Bean Estate

62 Pa. D. & C. 463, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 239
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedJanuary 3, 1948
Docketno. 50786
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Pa. D. & C. 463 (Bean Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bean Estate, 62 Pa. D. & C. 463, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 239 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

VAN Roden, P. J.,

specially presiding,

— Decedent was a prominent member of the Montgomery County bar. In the course of his professional duties, he was retained by Estella M. Smith to represent her interest in connection with the estate of Joseph H. Johnson, deceased. On April 8, 1939, while that matter was in progress, Mrs. Smith wrote a letter to decedent, stating as follows:

“At the time of settlement in the Estate of Joseph H. Johnson, deceased, I hereby authorize you to pay out of the funds collected by you, $100.00 to Lawrence High and $500.00 to Katie Gabel.”

On February 16,1940, after Mr. Bean had completed the collection of the distributive share due Mrs. Smith [464]*464from the Johnson estate, she again wrote to Mr. Bean, as follows:

“I hereby authorize you to pay out of the moneys due me in the Estate of Joseph H. Johnson, deceased, the sum of One hundred Dollars, ($100.00), to Lawrence High, and the sum of Five hundred Dollars, ($500.00), to Mrs. Katie Gabel.”

Mr. Bean made payment of the sum of $100 to Lawrence High and received a written release in connection therewith. It appears, however, that Mrs. Gabel was too ill to comply with Mr. Bean’s request that she call at his office and execute a similar release. On January 6, 1941, Mrs. Gabel died, without ever having received the above-mentioned $500.

After the death of Mrs. Gabel, and prior to the death of Mr. Bean, which occurred on September 20, 1943, both Mrs. Smith and the administrator of the estate of Katie S. Gabel, deceased, made demands upon Mr. Bean, each claiming to be .entitled to the said $500.

The executors of the Bean estate have frankly admitted that Mr. Bean was not entitled to the $500 and was merely acting as a stakeholder pending disposition of the rival claims.

At the time of audit in this estate, both claimants appeared and presented testimony in support of their respective contentions.

The first question to be considered is the competency of Mrs. Smith and her husband to testify in this matter. The Act of May 23,1887, P. L. 150, sec. 5 (e), 28 PS §322, provides that no surviving party to a thing or contract, whose interest shall be adverse to the right of the deceased party, shall be a competent witness to any matter occurring before the death of a deceased party. The interest of Mrs. Smith is not antagonistic to the interest of Mr. Bean or his personal representatives since they are not claiming any interest whatsoever in the fund in question. On the other hand, the interest of Mrs. Smith is antagonistic to the claim of [465]*465Mrs. Gabel and her personal representative since both parties are making adverse claims to the same fund. Accordingly, Mrs. Smith was incompetent to testify to any aspect of the transaction with Mrs. Gabel, but was fully competent to testify that, after Mrs. Gabel’s death, she had made demand upon Mr. Bean for the payment of the $500 to herself, and the court will consider only that portion of Mrs. Smith’s testimony which relates to such demand. Where a husband or wife is an incompetent witness under the statute, the other spouse is also incompetent to testify because of the identity of his or her interest with that of the other spouse: Weaver v. Welch, 325 Pa. 571, 578 (1937); Ickler Estate, 34 Del. Co. 538 (1946). Therefore, the consideration of the testimony of Mr. Smith, the husband of claimant, will likewise be limited to matters occurring after the death of Mrs. Gabel.

From the competent evidence submitted at the hearing, particularly the letters written by Mrs. Smith to Mr. Bean and the testimony of Mr. Bean’s former secretary (one of the present accountants), the court is required to determine whether the transaction in question constituted a completed gift, a gratuitous assignment or a mere direction and authorization from Mrs. Smith to her own attorney.

“ 'To constitute a valid gift inter vivos two essential elements must combine: an intention to make the gift then and there, and such an actual or constructive delivery at the same time to the donee as divests the donor of all dominion over the subject, and invests the donee therewith’ ”: Rynier Estate, 347 Pa. 471, 474 (1943). The delivery need not be made directly to the beneficiary, nor is it essential that the donee have knowledge of the transaction at the time of delivery to a third party: Ibid.

Thus, in Wagoner’s Estate, 174 Pa. 558 (1896), a man executed a bond payable to his niece and gave it to a third party to be delivered to her. The court sus[466]*466tained her claim on the bond against her uncle’s estate on the theory that there was a completed gift. Similarly, in Rynier Estate, supra, the court sustained a claim on certain sealed promissory notes which decedent delivered to a third party with instructions to turn same over to the payee after her (the maker’s) death. In both these cases, however, there was actual delivery of the tangible evidence of the chose in action which was the subject matter of the gift. In the instant case, the subject matter of the alleged gift was not a separate chose in action, represented by a note, bond or other specialty, but was merely a limited portion of Mrs. Smith’s claim against Mr. Bean, which said claim was not related to tangible property or to a written instrument representing a particular chose in action but was merely a debt due from Mr. Bean to Mrs. Smith arising from the fact that he had collected money from the Johnson estate on her behalf. He was, therefore, acting as her attorney or agent with respect to the instructions contained in the letters, and such instructions cannot be considered an actual or constructive delivery to Mrs. Gabel or her agent. Thus, at best, the letters written by Mrs. Smith to Mr. Bean constituted merely an assignment of such portion of her claim to Mrs. Gabel rather than a completed gift.

There is, of course, some doubt as to whether the letters written to Mr. Bean by Mrs. Smith actually constitute even a gratuitous assignment rather than being a mere authorization or direction to Mr. Bean, acting as Mrs. Smith’s agent or attorney, with respect to the funds in question. In this respect, the instant situation somewhat resembles that in Wood’s Estate, 243 Pa. 211 (1914). In that case, the distributees under a will empowered and directed the executors and trustees under the will to pay out of the income of the estate belonging to the distributees an annual stated sum to an uncle. Later, the said distributees claimed to be solely entitled to participate in the dis[467]*467tribution of income. The Supreme Court held that this was merely an executory agreement intended to authorize and empower the executors to make certain application of the funds in question but did not constitute an equitable assignment or completed gift to the uncle, and that the executors were not the agents or representatives of the uncle but were the agents of the distributees. The following language from that decision at page 214 is appropriate here:

“. . . It is to be remarked, first, that the agreement as written says nothing in express terms about assigning anything; it is entirely lacking in words which import a transfer of any property.

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Related

Weaver v. Welsh
191 A. 3 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Watkins v. MacPherson
35 A.2d 256 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Rynier Estate
32 A.2d 736 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
William A. Wagoner's Estate
34 A. 114 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Wood's Estate
89 A. 975 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
62 Pa. D. & C. 463, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-estate-paorphctmontgo-1948.