Bryen's Estate

195 A. 17, 328 Pa. 122, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 621
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1937
DocketAppeals, 133 and 136
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 195 A. 17 (Bryen'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
Bryen's Estate, 195 A. 17, 328 Pa. 122, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 621 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

At the request of George J. Bryen his counsel drafted a will. It consisted of three typewritten, unnumbered pages, which were backed and clamped together with brass eyelets, and contained nine clauses. The first clause provided for the payment of debts and funeral expenses, the second directed the payment of $300 to a cemetery association for the upkeep of decedent’s burial lot, the third devised a house and lot to the Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co. in trust for a grandson, the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth each bequeathed $5,000 in trust for a grandchild. The eighth clause extended over from the second to the third page, which contained also the ninth clause giving the residue of the estate to decedent’s children (with the exception of one of them) and appointing the trust company as executor. Then followed the usual testimonium and attestation clauses. The third page is reproduced in the footnote. 1

*124 Upon reading the draft of the will Bryen found that he had overlooked one of his grandchildren, and also that he had neglected to provide that the shares to the children should be charged with such advances as he had made on their behalf. Accordingly he returned the will, unexecuted, to counsel, who unfastened the pages and prepared a new third or last page, which started with the part of the eighth clause carried over from the second page, contained a new ninth clause making a bequest of $5,000 in trust for the grandson who had been forgotten in the first draft, and a tenth clause embodying the original ninth but with an added provision that the shares should be charged with loans advanced during the lifetime of decedent, followed, as before, by the appointment of the executor and the testimonium and attestation clauses. A copy of the new page, as thus prepared, is set forth in the footnote. 2 Counsel backed and *125 bound together with brass eyelets the first, second and new third page, unnumbered, and inserted the original third page loosely between the last of the fastened pages and the backer. The four pages and the backer were then folded in the usual manner and sent to Bryen by mail enclosed in a letter in which counsel wrote:

“Enclosed find will with the additional bequests to your grandson as requested.
“I am returning the sheet taken out so that you may compare it.
“Have the will executed in the presence of two witnesses.” (Italics supplied.)

Three days after receiving this letter with its enclosure Bryen came into the First National Bank of Duquesne, and, in the presence of two employees of the bank, having turned or folded over all the pages but the loose one, signed the latter, and the two clerks subscribed their names as witnesses. Bryen then replaced the enclosure in the envelope in which he had received it, and put it in his safe-deposit box at the bank. He died a few months later, and the four pages, three of *126 them fastened to one another and to the backer, and the fourth, signed but loose, were thereupon offered for probate as decedent’s last will and testament. Three of the children filed a caveat, which was overruled by the register of wills. On appeal, the orphans’ court revoked the probate and set aside the grant of letters testamentary. From that ruling the present appeal of the trust company, as trustee for the grandchildren legatees, was taken.

The question presented is whether an alleged will should be probated when it consists of three pages fastened together and exhibiting complete continuity in expression, but unsigned, and a separate page, signed and witnessed, but not following the last of the bound pages in sequence of thought.

It is long-settled law that testamentary intent may be evidenced by several papers only one of which is “signed at the end thereof,” provided they are connected either physically: Ginder v. Farnum, 10 Pa. 98, or by logical and grammatical sequence, “by their internal sense, by coherence or adaptation of parts”: Wikoff’s Appeal, 15 Pa. 281, 290; Baker’s Appeal, 107 Pa. 381, 392. In the last-named case it was added: “The order of connection . . . must manifestly appear upon the face of the will; it cannot be established by extrinsic proof.” See also Stinson’s Estate, 228 Pa. 475, 479, and Seiter’s Estate, 265 Pa. 202, 206.

In Maginn’s Estate, 278 Pa. 89, the court said (p. 93) through the present Chief Justice: “It is true a will may be written on several detached or loose sheets of paper, and, while there may be confusion in the order of arrangement, if they can be coherently read as a will, that is, contain nothing incongruous or out of harmony in the general conception as a will, or if the several parts suit, fit in and are adaptable as a will, it will be given effect, provided the several pages be connected by their internal sense. Such is the clear intent of Ginder v. Farnum, 10 Pa. 98; Wikoff’s App., 15 Pa. 281, 290; *127 Baker’s App., 107 Pa. 381, 391, and Seiter’s Est., 265 Pa. 202, 206. The persuasive element in all these eases where any doubt existed was material sense, the co-relation of thought, identified and carried through each loose sheet.” The decree of the court below probating the papers in that case having been reversed, a further attempt was made to probate some of the separate papers, but the court again held that these were not sufficiently identified by their internal sense or coherence to constitute a will: Maginn’s Estate, 281 Pa. 514. For the same reason, in Fisher’s Estate, 283 Pa. 282, sheets not fastened together were denied probate.

In the present case, the page containing Bryen’s signature and the attestation of the witnesses was not connected with the bound pages which preceded it, either physically or by internal sense. If it be contended that the will should be considered as consisting only of the three pages clamped together, the answer would be that there would be no signature to it. If it be argued that the will should be accepted as made up of all four pages, the objection would be that the signed last page, which was loose, would not fit in with the page ahead of it by continuity of thought or expression, as required by the authorities cited, being repetitious of some parts and contrary to others, and not starting where the preceding page left off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A. 17, 328 Pa. 122, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryens-estate-pa-1937.