Hersha v. Brenneman
This text of 6 Serg. & Rawle 2 (Hersha v. Brenneman) 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
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The intestate left five daughters and four sons, besides three grand-children, to wit, two daughters and a son, the children of Michael Brenneman, who died in the lifetime of his father, the intestate. On a petition to the Orphans’ Court for partition of the estate, the inquest divided it into four purparts; on which the guardian of the three grand-children claimed priority of right as to taking one of the purparts at the appraisement. This was resisted by the two eldest sons, who contended that the right of choice was in them; and of this opinion was the Court, who confirmed to them the purparts which they selected : so that the question is, whether the children of a son who died in the lifetime of the intestate, succeeds as well to the personal right of priority of choice which their father would have had if he had survived the intestate, as to the share of then-father to which they are entitled under the third section of the act of 1794. The twenty-second section of that act, which is the one under which the present question arises, was taken from the third and fourth sections of the act of 1764, and is not only substantially the same as those sections, but pursues them, for the most part, word for word. In Walton v. Willis,
Decree reversed*
1 Dall. Rep. 351.
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