District of Columbia's Appeal

21 A.2d 883, 343 Pa. 65, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 571
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 1941
DocketAppeals, 82, 120, 121 and 150
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 883 (District of Columbia's Appeal) 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
District of Columbia's Appeal, 21 A.2d 883, 343 Pa. 65, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 571 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Parker,

Helen Marie Fink, of Washington, D. C., on April 10, 1929, delivered certain securities to the Girard Trust Company under a deed of trust in which she provided for the payment of the net income of the trust to herself for life and of the corpus after her death in accordance *67 with her will or, in case of intestacy, “to be paid over and distributed in accordance with the Intestate Laws of the District of Columbia.”

While at sea on a voyage from New York to California, Miss Fink disappeared, having been last seen alive on April 2,1930. The following day her cabin door was found locked on the inside and when the room was broken into, from its condition it was inferred that she had cast herself through the porthole into the sea and perished. She did not leave a will. The trustee having filed a final account, a fund of approximately $75,000 awaits distribution.

The problem presented to the auditor and court below was to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to identify any persons as her next of kin. Three sets of heirs claimed the fund: (1) the Fink claimants, surviving brothers and sister of John J. Fink, who claim that Helen Marie Fink was the natural and legitimate child of John J. Fink and Cora Fink, his wife, both deceased; (2) the Weis-Leahy claimants, consisting of William Weis who claims the fund as the father of Helen Márie Fink, and heirs of Helen Marie Leahy Weis (called Nellie), the wife of William Weis; 1 and (3) the King claimants, the heirs and next of kin of one Carrie B. King, who claim that Helen Marie Fink was Carrie King’s illegitimate daughter. If all these claimants fail to establish their kinship the fund goes to the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to use for the benefit of the poor, under the intestate laws of that District.

The court below referred the matters in controversy to an auditor who made seven different reports. Several of these dealt with important matters not now in controversy so that it is necessary to refer only to the third and seventh reports of the auditor. In his third report *68 the auditor found as a fact that Helen, or Ellen, or Nellie Marie Leahy Weis, was the mother of Helen Marie Fink, the deceased, and that William Weis, the lawful husband of Nellie, was the father, and sustained the claim of William Weis and the Leahy heirs. After more reports, the testimony of Grace Leahy, an alleged aunt of the decedent, was added to the record, and with that additional information the auditor filed his seventh report in which he reversed his former finding and found as a fact that Helen Marie Fink was not the natural child of Nellie M. Weis, denied the claim of the Fink heirs and the King heirs, and directed distribution to the District of Columbia in the absence of known heirs or next of kin.

On exceptions, the Court of Common Pleas No. 4, of Philadelphia, in an opinion by its experienced and able President Judge, overruled the auditor, sustained the exceptions filed on behalf of the Fink claimants, and awarded the fund to them.

In view of the fact that the auditor and the court below rejected the claims of the King heirs and the Weis-Leahy heirs, we will confine our attention for the present to a consideration of the claim of the Fink heirs.

Helen Fink during her lifetime and all the claimants since her death have made diligent and persistent efforts without success to find a record of the birth of Helen Marie Fink, or other direct proof of the circumstances of her birth. A baptismal certificate from St. Stephen’s Church in Washington was introduced into evidence. It showed that she was baptized October 10, 1894, as the child of John and Cora Fink. It also recites that she was born May 4,1894. The witness for the Finks who claims to have seen Helen at the earliest date was William Fink, a brother of John Fink. He testified that at the request of his brother John he had gone from New York City to Jersey City in the fall or spring thirty-eight years before the date at which he was testifying (which would be 1893) and there found Mrs. Fink in bed with a baby a month or less old. He further testified that he had seen *69 this child, Helen Fink, every few months until she was seventeen years of age. Henry Murdoch, formerly secretary to John Fink and a member of the Fink household for two or more years, testified that in 1892 or 1893, when the Finks returned from one of Fink’s business trips, they had a very young baby with them and that he thought before they left on that trip that Mrs. Fink was pregnant. The child became very ill when it was about three months old and Murdoch called a priest named Father Gloyd from St. Stephen’s Church, and the child was baptized Helen, with Murdoch and the child’s nurse acting as sponsors.

One other witness called by the Fink claimants was J ohn Wooster, a fireman on duty near the Fink residence from the fall of 1893 to July, 1894. He said that he had become acquainted with J ohn Fink in the fall of 1893 and occasionally visited the Fink home, that he distinctly remembered that there was a baby in the house Christmas, 1893; and, further, that he had never heard of any death in the family. His testimony, taken in connection with other evidence to which we will refer, is in fact against the Fink claim since it indicates that the baby he was referring to was Cora A. Fink, as to whom more will later appear.

The testimony of the Finks showed that John J. Fink and Ida Corinne Moore were united in marriage by the pastor of the Seventh Baptist Church of Baltimore on the 28th day of February, 1891. It was essential, as will later appear, that these claimants should show the date of Helen’s birth. The evidence suggests no other date than May 4 or 5, 1894. Helen at all times recognized May 5, 1894, as her birthday, and her own declarations were evidence of that fact: Simon v. N. 7. Life Ins. Co., 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 408. Their testimony was to the effect that Helen remained in the household of John and Cora [Ida Corinne] Fink until 1901 when the wife, Cora Fink, died. From that time until 1910, Helen lived with John Fink and his sister, Rida Fink. In 1910 she ob: *70 tained employment and went to live at St. Catherine’s, an institution for working girls in Washington. She remained there until 1917 and from that time until her death lived at various places not here significant. John Fink died January 9,1919.

Although Murdoch was called by the Finks, his testimony not only failed to support their claim but tended strongly to rebut it when taken in connection with baptismal records and his failure to explain contradictions raised thereby and discrepancies in his own testimony. There was the baptismal certificate of Helen Marie Fink, to which we have referred, and there was also produced a record of the baptism of one Cora Arinthia Katherine Fink, child of John j. Fink and Ida C. Moore, baptized February 13, 1891, “at home in danger of death”, by Rev. John Gloyd, with Henry Murdoch as sponsor. There was also placed in evidence a transcript of the certificate of death of this same Cora Fink, showing that she died February 13, 1891, at the age of three months and twenty-one days.

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21 A.2d 883, 343 Pa. 65, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbias-appeal-pa-1941.