Gatto Estate

74 Pa. D. & C. 529
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Allegheny County
DecidedFebruary 27, 1950
DocketNo. 2; no. 3604, of 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 Pa. D. & C. 529 (Gatto Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Allegheny County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gatto Estate, 74 Pa. D. & C. 529 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Cox, J.,

The first and final account of the First National Bank of McKeesport, administrator pendente lite, is before the court on audit in the estates of Julia Andros Gatto and Angelo Gatto, deceased, and the question to be determined is the manner in which distribution shall be made of the balance shown by the account.

From the record in this case it appears that both decedents died April 2, 1943, from gunshot wounds. The coroner’s jury subsequently rendered a verdict that the wife was “Found dead at home Friday, April 2, 1943, at 4:30 p.m. from gunshot wound of head inflicted by one Angelo Gatto, who was also found dead at the above named place on same day and date at 4:30 p.m. And from the evidence the jury finds death was due to above cause and that the same was murder”. The same coroner’s jury also rendered a verdict that h i husband was “Found dead at home Friday, April 2, 19-13, at 4:30 p.m. from self-inflicted wound of head. [530]*530And from the evidence the jury finds death was due to above cause and the same was suicide.”

It also appears that a purported will alleged to have been signed by both Angelo Gatto and Julia Gatto, in the attestation clause, dated March 31,1943, three days before the tragedy, was subsequently offered for probate, and that after taking testimony in a contest of the alleged will the register certified the matter to this court, in the meantime issuing letters of administration pendente lite to the First National Bank of McKeesport. The case was tried in this court, and in its opinion the court rejected the alleged will because it had not been signed at the end thereof as required by the Wills Act of 1917. In its decree, dated October 13, 1949, returning the record, the court directed the register to refuse probate of the instrument and to issue letters of administration to some fit person on the estates of these decedents. The administrator pendente lite then filed its account in the estates of these decedents.

At the audit of the account of the administrator pendente lite it appeared from statements of counsel that decedents owned real estate as tenants by entire-ties, that their furniture and some articles in a barber shop seemed also to have been so owned, that involved in the question of distribution are the proceeds of insurance policies, one on the life of Angelo Gatto in which Julia Gatto was named beneficiary, and another on the life of Julia Gatto, and that there were some government bonds in which decedents-were coowners.

The inventory filed by the administrator pendente lite in the estates of these decedents shows receipt of personal property consisting of the proceeds of a Metropolitan Life Insurance policy on the life of Julia Gatto in the amount of $1,002.48, of -a Prudential Life Insurance policy on the life of Angelo Gatto in the [531]*531amount of $1,018.54, household goods and personal effects of the value of $816.73, and United States Treasury series E bonds in the amount of $1,907.50, the total amount of the personal property being $4,745.25, out of which were paid expenses of administration, fees, commissions, funeral expenses, and taxes in the total sum of $2,133.28, leaving a balance of personalty of $2,611.97.

Also included in the account of the administrator pendente lite, in addition to the balance of personalty of $2,611.97, is the rent from decedent’s real estate for the period from May 20, 1944, to October 20, 1949, 65 months at $25 per month, or a total of $1,625, out of which sum were paid taxes, repairs, and insurance in the amount of $1,048.53, leaving the net balance of rents $576.47. These two amounts, personalty of $2,-611.97 and rent of $576.47, make up the balance now for distribution in the sum of $3,188.44.

The testimony and the record in the will contest was offered in evidence at the audit of the account without objection, and, therefore, it is part of the record on which we are to base our findings in the matter of distribution in this case.

Angelo Gatto, the husband, was survived by his father and mother, and also, as will appear later, by Julia Gatto, his wife. Julia Gatto, the wife, was survived by two brothers and two sisters.

Pete Andros, a brother of Julia Gatto, found the bodies of decedents in their home following their deaths. Before his induction into the Army he had lived with his sister and her husband. He testified generally as to how his brother-in-law treated his sister, his peculiar actions shortly prior to the deaths, and about the husband’s worrying because he had to go to the Army. Pete Andros testified as follows:

“Q. Now you say you heard conversations between Angelo Gatto, your brother-in-law, and your sister his [532]*532wife. Do you remember any of those conversations particularly?

“A. Well, I remember once when he brought the subject about a will.

“Q. How many times, on how many occasions did you hear them discussing a will?.

“A. Twice.

“Q. When was the first time?

“A. Oh, it was about five or six days before he murdered my sister; it was on a Sunday afternoon. . . .

“Q. And the last time was on a Wednesday night?

“A. That is right.”

He testified the brother-in-law wanted his sister to sign a will with him giving everything to his parents and she refused. The witness said he had been making trips to the Presbyterian Hospital and having his feet treated by Dr. DeRoy, and that from one of these visits he had returned and gone to his sister’s home. He testified as follows:

“Q. Who was the first to see the bodies of your sister and her husband?

“A. Well, I found them. When I found them I went up to the doctor’s office.

“Q. Why did you go to the doctor’s office?

“A. Well, as soon as I got there I sort of made a little investigation to see what happened, and then I felt Angelo first, and I knew he was dead because he was stiff and his hands were cold, and his face; and then I touched my sister’s feet; they was sticking out of the covers; and I touched her hands, and they felt warm, and even the muscles in her foot felt flabby, so I thought maybe she was still alive, because she was warm. When I found that out I ran up to the doctor’s office.”

He said he entered the house through the cellar because the other doors were closed. He testified further.

[533]*533“Q. Was her body found in the room she had been sleeping in?

“A. She must have slept there that night, but it was not found in her bedroom. She usually slept upstairs, and she was found down there in the dining room, on the studio couch.

“Q. What did you notice when you first came into the house, when you walked into that room?

“A. The first thing I noticed was Angelo lying on the couch.

“Q. Did that indicate to you there was anything wrong?

“A. No, I didn’t think there was anything wrong, so I was ready to go back in the kitchen, and I noticed there was blood on the side of his head; I thought maybe he had a pealed ear or something, and it started bleeding, so right then and there I thought something happened, so I went over and found out.”

This is the only testimony concerning the finding of the bodies, and it is not contradicted.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Pa. D. & C. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatto-estate-paorphctallegh-1950.