Estate of Grossman

406 A.2d 726, 486 Pa. 460, 1979 Pa. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 1979
Docket515
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 406 A.2d 726 (Estate of Grossman) 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
Estate of Grossman, 406 A.2d 726, 486 Pa. 460, 1979 Pa. LEXIS 681 (Pa. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ROBERTS, Justice.

Herman Grossman died on November 9, 1973, survived by six children, Joseph Grossman, Max Grossman, Doris Rose-man, Burton Grossman, Thelma Selet, and Rhoda Kesselman. Decedent’s will, dated October 19, 1972, directed payment of all testator’s debts, funeral expenses, and all inheritance taxes. The will provided that of the residue of decedent’s estate, his son Joseph was to receive fifty percent, his daughter Doris was to receive fifteen percent, his grandchildren Margo and Duffy Grossman - were each to receive twelve and a half percent, and his brother Max Grossman was to receive ten percent. Decedent’s 1972 will was admitted to probate and, on October 22, 1974, letters testamentary were issued to the executor of the estate, his son, Joseph Grossman.

Decedent’s disinherited children (Max, Rhoda, Thelma and Burton) objected to the first and final accounting of the estate. Rhoda claimed a one-half share of her father’s net estate plus executor’s commission. 1 In the alternative, Rho *463 da claimed she was entitled to recover from the estate damages in quantum meruit for her expenditures and services with respect to certain of decedent’s property. At the hearing before the auditing judge, Rhoda sought to establish her entitlement to a portion of the estate by proving that she and her father had entered into an oral agreement by which he agreed to execute a will leaving one-half of his estate to Rhoda and appointing her executrix, and that her father breached the agreement. 2 The auditing judge ruled that the testimony of both Rhoda and her husband, Stanley Kesselman, was incompetent under the Pennsylvania Dead Man’s Statute, Act of May 23, 1887, P.L. 158, § 5(e), 28 P.S. § 322 (1958). 3 The court, therefore, refused to permit Rhoda or Stanley to testify in support of the claim, and rejected Rhoda’s claim because the evidence of the agreement was not clear and convincing.. By decree nisi, the auditing judge dismissed the claims of all the contestants and confirmed the account. 4

Contestants excepted to the decree nisi arguing inter alia that the Dead Man’s Statute was improperly applied by the auditing judge to bar the testimony of claimant’s husband, Stanley Kesselman. The orphans’ court en banc dismissed appellants’ exceptions and confirmed the decree nisi. On appeal- to this Court appellants again contend that the orphans’ court erred when it ruled that Stanley Kesselman’s testimony was incompetent solely because he was the spouse *464 of a party whose interest was adverse to that of a decedent. 5 We agree that the orphans’ court erred and hold that the testimony of Stanley Kesselman may not be excluded under the Dead Man’s Statute solely on the basis of his marital status. 6

I. The Language of the Dead Man's Statute Does Not Require Exclusion of the Testimony of the Spouse of an Adverse Interested Party

At common law the testimony of parties to a lawsuit and any other person who had a direct pecuniary or proprietary interest in its outcome was considered incompetent. See *465 generally, Wigmore, Evidence § 575. In England, the disqualification of the testimony of interested witnesses was removed by Parliament in 1834. Lord Denman’s Act, 6 & 7 Victoria, ch. 85. And, in 1851, the testimony of parties to the lawsuit was rendered competent by Lord Brougham’s Act, 14 & 15 Victoria, ch. 99. The reform movement begun in England quickly spread to the United States and the Pennsylvania Legislature removed the broad common law testimonial disqualification of interested persons by the Act of April 15, 1869, P.L. 30, § 1. Yet, like other American jurisdictions, the Pennsylvania Legislature carved an exception out of the broad enabling legislation. That exception is commonly known as the Dead Man’s Statute. 7

In its most recent form, Pennsylvania’s Dead Man’s Statute provides:

“Except as otherwise provided in this subchapter, in any civil action or proceeding, where any party to a thing or contract in action is dead, or has been adjudged a lunatic and his right thereto or therein has passed, either by his own act or by the act of the law, to a party on the record who represents his interest in the subject in controversy, neither any surviving or remaining party to such thing or contract, nor any other person whose interest shall be adverse to the said right of such deceased or lunatic party, shall be a competent witness to any matter occurring before the death of said party or the adjudication of his lunacy, unless the action or proceeding is by or against the surviving or remaining partners, joint promisors or joint promisees of such deceased or limatic party, and the matter occurred between such surviving or remaining partners, joint promisors or joint promisees and the other party on the record, or between such surviving or remaining partners, promisors or promisees and the person having an interest adverse to them, in which case any person *466 may testify to such matters; or, unless the action is a possessory action against several defendants, and one or more of said defendants disclaims of record any title to the premises in controversy at the time the suit was brought and also pays into court the costs accrued at the time of his disclaimer, or gives security therefor as the court in its discretion may direct, in which case such disclaiming defendant shall be a fully competent witness; or, unless the issue or inquiry be devisavit vel non, or be any other issue or inquiry respecting the property of a deceased owner, and the controversy is between parties respectively claiming such property by devolution on the death of such owner, in which case all persons shall be fully competent witnesses.” . ... .......

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5930.

On its face, the Pennsylvania Dead Man’s Statute excludes only the testimony of interested parties to a transaction with a deceased. The statutory language does not exclude the testimony of the spouse of an incompetent party on the basis of martial status alone and does not refer to spouses of disqualified parties at all. Nonetheless, only two years after passage of the Act of 1887, in Bitner v. Boone, 128 Pa. 567, 18 A. 404 (1889), the statute was construed to bar the testimony of the spouse of a disqualified party. A decade before the turn of this century, the Bitner court reasoned:

“If the husband must be excluded on account of interest, so also must his wife be excluded on account of her unity of interest with him. Although each may not be said to have any direct interest during coverture, she has, nevertheless, an indirect interest derivative from her husband, and so presently joined with his, as at all periods in the history of the law placed her in the attitude of an interested person, in cases where her husband’s rights came into controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 A.2d 726, 486 Pa. 460, 1979 Pa. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-grossman-pa-1979.