Daub's Estate

157 A. 908, 305 Pa. 446, 81 A.L.R. 735, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 613
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1931
DocketAppeal, 158
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 157 A. 908 (Daub'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
Daub's Estate, 157 A. 908, 305 Pa. 446, 81 A.L.R. 735, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 613 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

For more than thirty years, Charles C. Daub, this testator, and his brothers, August and Jacob, had been in *449 business together, he having a half interest in the firm and each of the others a quarter interest therein. Their partnership articles provided that upon the death of either of the partners, the others should pay his estate a specified sum in cash, — in the case of this testator, $210,000, — and all the decedent’s interest in the firm’s assets should then vest in the survivors. Whether or not the articles were broad enough to cover the death of the second of the three partners, leaving but one survivor, was not determined by the court below in this proceeding, nor will it be by us; our conclusion, as hereinafter stated, would be the same even though we decided they were not.

On March 22, 1921, Jacob Daub, one of the partners, died, and his personal representatives elected to take the sum he was entitled to under the partnership articles, in securities standing in the name of the firm. These were set apart for the benefit of his estate, but had not been transferred to it on December 14,1922, when the present testator died. At that time the appraised value of the assets, standing in the firm name, was $543,957.88, — of which $101,500 belonged to Jacob’s estate, leaving a net ¡balance of $442,457.88. If the partnership articles did not apply to the situation then existing, testator’s estate was entitled to receive two-thirds thereof, or $294,971.92, less the fees, costs and expenses of settling the partnership, and the depreciation in value possibly and not uncommonly arising from an enforced liquidation. If the partnership articles did then apply, the estate was entitled to receive from August, the surviving partner, the net sum of $210,000 in cash.

By testator’s will, — which specifically refers to the partnership articles, but says nothing regarding the rights of the last survivor of the three partners, — he appointed his two brothers, Jacob and August, as executors and trustees, but the former having predeceased him, the latter was commissioned as sole executor. When the question of the widow’s election came up, it was im *450 portant for the executor to know, in order to advise her properly, whether the estate was entitled to the $210,000 in cash, or to an interest in the net proceeds on the winding-up of the partnership. He therefore laid the matter before the lawyer, — a man of unquestioned integrity,— who had been counsel for the firm and for each of the partners during the thirty years the firm had been in existence, and who had drafted the partnership articles and the will of testator. He advised the executor that testator’s estate was entitled to receive only the $210,000 in cash provided for in those articles, and upon the payment of that sum all the assets of the firm would vest in the sole surviving member thereof. At the trial in this proceeding, the lawyer testified he had so advised the executor. Moreover, this conclusion agreed with what testator himself had repeatedly said after the death of Jacob, was his understanding of the scope of the partnership agreement.

On February 23,1923, which was about two and a half months after the death of testator, his widow elected to take under his will, and signed a formal paper so stating. Three days later, at her residence, she duly acknowledged and delivered it and it was recorded the same day. Whether or not that meeting was the result of previous consultations on the subject, and what, if anything, had theretofore been said regarding the interest of testator’s estate in the partnership assets, does not clearly appear, possibly because of the death of the executor and of the notary public as hereinafter set forth. The widow knew, however, that it was claimed the estate’s interest in the partnership assets was $210,000 in cash, and that, under the will, she was to receive a life interest in $70,000, which was one-third of that sum, instead of an absolute interest in one-third of the estate, as provided by the intestate laws. In point of fact, the only assets of the estate were the contents of her home, which she received under her claim for the widow’s exemption, and the estate’s interest in the partnership. *451 The home itself had belonged to the firm, but it had been conveyed by the partners, through an intermediary, to her and her husband as tenants by the entireties, and on his death vested in her in fee.

About a year after testator’s death, the executor filed his account, charging himself with the $210,000 and the appraised value of the furniture, and claiming credit for the delivery of the furniture to the widow, and for the usual items of expense arising in the settlement of estates. The widow and the three children of testator agreed in writing that the account should be confirmed absolutely, that the $70,000 should be awarded to a trustee for the benefit of the widow for life, with remainder to the children, and that the net balance should be divided between them equally. The will, the partnership articles and the agreement were handed to the auditing judge, and he decreed distribution accordingly.

From then on, the widow, without objection, regularly received the income of the $70,000, until January 31, 1929, more than six years after the death of testator, and nearly five years and eleven months after she had elected to take under his will. She then filed the present petition asking a decree vacating her existing election, and for leave to make a new election to take against the will. At that time, the notary public before whom she had acknowledged her election had been dead for several years, and the executor, the only other person who was present when it was executed, had recently died. A citation was awarded, answers were filed, testimony taken, and the court below granted the prayers of the petition. Testator’s son, who was one of the respondents in the proceeding, then prosecuted this appeal.

The gravamen of her petition is that she had been told by the executor that the value of the estate was $210,000; that she was given no other information in regard thereto, except that it consisted of testator’s interest in the partnership; that the executor “was in duty bound to act and advise [her] to the greatest possible extent”; *452 that because of the close relations between them she did not seelt legal advice until after he died, when, for the first time, she learned that the estate amounted to more than the $210,000, presumptively because its interest in the partnership was claimed to exceed that sum.

The testimony in support of the petition consisted, so far as it was important, in her own statements, which were vague and unsatisfactory, and were difficult to meet because of the death of the executor and the notary public. She admitted that, after her election, and during the executor’s lifetime, she had never asked the executor or anybody else for information regarding the estate, but persisted in the contention that this was because of her great and continued confidence in him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 A. 908, 305 Pa. 446, 81 A.L.R. 735, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daubs-estate-pa-1931.