Friese's Estate
This text of 176 A. 225 (Friese'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.
Opinion
Opinion by
The court below was of the opinion that, under the Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 447, section 2 (c), as amended by the Act of May 13, 1925, P. L, 687, where a spouse sur *88 vives the deceased the “statute ... is explicit that the survivor be preferred over all other persons” in appointment as administrator. The Act of 1917 reenacted the Act of March 15, 1832, P. L. 135. 1 In granting letters, the register acts in a quasi judicial capacity: Phillip’s Est., 293 Pa. 351, 355. The act sets up distinct classes of persons eligible for appointment as administrators. 2 Within the class the register may exercise his discretion unless otherwise directed, 3 but he cannot disturb the order of appointment outlined by the legislation. 4
While under the act a spouse has a prima-facie right to administer (Hassinger’s App., 10 Pa. 454), it was not *89 intended by the act that sbe should be sole administratrix if the register determined otherwise: Gyger’s Est., 65 Pa. 311. The act permits the joinder with her of other relatives, but all classes are subject to the limitation that they must be fit persons. The proviso, “the surviving spouse shall be-entitled to the administration, in preference to all other persons,” must be read in connection with the enacting clause. The office of a proviso is to except something from the enacting clause, or to qualify or restrain its generality, or to exclude some possible ground of misinterpretation. When the proviso is read with the enacting clause, the act declares that all “other things being equal the widow is entitled to be preferred,” (Wilkey’s App., 108 Pa. 567), but she cannot claim that she is in a class entirely by herself.
Historically, the right of administration was placed on the ground of interest in the estate. Early judicial construction of the Act of 1832 stated: “The right to administration is put expressly on the ground of interest, on the reasonable presumption that the person most interested to increase the estate is most competent to administer”: Ellmaker’s Est., 4 Watts 34,38. The same principles are expressed by Justice Woodward in Kellberg’s App., 86 Pa. 129, 133, and in Appeal of Anna B. Sieber, 1 Penny. 191. It was reiterated in Reamer’s Est., 315 Pa. 148, where we held that one who has no financial interest in an estate has no standing to nominate an administrator for it. The cases from other jurisdictions support the principle that administration should only be granted to those having an interest in the estate. 5
In addition to the fact that she is required to have an actual interest in the estate, she may be further disqualified by being unfit to administer. Among these disquali- *90 fixations are insolvency, 6 nonresidence, 7 conviction of crime, 8 claim of interest hostile to tbe estate, 9 unfriendly feeling between tbe parties, 10 dissatisfaction and antagonisms between tbe widow and tbe children. 11 it is apparent from tbe decided cases that tbe appointment of tbe surviving spouse is not mandatory in all cases. That they have a prima facie right so to act is without question ; tbe register may not lightly set aside any one within tbe class entitled and prefer one in a remoter class or á stranger. Appointees as administrators must not possess any of tbe disqualifying characteristics mentioned. In Warner’s Est., 207 Pa. 580, tbe facts are somewhat parallel to those in tbe case at bar. There, as here, an antenuptial contract was contested by tbe widow, and it was apparent much feeling between tbe parties existed. Tbe widow there, as here, contended tbe antenuptial contract was invalid, and tbe court below, without deciding tbe validity of tbe contract, granted letters to tbe widow. We reversed the court below in Warner’s Est., supra, saying : “With tbe antagonisms and differences existing between tbe appellee and tbe two sons of her husband by bis former marriage, tbe best interests of tbe estate will be promoted by committing tbe administration of it to some disinterested fit person to be appointed by tbe register of wills, if tbe parties to this controversy cannot agree upon an administrator.”
The only difference which we would make between tbe order in tbe last named case and here is this: here Charles *91 A. O. Friese left a will wherein Ms children were appointed executors. They bad practically completed tbeir administration and the estate was about to he closed. Meanwhile an attack was being made on the will and it was set aside, which left the estate open for the appointment of an administrator. Under these circumstances the register would be well within his discretion to permit those named executors to continue, as administrators, the management of the estate by filing their account and closing it up. There is nothing further to do to terminate the administration. The widow is not entitled to administration. Not only does her antenuptial agreement, if it is valid, bar any interest, but if it is invalid, she has a direct claim against the estate because of its invalidity. In the latter case she must remove the antenuptial agreement as an obstacle to her claim in the estate. The record also shows sufficient differences and animosities between the parties to malee it imperative, were the estate not administered, to appoint a disinterested administrator who would protect the interests thereof.
The decree is reversed with a procedendo.
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176 A. 225, 317 Pa. 86, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frieses-estate-pa-1934.