions of intention: Line’s Estate, 221 Pa. 374; Groninger’s Estate, 268 Pa. 184; and Weir’s Estate, 307 Pa. 461.
In my view, reading the will from its four corners, testator did intend that the death of the wife before actual distribution should divest her of the estate. This clear expression of intention overcomes any canon of construction to the contrary. The contest over testator’s estate is not between testator’s widow and his alternate beneficiary, but is between the widow’s testamentary legatee and the testator’s alternative legatee.
What testator clearly contemplated was the possibility of simultaneous deaths of himself and wife, or of his wife’s death either before or after his own. See Kimmey’s Estate, 326 Pa. 33. This is a consideration of testators which is increasingly apparent in wills, and is undoubtedly due to the hazards and speed of modern transportation in the air, on land, and at sea.
The first item of the will bequeaths the residuary estate to the wife absolutely. In the immediate succeeding item testator provides specifically for three divesting contingencies: (1) Prior death of the wife; (2) their simultaneous deaths “or under such circumstances as to make it impossible or impractical to de*162termine who died first” (Kimmey’s Estate, supra), or (3) should the wife die “before the settlement of [his] estate.” It was the last divesting contingency which actually occurred. The widow (who was named executrix) survived the testator by six months; she employed an attorney and commenced her administration of the estate; she died before she had completed her duties and before she could have done so under the statutes and rules of court. There was no actual distribution of the assets, and all the securities of the estate remained in the name of the testator and in the joint safe deposit box where they had always been kept during testator’s lifetime. There is not the slightest indication that there was ever an informal settlement and distribution of the estate. The record discloses, on the contrary, that the ordinary procedure of the settlement of the estate was normally following its usual course, under the direction of the estate’s attorney, when it was interrupted by the death of the executrix.
The legal question thus presented is whether the testator intended that the accident of death before actual distribution should divest the gift to the wife. In the facts of this case, I am of the opinion that this is exactly what the testator did intend. Regarding the will as a whole, testator clearly discloses that, unless his wife came into actual possession and enjoyment of his estate, he desired it to pass to his alternative beneficiary. In my view, every presumption to the contrary is clearly and unequivocally rebutted. I would pass the testator’s own estate to testator’s named beneficiary, rather than to the beneficiary under the wife’s will.
The auditing judge, in his readjudication, ruled that, as the residuary estate had been first bequeathed absolutely to the wife, the divesting contingency in the subsequent item of the will (should the wife die “before the settlement of my estate”) was not sufficiently *163definite to divest the vested estate in the wife. The majority adhere to this view, but I disagree.
Primarily, the action of the majority rests upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Wengerd’s Estate, 143 Pa. 615; of this court in Wilkes’ Estate, 25 D. & C. 228; and of other cited county court decisions, the latest of which is Martin’s Estate, 57 Montg. 352. As an additional weight, the majority relies upon the well-established canon of construction that where an absolute estate is bequeathed it will not be cut down except by clear and unequivocal language, citing Garrett’s Estate, 321 Pa. 74. To my mind, this latter principle has doubtful application to the present facts. It must be conceded, in view of the decisions, that the problem presented is not free from difficulty. In my opinion, the confusion arises in endeavoring to follow the legal reasoning in the Wengerd case, supra, and in attempting to reconcile the much later case of McClure’s Estate, 221 Pa. 556. The basic reasoning in the Wengerd case is that the possible accident of time in actual distribution of an estate, and the opportunity for fraud, either in accelerating or retarding distribution, makes the term “settlement of an estate” so indefinite and uncertain that a prior vesting will not be disturbed. The principle relied upon in support of such reasoning is that there exists a presumption that the legacy was intended to be vested, and it is therefore not lost to the legatee’s estate merely because of the legatee’s death before actual payment and distribution.
The gist of the Wengerd decision may be found on page 621 of the report, where Chief Justice Paxson wrote:
“In considering the nice question whether a legacy is vested or contingent, regard must always be had to the position of the parties. In construing a will, where the bequest is ambiguous, the inclinations of the courts are always towards vesting the legacies: Coggins’ *164App., 124 Pa. 10. The presumption that a legacy was intended to be vested, applies with far greater force, where a testator is making provision for a child or a grandchild, than where the gift is to a stranger or to a collateral relative, as in Haverstick’s App., 103 Pa. 394. It would be straining a point to hold that this testator intended that his grandchild should be deprived of his share, though he should die leaving a child or children, by the mere accident of his death the day before the money was distributed. This would enable an executor, under some circumstances, absolutely to defeat the will of his testator, by withholding or refusing distribution for a certain period. We cannot assume that this testator intended to lodge such a power in the hands of the executor of his will.”
In the Wengerd case the bequest was to grandchildren, coupled with a provision that if any of them should die “before the payment to them of their said share.” The estate of a grandchild so dying was held not to be precluded from receiving such share. As pointed out by the late distinguished John G. Johnson, Esq., in his brief in the McClure case, supra, where a bequest is immediate, and only payment is postponed, the legacy is vested. In the present facts, unlike those in the Wengerd ca’se, any presumption against the operation of a divesting contingency is rebutted and overcome where it is so clearly manifest that testator intended (among other contingencies) to pass the estate to his alternative beneficiary if the wife should happen to die before coming into actual possession of his estate.
The expression “settlement of my estate” does not appear to me as an indefinite or uncertain term. Throughout the cases and text books “settlement of an estate” has a most definite and well-understood meaning. It is the administration of the estate by payment of taxes, debts, and the making of distribution. I do not share the apprehension of the majority *165that the opportunity for exercising fraud renders the term indefinite. The orphans’ court has full jurisdiction to deal with such a situation if it should ever arise. Within its sphere, the orphans’ court is a court of equity and it applies equitable principles: II Hunter’s Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court Commonplace Book 946. One of equity’s maxims most often applied is “Equity looks upon that as done which ought to be done”: Bispham’s Principles of Equity (10th ed.) 75. Irrespective of what a fiduciary may do, or fail to do, the orphans’ court, under proper circumstances, and in equity, can regard an estate as settled depending upon the facts.
Another factual situation remains to be considered. It is true, of course, that under our law an estate can be settled without resort to the orphans’ court. Indeed, family settlements have always been favored by the law: I Remick’s Orphans’ Court Practice 2. Had the wife in this case, as sole beneficiary, evidenced an intention to so dispense with legal formalities, which she might have done by paying all taxes, debts, and charges, and retaining the balance as her own without an accounting, it might well have been argued, and with much force, that the estate had in fact been “settled” within the contemplation of the testator. In other words, under such circumstances, it might be said in truth and in fact that the wife had reduced the estate to actual possession. But, by the wildest stretch of the imagination, no such factual situation exists here. According to the record, statements of counsel, which were manifestly regarded as a stipulation by the auditing judge, reveal that this ill and elderly woman had left the details of settlement to her attorney, who, as above recited, was proceeding with the administration of the estate when his client died. This the auditing judge properly found as a fact in both adjudications.
*166The facts in the McClure case, supra, are very close to those in the present case. There the divesting contingency clause was: “in case [her] nephew should die . . . before my estate is fully settled up by my executor and before the proceeds of my estate shall have been paid over to my nephew . . .” The nephew died, and it was held that no estate had vested in him. The able Judge Gearhart, in Bittner’s Estate, 18 Le-high 191, distinguishes this case from Wengerd’s Estate, supra, upon the ground that the accountant in the McClure case was given five years within which to settle the estate, and hence there was a fixing of the period of distribution with reasonable certainty. I feel that the decision in the Bittner case was correct, but upon a different theory, for therein the beneficiaries used and enjoyed the estate for about five years after the date of death, thereby indicating there had been a family settlement.
To summarize: If testator intended to vest his estate in his wife, but to defer payment until the estate was settled, then the wife’s bequest was not divested because of her death before settlement. In such case the majority is clearly correct. If, however, as I view the case, it was testator’s intention to divest the bequest to the wife in the event that she did not come into actual possession upon the settlement of the estate, then, upon her death before such settlement of the estate, I would send testator’s estate, as he clearly and unequivocally directed, to his alternative beneficiary, not to the wife’s testamentary beneficiary.
I shall not attempt to distinguish all the county court cases cited by the majority. Indeed, I could not. In many of the cited cases there was a vesting, and merely a time fixed for payment — a very different situation than exists here. The writer of this opinion must share full responsibility for the per curiam opinion of this court in Wilkes’ Estate, 25 D. & C. 228. *167However, if I joined in an improper result there, I see no reason to perpetuate what I now regard as error.
I would sustain the exceptions in this case.