Callin Estate

25 Pa. D. & C.2d 376, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 297
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Bucks County
DecidedAugust 4, 1961
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Pa. D. & C.2d 376 (Callin Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callin Estate, 25 Pa. D. & C.2d 376, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 297 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Satterthwaite, J.,

The fundamental and controlling question in determining the proper distribution of the within estate under decedent’s will is the effect to be given to the impracticability of purpose, in fact the impossibility of actually carrying out, of testatrix’ directions respecting a cemetery monument on a family burial lot. If this provision be effective, the net estate will be insufficient for payment of all the legacies under the will, and questions of abatement would be presented. On the other hand, if this part of the will not be performed, the estate would apparently exceed the total of the other bequests therein, resulting in a partial intestacy since there is no residuary clause. The matter is now before the court on exceptions to the report of an auditor appointed to hear evidence and resolve the foregoing problems which arose upon the filing of the accounting of the executrix.

Testatrix, a widow and childless, died November 25, 1955, a resident of Morrisville, this county. Her will, dated February 14, 1945, is most definitely not a model of legal draftsmanship. After directing payment of her debts and funeral expenses and appointing an executrix, she provided therein:

“Enclosed with this will is a picture and Drawing for a Monument to be erected on the Smith-CaJlin Cemetery Lot at Oak Grove Cemetery At Delaware [378]*378Ohio Where All of us Are Burried. This monument To cost 8 Thousand Dollars the size of Dimentions or a size to fit the sum on Money. The present Monument to be sold or turned in as part of the cost of the new one. Also comer stones that are there to be replaced with new ones ten inches square. Head Stones like the ones that are already there are to be placed at the graves of Myself and Husband Clement.”

She then made provisions for a $600 fund to the same cemetery for decoration of graves in the family plot, directed payment of pecuniary legacies, in amounts varying from $50 to $500 each and totaling approximately $3,000, to specified churches, clubs, friends and “children in the neighborhood,” disposed of specific items of personal effects, and concluded with the following clause:

“The House 53 Union St. Morrisville is for Mary Cox Hudler providing she will consent to make it her home to the end of her life, if not the property is to be sold and the money is to be spent for Stained glass windows in the new Presbyterian Church in Morris-ville One to be for the Primary Room A picture of Jesus in ‘Suffer the Little Children To come to me’, in Beautiful collors.”

The picture and drawing of decedent’s planned cemetery monument were not probated with the will as they should have been; they were, however, identified by the executrix as found with the will and received in evidence by the auditor. They depict an ornate, many-tiered, massive stone monument, approximately 13 or 14 feet in overall height, with fluted columns and an elaborate entablature resting thereon, all supported on a base seven by five feet in size. The evidence before the auditor disclosed that it would cost $12,000 to $15,000 to erect such a monument. It also appeared that the burial lot in question, approximately 13 by 14 feet in dimension, in which are in[379]*379terred decedent, her husband, her father and her mother, was intended as a four-grave lot; that each grave had a headstone (decedent herself had erected in her lifetime the headstones contemplated by the above-quoted portion of her will for her husband and herself); that the existing large family monument thereon, four and a half feet long, two and a half feet wide and over five feet high, with the family name “Smith” engraved thereon, as well as a large tree, occupy substantially all of the balance of the lot; that the existing monument would cost about $5,000 to replace, is substantially in keeping with the nature of the surroundings in the Oak Grove Cemetery, and would be worthless if removed, having no “trade-in” value on a new monument; that the approval of the Oak Grove Cemetery authorities under the deed for the plot is requisite for the design of monuments to be placed therein; that said authorities have refused to approve the monument proposed by decedent’s drawing.

The record before the auditor also disclosed that Mary Cox Hudler, the devisee of the Morrisville house and lot mentioned in the will, renounced the devise and that the executrix had sold the same, realizing net proceeds of $7,984.65 therefrom. The auditor’s report further disclosed that there was available for distribution in cash, after deduction of the value of the specific in-kind bequests and the expenses of audit, only $7,447.94 over and above the proceeds of the real estate.

The auditor set aside the full sum of $8,000 for the executrix to erect a “scaled-down” monument after obtaining quotations therefor; he also authorized payment of $35 for the placement of corner stones on the burial lot, $600 for the testamentary grave decoration fund, and $80 for cutting decedent’s date of death on her headstone and the family name “Callin’’ on the [380]*380existing large monument. (No argument has been made with respect to the latter three amounts, although they were, in part, the subjects of exception, and they may therefore be considered approved without further discussion.) The auditor further reasoned that these amounts were preferred and should be paid in full even at the expense of the specific gift of the real estate proceeds for the benefit of the Morrisville Presbyterian Church, although he recognized that the latter was preferred over the general pecuniary legacies. Accordingly, the award in favor of the church was reduced from $7,984.65 to $6,717.59 to make up the deficiency of $1,267.06 by which the net cash personal estate failed to meet the $8,715.00 awarded on account of the cemetery provisions of the will, and the other pecuniary legatees were awarded nothing.

We believe that the auditor’s scheme of distribution was erroneous and that, under the circumstances, the $8,000 bequest for the family monument was ineffective and should have been totally disallowed. Since this disposition of the case makes it unnecessary to do so, we do not decide whether the auditor was correct in holding that this bequest would take priority and would not abate with the other general legacies. He relied upon a dictum in Calvin’s Estate, 18 Dist. R. 809, 815, in this connection, and see also Sock’s Estate, 9 Dist. R. 101,102, where the opinion unnecessarily volunteered a statement involving the analogous problem of abatement of a testamentary fund for care of a burial lot. On the other hand, the dictum expressed in the latter case was specifically repudiated in Stuart’s Estate, 30 Dist. R. 299, which held that such a provision is a legacy subject to abatement as any other legacy. Accord, Ridinger Estate, 3 Fiduc. Rep. 600, 65 Dauph. 281.

We quite agree with the learned auditor that a testamentary direction to erect a cemetery monument is by [381]*381and large a valid and enforceable bequest: Ingles Estate, 76 Pa. 430; Porter’s Estate, 77 Pa. 43; Bainbridge’s Appeal, 97 Pa. 482; Nolan Estate, 352 Pa. 75; Calvin’s Estate, supra; Reimel’s Estate, 10 D. & C. 465. Moreover, the court will not permit the parties beneficially interested in the estate to arrange among themselves to defeat such a provision: Stoffel’s Estate, 295 Pa. 248. But this principle cannot be controlling here for the simple reason that testatrix’ desires just cannot be carried out as she expressed them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dreisbach Estate
121 A.2d 74 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Stoffel's Estate
145 A. 70 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Nolan Estate
41 A.2d 867 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
Ingles's Estate
76 Pa. 430 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1874)
Porter's Estate
77 Pa. 43 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1874)
Bainbridge's Appeal
97 Pa. 482 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Pa. D. & C.2d 376, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callin-estate-paorphctbucks-1961.