Beck v. Beiter

22 A.2d 90, 146 Pa. Super. 114, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 191
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1941
DocketAppeal, 136
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 90 (Beck v. Beiter) 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
Beck v. Beiter, 22 A.2d 90, 146 Pa. Super. 114, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 191 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

This is a partition proceeding begun by a bill in equity. Some of defendants answered; as to others judgment pro confesso was entered. A decree for partition referred the matter to a master. To the master’s report exceptions were filed by plaintiffs and defendants. Defendants’ exceptions in so far as they related to an accounting for rents were sustained, and the report returned to the master for alteration and correction with respect to such accounting. Exceptions to the master’s supplemental report were dismissed, and the report approved by the court below. Plaintiffs have appealed from the final order.

The facts are not in dispute.

Mary Ann Deppisch died testate on September 11, 1926, seized of the real estate which is the subject of the present proceedings in partition. Surviving her as her heirs at law were her husband, John Deppisch, and the defendants, Margaret Beiter and Mathilda Rooney, sisters, and Mary Beiter Kirk and John Beiter, children of a deceased brother. In her last will and testament, duly probated, she provided for pecuniary legacies of $1,000 each to two churches, and for the erection of a gravestone at a cost of not less than $300. The residue of her estate, real and personal, she devised and bequeathed to her husband who was designated as her executor. Letters testamentary were granted, and on January 6, 1927, John Deppisch, as executor, filed an inventory showing a personal estate of $11. At the same time, and within the statutory period, he filed an election to take against his wife’s will. On August 2, 1927, he paid out of his personal funds $500 to each of the two churches designated in Ms wife’s will as leg *117 atees, and received from them releases of the legacies, which were recorded. On the same day he also paid with his own funds $160.46 for direct and collateral inheritance taxes. On August 8, 1927, he filed his first and final account which was confirmed absolutely, and which showed that he had personally paid certain debts of his deceased wife, and other expenses. No reimbursement was claimed by or decreed to him for these items, or for the legacies and taxes paid by him. Deppisch occupied the premises from the date of the death of his wife until his own death on June 25, ,1933'. By his last will and testament he directed the sale of his real estate and personalty by his executrix, and, after bequeathing certain 'pecuniary legacies, he gave the residue of his estate to his four daughters, Kate Smith, Margaret Peterson, Pauline Beck, and Mary Franz. Pauline Beck was named executrix. She, together with her husband, filed this bill in equity. Subsequently, the executrix was made a party plaintiff.

Plaintiffs’ bill, filed May 8, 1939, alleged, inter alia, that John Deppisch paid the legacies provided for in the will of Mary Ann Deppisch out of his personal funds, and “mistakenly took releases instead of assignments from the legatees,” and that he paid out of his own funds the inheritance taxes. In addition to the prayer for partition, plaintiffs prayed, inter alia, for an acounting for the sums thus paid, the accounted amount to be charged against defendants’ interests in the real estate sought to be partitioned, or the proceeds thereof, and a like amount credited to the beneficiaries under his will, or those entitled to receive his share of the real estate of his deceased wife.

Defendants, in their answer, joined in the prayer for partition, denied that release of the legacies was a mistake, and asserted, inter alia, that no claim was made or suit filed during the lifetime of Deppisch for the payments made by him. Without designating the aver *118 ments as “New Matter,” 1 defendants asserted that “plaintiff, Pauline Beck, and the other ...... heirs to the real estate of said John Deppisch or one or more of them, have collected or received the rent and income of said real estate of the said Mary Ann Deppisch, or have occupied the same, since the death of John Deppisch on June 25,1933, up to the present time and have not paid these defendants any of the rent and income from said real estate or made any accounting thereof, and these defendants now demand such an accounting of said rents from said real estate.” The court entered a decree for partition, and referred the case to a master. The master reported that the property could not be divided without prejudice to or spoiling the whole, valued it at $2,000, and received a bid from Mary Franz at the valuation. The court then directed that a conveyance be made to her.

The master in his interlocutory report found that Deppisch paid the legatees under the will of Mary Ann Deppisch $500 each “for a full release and discharge,” and concluded that the releases were not assignments, and that the amounts paid for the releases and inheritance taxes could not be claimed against her estate. The net proceeds of the sale of the real estate were awarded in equal portions to the heirs of Mary Ann Deppisch and the estate of John Deppisch respectively. Plaintiffs and defendants filed exceptions. The court in banc dismissed plaintiffs’ exceptions; defendants’ exceptions relating to an accounting of rents were sustained. The case was again referred to the master who found in his supplemental report that Pauline Beck, executrix of the estate of John Deppisch, deceased, was in possession of the real estate from July 18, 1933, to September 19, 1939, that she held possession for herself and the other residuary legatees under the will of John *119 Deppisch, and that the heirs of Mary Ann Deppisch were entitled to an accounting of the rents received. He made distribution accordingly. Plaintiffs’ exceptions were dismissed by the court in bane, and the master’s account confirmed absolutely.

The assignments of error raise two questions which are the same as were before the court below: (1) Reimbursement for payment for release of legacies and for payment of inheritance taxes, and (2) rental charge.

Appellants’ argument is, in effect, that the estate of John Deppisch is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the legatees under the will of Mary Ann Deppisch, as Deppisch paid these legacies and the inheritance taxes assessed thereon out of his own funds. We do not agree. So far as the record discloses he voluntarily made these payments. When he elected to take against his wife’s will he became entitled to one-half of her estate as in cases of intestacy. Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, §23 (a), 20 PS §261; Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 429, §2 (a), as amended, 20 PS §11; Mitchell’s Estate, 79 Pa. Superior Ct. 208, 209. As the rights of the legatees under the will were subject to the right of the surviving spouse to take against the will (Cramm’s Estate, 127 Pa. Superior Ct. 446, 452, 193 A. 135, affirmed, 329 Pa. 528, 198 A. 653; Lonergan’s Estate, 303 Pa. 142, 146, 154 A. 387), the interest that Deppisch received could not be affected by the bequests of the pecuniary legacies to the two churches, which were charged upon, ,and payable out of, the real estate descending to defendants, collateral heirs, as the result of the election of Deppisch to take against the will (Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, ,§17, 20 PS §241; Forsyth’s Estate, 335 Pa. 281, 6 A. 2d 817).

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 90, 146 Pa. Super. 114, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-beiter-pasuperct-1941.