Huebner Estate (No. 1)

51 Pa. D. & C.2d 611, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 321
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedJanuary 20, 1970
Docketno. 67038
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 Pa. D. & C.2d 611 (Huebner Estate (No. 1)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huebner Estate (No. 1), 51 Pa. D. & C.2d 611, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 321 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

ADJUDICATION

TAXIS, P. J.,

The first and final account of Mary H. Lambert, executrix, was examined and audited by the Court on December 19, 1969. . . .

Decedent died on July 1, 1965, survived by Sarah W. Huebner, his wife. Decedent’s will, dated February 28, 1958, leaves his estate to Mary H. Lambert, his daughter and executrix herein, but his marriage to Sarah W. Huebner on June 17, 1964, invokes section 7(3) of the Wills Act of 1947, under the provisions of which Sarah W. Huebner becomes entitled to one-half of the estate. She is likewise entitled to the [614]*614family exemption, and the same is awarded to her. .. .

The administration of this estate has been beset and complicated by the presentation of a variety of claims. Testimony taken in the ensuing litigation totals some 1,200 pages. By far the most complex is that of James G. Walker, brother of Sarah W. Huebner, which is in the amount of $59,971.86. Since an analysis of the record on this claim will take considerable time, this adjudication is being prepared disposing of all of the other claims, in order to extend no further the three-year wait for payment of some of the claimants. A supplementary adjudication will pass on the Walker claim in due course.

CLAIMS OF ARTHUR F. PEIFER AND ROBERT J. PEIFER

These claims are almost identical and will be disposed of together. Prior to 1956, claimant, Arthur F. Peifer, owned 88 shares of a corporation known as Litchfield Produce Sales Co., and claimant, Robert J. Peifer, his son, owned 87 shares. They also were shareholders in a separate corporation known as Litchfield Produce Co., which at about that time fell into financial difficulties and came to be managed by a voting trust of certain shareholders. The trustees of this trust insisted that the Peifers cease owning stock in both corporations, because of a possible conflict of interest, and as a result, in 1957, certificates for the Peifers’ shares in Litchfield Produce Sales Co. were endorsed in blank by them and turned over to Russell J. Huebner, who previously had had certain business dealings with claimants.

Claimants’ statement alleges that this transfer was made only to permit claimants to present the appearance of having parted with their interest in Litchfield Produce Sales Co., without actually doing so. They contend that beneficially they never ceased [615]*615to own the shares, that they had no intention to give them to decedent, and that they were never paid for them. They have attempted to prove these contentions with their own testimony, some pieces of correspondence with decedent, and also by eliciting certain admissions of fact from the executrix. The estate has countered with several defenses, which will be discussed below to the extent necessary.

Preliminarily, a substantial problem exists concerning the competency of claimants to testify, because of the Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, sec. 5, 28 PS §322, the dead man’s rule. This problem is made knotty by the offer of each claimant to testify, not in support of his own claim, but on behalf of the claim of the other. It is conceded that each claimant is barred as to his own claim; but counsel for the Peifers strenuously urges that the rule does not prevent them from proving each other’s case. However, we have reached the opposite conclusion.

As in many cases involving the dead man’s rule, the line between competency and incompetency is a fine one. Surely, if the claim of only one of these parties were presented, the other party could testify in support of it. Likewise, the mere fact that a proposed witness also happens to be a claimant against the estate in a separate matter will not bar his testimony: Houston’s Estate, 318 Pa. 300. But the case at hand is not precisely either of these situations; it involves an additional factor which determines this issue adversely to claimants.

The critical factor in determining competence is whether or not the witness has an interest adverse to decedent. If the dead man’s rule is to be properly applied, it must be on the basis of its substance and its purpose to prevent fraud where the evidence which would defeat it has been lost by death. Although [616]*616this matter is presented as two claims, by two claimants, this is merely form; the substance of both claims is that an agreement, one agreement, was made between claimants and decedent regarding the Peifer stock. There is no distinction between the facts of each of these claims; there is no possibility that one could succeed and the other fail; and testimony in support of one automatically and unavoidably supports the other as well. Thus, each claimant, even as a witness for the other, exhibits an interest adverse to the estate and is, therefore, incompetent. Cf. Miller Estate v. Shostak, 80 York 96 (1962), which had a result consistent with the above.

Claimants cite Gongaware’s Estate, 265 Pa. 512, and Houston’s Estate, supra, in support of a contrary result. However, the latter is distinguishable on the basis that there were two separate contracts between decedent and the claimants, who were domestics in his household. They involved different terms and considerations, although both were apparently made at the same time, and both were made to induce the claimants to remain in the employ of decedent. In Gongaware, the facts concerning the alleged incompetence are not very thoroughly treated in the opinion; but it appears, at page 514, that the adversity involved was not so much against the estate as against other witnesses, who themselves claimed ownership of part of the contested property. These cases demonstrate the difficulties encountered in applying this deceptively simple statute, but they do not convince us that the exclusion of claimants’ testimony was erroneous.

Claimants also urge that the dead man’s rule cannot be applied unless it appears that decedent had an interest in the subject of the litigation, and that his mere possession of the stock certificates and [617]*617executed assignments is not sufficient for this purpose. We again are in disagreement, because this is not a “mere possession” case. There is no doubt that the assignments were voluntarily executed by the claimants and the certificates voluntarily delivered to decedent by them. Of course, this does not explain every circumstance of the transaction, but clearly this is not a case where a party is relying entirely upon an unexplained, perhaps accidental or even fraudulent, possession. Comparisons between the present case, on the one hand, and Donsavage Estate, 420 Pa. 587, and Pappas Estate, 428 Pa. 540, on the other, must be rejected. Those cases involve the common situation of possession alone being urged, and found wanting, as an indication of a completed gift and have no application. In the light of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to discuss further the presumption of ownership raised by possession legally and properly acquired (Wigmore, Evidence, 3d Ed., Vol. 9, sec. 2515-2516, and Appeal of the Pennsylvania Co., 86 Pa. 102), which only establish more firmly that decedent had a sufficient interest in this property to permit his executrix to invoke the dead man’s rule.

The final issue is whether or not the evidence remaining after the exclusion of claimants’ testimony, and the inferences stemming from it, sufficiently prove their case. We must hold that it does not. The burden on one who asserts a claim against a decedent’s estate is heavy, expecially where it could have been brought against decedent in life and was not.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

New England Merchants National Bank v. Old Colony Trust Co.
417 N.E.2d 471 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Pa. D. & C.2d 611, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huebner-estate-no-1-pactcomplmontgo-1970.