Bahl v. Lambert Farms, Inc.

773 A.2d 1256, 2001 Pa. Super. 125, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 483
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 773 A.2d 1256 (Bahl v. Lambert Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bahl v. Lambert Farms, Inc., 773 A.2d 1256, 2001 Pa. Super. 125, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 483 (Pa. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

TODD, J.:

¶ 1 The matter before us involves an action to partition real estate filed by Appellants John Bahl, Timothy Bahl, William Bahl, Jeanne M. Jennings, Catherine Horton and Theresa Bacon, seeking their father, William J. Bahl’s intestate share of a farm sold to Appellee Lambert Farms, Inc. in 1991. Following trial, and the denial of Appellants’ post trial motions, judgment was entered for Appellee. Upon review, we reverse.

¶2 The relevant factual background is as follows: In 1991, a group of the heirs of William Bahl and his wife, Rose Bahl, sold the family farm in Forks Township, Sullivan County, to Appellee. The farm had been in the Bahl family for many years. William predeceased Rose and after Rose died intestate in 1969, title to the farm vested in their children and grandchildren by virtue of intestate succession pursuant to the statutes governing intestacy in Pennsylvania, 20 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2101-2110. When the farm was sold to Appellee in 1991, the deed to the farm listed the grantors as Geraldine McDonald, Zita Warman, Genevieve Friedah and Kenneth Friedah, her husband, Rosemary Holland and Michael Holland, her husband, Patricia Blasi and Alex Blasi, her husband, Joseph P. Bahl, Jr. and Beverly J. Bahl, his wife. The deed did not list William J. Bahl, Appellants’ father who died in 1980, or any of Appellants, his heirs.1

[1258]*1258¶3 In 1998, Appellants brought an action in partition against Appellee seeking an intestate share of William J. Bahl’s interest in the farm.2 Appellants allege that their father, William J. Bahl, was the last child born to William and Rose Bahl and, therefore, his heirs are entitled to an order of partition for their father’s intestate share of the farm as they were omitted from the deed. The case was tried before the Honorable Brendan J. Vanston, President Judge of the Sullivan County Court of Common Pleas, who entered an Order in favor of Appellee on February 29, 2000. Appellants moved for post-trial relief, which Judge Vanston denied by opinion and order on April 27, 2000. This timely appeal followed.

¶4 Appellants raise only one question for our consideration:

Whether William J. Bahl was the son of Rose and William Bahl, Sr. and, if so, whether the Appellants are entitled to an action in Partition of Real Estate against Appellee for their father’s intestate share of the value of a farm owned by the Appellee.

(Appellants’ Brief, at 4.)

¶ 5 William J. Bahl died in 1980. At the time the partition action was tried before Judge Vanston, the only siblings (children of William and Rose Bahl) who were still alive were Genevieve Friedah and Geraldine McDonald. In support of their Petition, Appellants submitted into evidence numerous documents in support of their position that their father, William J. Bahl, was a son and heir at law of William and Rose Bahl. The record before us contains many documents including letters to William J. Bahl from other family members referring to Rose Bahl as “Mom,” various obituary notices listing William J. Bahl as the sibling of the other children of William and Rose Bahl, report cards for William J. Bahl signed by William Bahl as “parent,” estate distribution notices including William J. Bahl as an heir, documents and correspondence to William J. Bahl containing various references to his position as a sibling of the other children of William and Rose Bahl, and William J. Bahl’s baptismal certificate listing William and Rose Bahl as his parents.

¶ 6 Appellee argues that although the documents offered by Appellants purport to show that William J. Bahl was the natural son of William and Rose Bahl, in actuality, William J. Bahl was the out-of-wedlock son of William and Rose’s daughter, Zita Bahl, who returned home to the farm unmarried at the age of 21 with a newborn infant. Appellee alleges that rather than face the inevitable community criticism of the 1920’s, William and Rose Bahl decided to raise William J. Bahl as their own son, a sibling to the other natural Bahl children, including Zita Bahl.

¶ 7 In support of its position, Appellee offered the deposition testimony of Genevieve Friedah, daughter of William and Rose Bahl and younger sister of Zita Bahl. Friedah, who was 93 years old at the time of her deposition, testified that when she was 17 and living on the family farm, she specifically remembered Zita Bahl returning home with a baby boy after living away. She recalled under oath that her parents, William and Rose, named Zita’s baby William, raised him as their own son, had him baptized as their own, and treated [1259]*1259him as the sibling of their other children in order to avoid embarrassment and community criticism. She further testified that to her knowledge, her parents never formally adopted him as their own child. (N.T. Deposition of Genevieve Friedah, 6/2/98, at 6-10.)

¶ 8 Appellee argued at trial that despite the existence of the documentary evidence that William and Rose Bahl raised William J. Bahl as one of their children to avoid embarrassment, in the face of Genevieve Friedah’s testimony, Appellants failed to prove that William J. Bahl was their natural (or formally adopted) son. Accordingly, Appellee maintains that William J. Bahl’s heirs are not entitled to an intestate share of the family farm sold to Appellee.

¶ 9 The trial court, upon review of the documentary evidence, as well as the deposition testimony of Friedah, denied Appellants’ petition and post-trial motion for relief. In his opinion, Judge Vanston held that Friedah’s testimony of her personal recollections about William J. Bahl’s origins provided more competent and compelling evidence than the documents submitted by Appellants purporting to prove that William J. Bahl was the natural child of William and Rose Bahl. (Trial Court Opinion, 4/26/2000, at 2.)

¶ 10 Our review of the relevant case law in this area reveals that challenges to maternity and paternity for purposes of proving entitlement to inheritance have been relatively uncommon. The vast majority of precedent concerns cases where paternity alone, not paternity and maternity, are challenged, such as where a named father denies paternity in an action by the mother for child support. The present case, in contrast, presents an atypical factual situation where the heirs of a deceased child are attempting to prove that his natural parents were the couple who raised him and claimed him during their lives as their own child.

¶ 11 For guidance, we first look to two decisions of this Court regarding proof of paternity for purposes of intestate succession. In In re Estate of Greenwood, 402 Pa.Super. 536, 587 A.2d 749 (1991), we held that:

the standard of proof required by a child bom out of wedlock to establish a right to intestate succession by, from and through a person alleged to be the father of the claimant rises to a level of “clear and convincing” evidence. 20 Pa. C.S.A. § 2107(c)(3)[.]

Id. at 754 (citing Estate of Hoffman, 320 Pa.Super. 113, 466 A.2d 1087 (1983)). The standard to be applied should be the same to prove paternity or maternity. Accordingly, we hold that Appellants were required to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Rose Bahl, and not Zita Bahl, was William J. Bahl’s mother.

¶ 12 In Estate of Hoffman,

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Bahl v. Lambert Farms, Inc.
773 A.2d 1256 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)

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773 A.2d 1256, 2001 Pa. Super. 125, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bahl-v-lambert-farms-inc-pasuperct-2001.