Huebner Estate

52 Pa. D. & C.2d 406
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 24, 1970
DocketNo. 2
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 406 (Huebner Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huebner Estate, 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 406 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

SUPPLEMENTARY ADJUDICATION

TAXIS, P. J.,

— In an adjudication [408]*408dated January 20, 1970, we ruled upon a variety of claims and other matters involved in this very complex administration. We also had before us at the same time a claim by Dr. James G. Walker, brother-in-law of decedent, for $59,971.86, which had required the taking of some 1,000 pages of testimony and exhibits. In the adjudication, the court noted that it did not wish to delay disposition of all of the other matters until the record, arguments and briefs on the Walker claim could be analyzed, since the administration of the estate was then four years old. We now rule on the Walker claim.

A summary of the allegations of the statement of claim is in order. It sets forth that in December 1964, about six months before decedent’s sudden and unexpected death, he orally requested Dr. Walker to purchase for his wife, Sarah W. Huebner, all of the furnishings and decorations required to equip her and Mr. Huebner’s new home. It is further alleged that decedent knew that Dr. Walker had been a purchaser and collector of antiques and furnishings and had many of these at his own home. Decedent also allegedly stated that he would be interested in having claimant select items from his own collection. It is then set forth that Dr. Walker prepared furniture floor plans for the home, and that, still in December, decedent authorized claimant to purchase the furniture, furnishings and decorations, including upholstering and refinishing of furniture, as indicated on the plans. Claimant purportedly carried out the project and selected items from his collection and from other shops and suppliers which, after approval by decedent or Mrs. Huebner, were delivered to the house. Then follow details of the purchases made. The largest single group was from Dr. Walker’s own collection, allegedly worth $26,138.08 at its fair [409]*409market value, which amount decedent, it is contended, agreed to pay. There were also acquisitions from numerous other suppliers, at amounts ranging from $30 to $7,662.58. In most cases, it is alleged that the articles and prices were approved by decedent prior to his death, while in the balance it is simply alleged that the items were purchased and the prices agreed to by Dr. Walker and Mrs. Huebner on behalf of decedent.

Thus, there are two principal branches to the claim. In the first, Dr. Walker asserts a sales contract with decedent for the purchase of items owned by him. In the second, he seeks to constitute himself the representative of decedent, authorized by Mr. Huebner to buy and pay for items on his' behalf and thereafter be reimbursed. Unlike certain claims dealt with in the prior adjudication, this should not properly be termed an agency, as it is not contended that Dr. Walker had the power to make contracts between the suppliers and Mr. Huebner, or that he did make any such contracts; however, from the practical standpoint it makes little difference, as the liability of the decedent, and the estate, is nevertheless asserted only to Dr. Walker and not the individual suppliers.

Claims against decedents’ estates based on contracts entered into during life are usually held to a relatively high standard of proof. It was said, for example, in Petruzzi Estate, 410 Pa. 554, that the evidence to prove such claims must be “clear, direct, precise, and convincing.” With logic, the law generally regards claims against estates which could have been presented during life with some suspicion, and for that reason requires shch clear and definite proof. However, here we are dealing with a furnishing and decorating project extending over many months, and which was still in process at the time of decedent’s [410]*410sudden and unexpected death. Therefore, the fact that Dr. Walker had not presented his claim or been reimbursed prior to Mr. Huebner’s death does not raise any unfavorable inference against him.

Certain facts are substantially undisputed, and constitute an interesting background. Mr. and Mrs. Huebner were married on June 17, 1964. Shortly before, decedent had acquired a lot in Penn Valley, Lower Merion Township, and there he built a new home for his wife and himself. The property is on Rosemary Lane, and will be referred to in that way hereinafter. Mr. Huebner kept the title in his own name after his marriage. The couple moved into the house shortly after their marriage, having decided to decorate it in an impressive and elaborate fashion. They utilized the furnishings from their former residences only temporarily.

Mr. and Mrs. Huebner’s first attempt to engage an interior decorator and designer was frustrated when the decorator suffered injuries in an automobile accident. They then contacted Dr. Walker who, although a dentist by profession, had great interest and experience with the acquisition, refinishing, and use of furnishings, antiques, decorative items and the like. It was shown that Dr. Walker’s office and residence on Delancey Street in Philadelphia had been opened to public view on one occasion, on account of its furnishings and decorations. Dr. Walker is Mrs. Huebner’s brother, and Mrs. Huebner had resided at his address prior to her marriage to decedent. Mrs. Huebner testified that her husband agreed to pay Dr. Walker 15 percent of the total cost of decorating the house as his fee, but that amount is not claimed in the present litigation.

It is not disputed that Mr. Huebner was familiar with Dr. Walker’s large collection, having seen it [411]*411on numerous occasions when he visited his intended wife at Delancey Street. It is likewise clear that he greatly admired various pieces in the collection and desired to acquire them for his new home; although it does not appear that he had great expertise in the area of furnishings or decorating, he was intelligent and refined and undoubtedly knew what he liked. Moreover, several witnesses testified that he had a great desire to please Mrs. Huebner, who herself was a designer, in decorating the Rosemary Lane home. Starting early in 1964, before the marriage, and continuing for a year or more, Mr. and Mrs. Huebner and Dr. Walker together identified items in the Walker collection which were to be acquired. From time to time the items were embodied in lists made by Mrs. Huebner. According to her, these lists were not all made at one time, being written on various sorts of paper, but they were admitted into evidence as one exhibit “W-6.” They purport to contain all of the items from Dr. Walker’s collection that Mr. and Mrs. Huebner desired to buy. The total of exhibit “W-6” appears to be $23,528.69, and this sum must be regarded as the amount sought by Dr. Walker in this portion of his claim. Mrs. Huebner further testified that the prices for the items set forth in exhibit “W-6” were agreed upon by decedent and Dr. Walker, and that she wrote them on the lists at various times as agreement was reached. On these facts, claimant argues that the estate is liable for the prices of the items in exhibit “W-6.”

The estate counters with a denial that an enforceable contract exists. It first argues that the statute of frauds contained in section 2-201 of the Uniform Commercial Code, 12A PS §2-201, renders these sales unenforceable. We do not agree. While the furnishings and decorations were the major cost of decorat[412]*412ing the house, they were purchased by Dr. Walker as part of the services he was performing, and indeed the agreement included compensation to Dr. Walker. It is questionable whether such an agreement is within the statute: Stone v. Krylon, Inc., 141 F. Supp.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Pa. D. & C.2d 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huebner-estate-pactcompl-1970.