Bowman's Estate

152 A. 38, 301 Pa. 337, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 485
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 1930
DocketAppeal, 176
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 152 A. 38 (Bowman's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman's Estate, 152 A. 38, 301 Pa. 337, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 485 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Sallie Bowman, the widow of Gerson L. Bowman, elected to take against the will of her deceased husband, and claimed a widow’s exemption of $500 and one-third of his estate. The court below found that she had wilfully and maliciously deserted her husband for a period of one year prior to his death, and, by so doing, had forfeited her right to participate in his estate, under sec* tion 6 of the Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 429. The conclusion that she intended wilfully and maliciously to desert could have been predicated on two grounds; the court below, however, thought it necessary to sustain only one.

We discussed in Lodge’s Est., 287 Pa. 184, the intent and purpose of section 6 of the Act of 1917. It is contended by appellant that the separation here was by consent; but, notwithstanding the amicability of the consent, if one of the parties during the period of separation commits an act for which the other party could *340 have procured a divorce, the element of consent thereafter is turned into wilfulness and malice. If, after separation, the wife commits adultery, the separation from that time on becomes desertion within the meaning of the act. It deprives her of all interest in the estate: Lodge’s Estate, supra. The present record shows an adulterous relationship for more than a year prior to the husband’s death. Notwithstanding this fact, if in the meantime the husband condones the offense, the wife would reestablish her right to her share of the estate; but where the condonation is not accompanied by cohabitation and all that the term means, and desertion has continued to the death of the husband, the evidence to prove such condonation should be such as would dearly establish the facts. Under such circumstances, the wife’s testimony evidencing condonation, without corroborating circumstances, would not be sufficient. Here the desertion continued over a period of fourteen years. In all the various places in which claimant lived, her lover accompanied her, and at some places they lived as man and wife. Claimant testified that marital relations were resumed, on one or possibly two occasions, under most remarkable circumstances, although she never returned to her husband. We are not satisfied the wife’s testimony was sufficient to show a condonation of her offense. The testimony as to this feature was characterized by the court below as most improbable. With this we agree. We shall discuss this feature without considering at this time her competence to testify.

Among the items of evidence were the directories of the City of Reading. They showed claimant was listed in the usual way as the wife of Adams, the person accused as her paramour. The same listing occurred during the four years they lived in Reading. The evidence was objected to for the reason that there was nothing to show the authenticity of the directory or the correctness of the record, and, further, that it was not the best evidence in the case. It was not denied that the books were *341 the general directories issued for the city, and claimant admitted that she lived at the address named, with Adams in the same house. The listing standing alone would be of little value as evidence. It alone would not show an adulterous relationship unless perhaps it appeared she knew of her name being so placed; but it would show common repute in the neighborhood and Avould tend to show desertion; these acts are inconsistent Avith an amicable separation. The court below did not base its conclusion on these items of evidence, nor on the record of a divorce proceeding initiated against appellant by the decedent for desertion, though incomplete because of death. The testimony in the present hearing, however, would have supported the libel, and the record was therefore immaterial.

One of the children testified that he saw the hotel register and from it learned his stepmother had registered with Adams, as man and wife, at the Sinking Springs Hotel, that his stepmother had been pointed out by the hotelman as being the “wife” there registered, that he had a conversation with her at that place, asking her to return to and live with his father and she refused. They were at the hotel eleven months. He also testified to the time and manner of the stepmother’s departure, to establish the date of desertion. Another child and other witnesses gave evidence along the same line. Claimant in rebuttal testified in full to matters occurring before the death of her husband, that the separation took place by consent, that her husband visited her frequently thereafter, that they had marital relations, and denied any adultery with Adams or desertion from her husband. Her testimony was all objected to for the reason that she was not a competent witness under the Act of 1887. Where a widow claims against the will of her husband and seeks to establish her right by matters occurring in her husband’s lifetime, she is not a competent witness under the Act of May 23,1887, P. L. 158, section 5, clause e. To make the witness compe *342 tent, all the parties in interest must claim by devolution, in which case the children and the widow would stand on an equal footing; here, however, the widow’s right is fixed by devolution or descent, while the children’s rights are fixed by will or by purchase: Munson v. Crookston, 219 Pa. 419.

The Act of June 11, 1891, P. L. 287, is called on to aid the widow. This act is one that qualified “the surviving party to testify to relevant matters occurring between or in the presence of himself and another person who is a competent witness and has testified against him in reference to such matters”: Krumrine v. Grenoble, 165 Pa. 98, 107. “By the Act of 1891 a surviving party is made competent to testify to any relevant matter which occurred before the death of the other party, if such matter occurred between the party himself and a person who is living and who testifies against him at the trial or if such relevant matter occurred in the presence or hearing of such other living and competent person”: Kauss v. Rohner, 172 Pa. 481, 488. To this must be added the construction that the surviving party is not competent to testify unless the living witness is called (Roth’s Est., 150 Pa. 261; Wright v. Hanna, 210 Pa. 349), and then only to such matters as have been testified to and which it is proposed to contradict. The children testified to a conversation at the hotel; that rendered the wife competent to contradict such testimony, as the matter occurred between herself and them, but it did not render her competent for any other purpose : Phillips’s Est., 271 Pa. 129, 133. The wife would have been competent to rebut statements she is alleged to have made and to testify to any matter which occurred in the presence of the children, but would not be competent to testify to condonation, how the desertion arose, or to other matters which the children have not testified to. “It will be observed that the subject-matter of the proposed contradicting evidence must be something that occurred between the witness and another liv *343 ing competent person, or something that occurred in the presence or hearing of such other living competent person.

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Bluebook (online)
152 A. 38, 301 Pa. 337, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowmans-estate-pa-1930.