Davies' Estate

21 A.2d 517, 146 Pa. Super. 7, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 173
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 30, 1941
DocketAppeal, 17
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 517 (Davies' Estate) 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
Davies' Estate, 21 A.2d 517, 146 Pa. Super. 7, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 173 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This is an appeal from the order of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County removing the administrator of the estate of John R. Davies, Jr., deceased, and allowing the widow’s exemption.

John R. Davies, Jr., a resident of Allegheny County, died intestate March 4, 1938, leaving to survive him a widow, the appellee herein and three minor children. The sole asset of his estate was a piece of land situate in the Township of Mifflin, Allegheny County, consisting of two lots, Nos. 278 and 279 in the Duquesne Annex Plan of Lots, recorded in the Recorder’s Office of Allegheny County, Plan Book Volume 24, page 174. Prior to decedent’s death L. H. Botkin obtained a judgment against him. On April 7, 1937, John P. White, Esq., attorney for Botkin, caused a writ of fieri facias to be issued, and the aforesaid real estate to be levied upon and sold at sheriff sale to John Jonosko and Helen Jonosko. A deed was delivered and recorded in D. B. V. *9 2571, p. 130, June 2, 1937. No writ of scire facias was issued warning the personal representatives of Davies or the executors, as required by the Fiduciaries Act of 1917, June 7, P. L. 447, §15 [i], 20 PS §529.

The widow presented a petition to the court of common pleas alleging that the plaintiffs’ sale was void and asked that the same be set aside and the deed stricken from the record. The rule granted thereon was made absolute on January 22, 1938. On February 2, 1938, she presented to Judge Chalk ant of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County a petition setting forth that the value of the real estate of which decedent died seized did not exceed $500 and asked that it be set aside to her on account of her widow’s exemption as provided in section 12 [¶] of the Fiduciaries Act of 1917, supra, 20 PS §477. The petition was retained by the judge but was not marked “filed” until March 2, 1938, on the date the land was awarded to the widow.

Eobert L. Botkin, one of the executors of the will of L. H. Botkin, deceased, presented his petition as a creditor to the Eegister of Wills on February 10, 1938, for the appointment of an administrator of the estate of John E. Davies, Jr., and prayed that letters be granted to John F. White. The purpose of this application undoubtedly was to comply with the provisions of section 15 [i] of the Act of 1917, supra. Mr. White, as above noted, had represented L. H. Botkin in the execution proceedings. The Eegister of Wills granted the prayer of the petitioner. All that White, as administrator, apparently did was to accept the service of the writ of scire facias, which was issued subsequent to his appointment. He filed no answer thereto nor did he notify the widow that the sole asset of her husband’s estate was levied upon, and that the land was to be resold by the sheriff. It appears that neither the widow, her attorney, nor the court, had knowledge that letters of administration had been granted until after the order of *10 March 2, 1938, allowing the widow’s exemption, had been entered.

On March 10, 1938, the executors of the will of L. H. Botkin, deceased, filed exceptions to the granting of the exemption. Before they were disposed of the Register of Wills on the petition of the widow issued a citation directing John F. White to show cause why the letters of administration granted to him should not be revoked. After an answer was filed thereto the widow presented a petition to the orphans’ court praying that the exceptions filed to her exemption be held in abeyance pending the outcome of the proceeding she instituted to have the letters of administration revoked.

The Register of Wills then certified the proceedings pending before him to the orphans’ court. On February 1, 1940, that court after argument entered a decree refusing to revoke the granting of letters of administration and directed that the record be remitted to the Register of Wills “without prejudice to the rights of the widow and the widow’s claim for exemption.” Exceptions filed thereto were dismissed on March 6, 1940. Two days later, to wit, March 8, the court in banc set aside and struck from the record the decree of March 6. On the same day the court entered a further decree sustaining the exceptions filed by Ruth M. Davies to the order entered February 1,1940, and directed that John F. White, as administrator of the estate of John R. Davies, Jr., be removed and the letters of administration granted to him be revoked, and dismissed the exceptions filed to the allowance of the widow’s exemption. This appeal followed.

We will consider first the appellants’ contention that the court erred in awarding the exemption to the widow as she was guilty of laches in making her claim. Section 12 [a] of the Fiduciaries Act of 1917, supra, 20 PS §471, which gives the right to a widow to claim the exemption, is silent as to the time within which she must make her claim. The principal case on which appellant relies *11 is Clark Estate, 275 Pa. 506, 119 A. 590, wherein Mr. Justice Simpson, speaking for the court, said: “It may now be considered as established by Kern’s App., 120 Pa. 523, and Machemer’s Est., 140 Pa. 544, — the earlier conflicting authorities being overruled therein, — that if there has been no sale of the property allotted to a widow, an award of exemption to her may be set aside, on due application, if she had remarried ‘before her election was made’ or if there was ‘a delay of a year in claiming her exemption.’ ” In that case the widow did not present her claim until five years after the death of the decedent and in the meantime she had remarried.

In Kern’s Estate, supra, decedent died in April 1880. Letters testamentary were issued March 4, 1882 and the widow, who had remarried, did not file her claim for widow’s exemption until September 24, 1883, almost three and one-half years after the testator’s death and almost twenty months after the granting of letters. The court there said p. 530: “While we do not mean to say that she should be allowed so much as one year in which to claim her $300 exemption, the analogy of the statute which subjects her to a compulsory citation to elect as against a will, at the expiration of twelve months from her husband’s death, admonishes us that a delay of a year in claiming her exemption is gross laches, and in itself evidence of a waiver of her right.” (Italics supplied.)

Under the provisions of law now in force the right to elect to take against a will exists for one year after the issuance of letters. See Wills Act of 1917, June 7, P. L. 403, §23 [b], as Anally amended by the Act of 1935, July 8, P. L. 611, §1, 20 PS §262. If section 23 of the Wills Act gives any aid whatever by way of analogy to a proper construction of section 12 [a] of the Fiduciaries Act, it would be favorable to the widow’s contention that she was not guilty of laches in making her claim as her petition was presented before letters of ad *12 ministration had been granted and 39 days after the sheriff’s deed had been set aside.

In Machemer’s Estate, also referred to in the opinion in the Clark case, the decedent died in 1860 and letters testamentary of his estate were not issued until 1887.

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Bluebook (online)
21 A.2d 517, 146 Pa. Super. 7, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-estate-pasuperct-1941.