Hudak Appeal

84 A.2d 226, 170 Pa. Super. 74, 1951 Pa. Super. LEXIS 472
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1951
DocketAppeal, No. 9
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 A.2d 226 (Hudak Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudak Appeal, 84 A.2d 226, 170 Pa. Super. 74, 1951 Pa. Super. LEXIS 472 (Pa. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

Opinion by

Dithrich, J.,

On petition of Irene and Edward Hudak a guardian was appointed for the estate of their mother, Anna Hudak, whom the court below decreed to be “without mental capacity to take care of her property” within the meaning of the Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292, 50 PS §911 et seq. Respondent filed exceptions to the decree; the exceptions were dismissed and this appeal followed.

[76]*76After a comprehensive and painstaking review of the record in this case, we can reach no other conclusion than that the learned court below failed to give due regard to the admonition by the late Chief Justice Maxey that “It is a serious thing to deprive any person of the control of their own property or of their right to dispose of it by will. This right will be judicially taken away from a person only after preponderating proof of his lack of mental capacity to manage his own business affairs” (emphasis added) : Denner v. Beyer, 352 Pa. 386, 397, 42 A. 2d 747. We cannot help but feel that if the learned court below had given proper heed to that warning it would not have found “preponderating proof that she [respondent] is lacking in mental capacity to manage her own business affairs”; but, to the contrary, would have found, as the Supreme Court found in Denner v. Beyer, supra (p. 397), that “There is no such proof in this record. In fact, the proof strongly preponderates in favor of this respondent.”

The most that can be said of petitioners’ evidence, coupled with the admissions of respondent, is that for several years during the lifetime of her husband respondent was excessively jealous of him and suffered hallucinations and delusions in respect of his relationship with other women. But according to the refreshingly frank and straightforward testimony of Michael J. Hudak, one of the sons, his mother had good reason to be jealous of his father. Michael testified that his father “was gay with women” the same as was he, the son, a “man of the road” and a “salesman all . . . [his] life. . . . She was jealous, yes, always has been jealous, and she had a reason to be jealous . . .”

The most enlightening medical testimony in the case was that of Dr. P. H. Leavitt, a “nationally known” psychiatrist of Philadelphia.' Seven physicians in all testified — four for the petitioners and three for the respondent — and the reason we say that Dr. Leavitt’s tes[77]*77timony was the most enlightening is not only because he was so eminently qualified to form and express an opinion but because he was the only psychiatrist whose testimony went directly to the condition of the respondent at the time of trial. Since November 27, 1950, a few days following the death of respondent’s husband, she had been making her home with her son Francis in Philadelphia. She was examined there by Dr. Leavitt on December 8, 1950, and in Scranton on December 26, the day he testified. With the exception of Dr. Killeen, a surgeon with considerable psychiatric experience, who has known respondent for years and who examined her December 14, the day before the beginning of the trial, none of the other physicians had examined her for more than a year prior thereto. “The point to be decided was the mental condition of [respondent] at the time of trial, with respect to [her] ability to take care of [her] property, and whether [she] is liable to dissipate or lose the same and become the victim of designing persons”: Ryman’s Case, 139 Pa. Superior Ct. 212, 216, 11 A. 2d 677; Nagy Appeal, 169 Pa. Superior Ct. 388, 390, 82 A. 2d 591.

The gist of. the medical testimony offered by petitioners was that since respondent had been suffering from paranoid psychosis or .paranoic schizophrenia— a comparatively recent, terminology .for the. same affliction — when they examined or treated her, she could not be expected ever to completely recover from what the trial judge referred to as her “underlying infirmity.”' .

Dr. Leavitt and Dr.' Killeen, the only physicians who had examined respondent anywhere near the time of trial, testified that mentally respondent .’was normal in every respect and in'no sense likely to'become the victim of designing- persons. Physically: she was suffering, from, .‘hypertension and a cardiovascular condition that, in no- Way affected _ke‘r .'mentality. Cf. Owens. Ap[78]*78peal, 167 Pa. Superior Ct. 10, 74 A. 2d 705. However, in respect of their testimony the trial judge said: “Obviously these expert witnesses were not in possession of all the facts respecting the respondent’s conduct when they arrived at the conclusions they testified to and the probative force of their opinions must be so evaluated in weighing their testimony.” (Emphasis added.) They may not have been in possession of all the facts, but in our opinion they were in possession of sufficient facts to enable them to form and express an intelligent and competent opinion of respondent’s mental capacity. In any event it cannot reasonably be said that the preponderance of the medical testimony was on the side of the petitioners.

In respect of the testimony of two sisters of respondent and three of her sons the trial judge said: “This testimony is of little or no value.” As pointed out by Reno, J., in Owens Appeal, supra (p. 13) : “Recently the Supreme Court questioned not only the sufficiency of the evidence, but also weighed it.” See Denner v. Beyer, supra (p. 397).

When the testimony of the lay witnesses for respondent is weighed against the testimony of Irene, the only lay witness for the petitioners — her brother Edward did not testify — it greatly affects her credibility as a witness. For example, she testified and the trial judge found that “For over twenty-five years the respondent accused each child, in turn, of wrongdoing as a result of which each left the family home ... at an early age.” That statement was refuted by Joseph, aged 47 and the oldest child, who testified that he did not leave home until he was 21, when he left to get married. When asked, “Were you driven out by your mother?” he answered, “No. I wasn’t driven out bv my mother. It was my father who did the driving.” He further testified that two weeks before the trial he took his mother into his own. home for a week in :order to [79]*79be able to observe her conduct and “to find out what it is all about.” He was of the opinion that she was “very capable in handling her own affairs.”

The statement was further refuted by Francis, the son with whom the respondent went to live following the death of her husband. He testified that he did not leave home until he was 22. He was then “studying for the priesthood of the Scranton diocese” and had received his A. B. degree at St. Mary’s Seminary, Baltimore, Maryland. He was at home in the summer of 1940 when he received a telegram, purporting to be from an employment agency, offering him a Job in Philadelphia. He later found out that it was not from the agency but from his brother Edward, one of the petitioners in this case, who said it offered Francis “the opportunity to get away from home and get to work.” When asked if he thought his mother was “mentally capable of handling her own affairs,” he answered, “Very much so.”- And it was still further refuted by Michael, the - “man of the road,” aged 42, who testified, that he left home of his “own free will” when he was 16 because his father, who was a “Very, very strict” man, was waiting for him. with a cat-o’-nine-tails one night when he was late in getting home.

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Bluebook (online)
84 A.2d 226, 170 Pa. Super. 74, 1951 Pa. Super. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudak-appeal-pasuperct-1951.