Matter of Estate of Coniglio

472 A.2d 205, 324 Pa. Super. 527, 1984 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3818
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 1984
Docket278
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 472 A.2d 205 (Matter of Estate of Coniglio) 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.

Bluebook
Matter of Estate of Coniglio, 472 A.2d 205, 324 Pa. Super. 527, 1984 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3818 (Pa. 1984).

Opinion

SPAETH, Judge:

This is an appeal from a decree admitting to probate a will executed by mark. We affirm.

The decedent, Guernio Coniglio, died on October 10, 1979, survived by two daughters, Josephine Rossetti and Margaret Ambrogio. On November 1, 1979, Mrs. Ambrogio offered for probate what purported to be decedent’s will, executed on July 10, 1979, appointing her executrix, and leaving her the entire estate. Mrs. Rossetti challenged the will, claiming undue influence and lack of testamentary *530 capacity. When the matter came up for hearing, on August 27, 1981, she withdrew these claims and instead claimed only that the will had not been properly executed. After hearing this claim, the trial court entered a decree upholding the will. Mrs. Rossetti filed exceptions, but on February 18, 1982, the court dismissed the exceptions and made the decree final.

The Probate, Estates & Fiduciaries Code provides:

Every will shall be in writing and shall be signed by the testator at the end thereof, subject to the following rules and exceptions:
sjs * * sjs * *
(2) Signature by mark. If the testator is unable to sign his name for any reason, a will to which he makes his mark and to which his name is subscribed in his presence before or after he makes his mark, shall be as valid as though he had signed his name thereto: Provided, That he makes his mark in the presence of two witnesses who sign their names to the will in his presence.
20 Pa.C.S.A. § 2502(2).

This provision is copied from The Wills Act of 1947, 20 P.S. § 180.1 et seq., and its requirements,, were explained in Rhodes Will, 399 Pa. 476, 160 A.2d 532 (1960), as follows:

To comply with this statutory provision a proponent of this type of will must prove: (1) the inability of the testator to sign his name for any reason; (2) that the mark was made by the testator; (3) that, either before or after the testator made his mark, his name was subscribed; (4) that the subscription of testator’s name took place in his presence; (5) that when testator made his mark two witnesses were present; (6) that these witnesses signed their names to the will; (7) that the subscription of the witnesses’ names took place in the testator’s presence.
Id., 399 Pa. at 479, 160 A.2d 532.

*531 Each of the seven elements thus identified by the Court must be proved by the testimony of two witnesses. Thus, in Rhodes Will the will was held invalid because element (4) was proved by the testimony of only one witness. This “two-witness rulé” was embodied in Section 4(a) of The Wills Act of 1947 (“... no will shall be valid unless proved by the oaths or affirmations of two competent witnesses”), Rhodes Will, supra, and it remains the law, for it has been carried forward as Section 3132 of the Probate, Estates & Fiduciaries Code (“All wills shall be proved by the oaths or affirmations of two competent witnesses ____”). And see Comment to Section 2504.1 of the Probate, Estate & Fiduciaries Code (Section 4(a) of Wills Act carried forward in Section 2504 of Code, which was subsequently repealed because it “unnecessarily duplicated Section 3132” of Code).

The two-witness rule does not require that the proof always be by the testimony of two subscribing witnesses; sometimes the proof may be by non -subscribing witnesses. Rhodes Will, supra. However, Section 3132 of the Probate, Estates & Fiduciaries Code provides that

the proof must be by subscribing witnesses, except to the extent that the register is satisfied that such proof cannot be adduced by the exercise of reasonable diligence.

In summary, then, in deciding whether a will executed by mark may be admitted to probate, three questions must be asked: (1) Has each of the seven elements identified in Rhodes Will been proved? (2) Has each element been proved by the testimony of two witnesses? And (3) if with respect to any element the two witnesses are not both subscribing witnesses, was the register (or trial court, if, as in this case, the register certified the matter to the court) satisfied that in the exercise of reasonable diligence, proof by subscribing witnesses was not possible?

As appellant, Mrs. Rossetti argues that two of the seven elements identified in Rhodes Will, supra, have not been *532 sufficiently proved: that the decedent was unable to sign his name at the time he executed the will by making his mark; and that the decedent’s name was subscribed to the will in his presence.

(a)

Generally stated, the evidence was as follows: The decedent’s attorney prepared the will and mailed it to Sebastian Ambrogio, Margaret Ambrogio’s husband, with a letter explaining how a will should be executed when the testator signed by mark. Mr. Ambrogio was a proprietor of a restaurant and bar. He told the decedent that he had received the will, and put it behind the bar. When the decedent said that he wanted to execute the will, Mr. Ambrogio asked Fred Tomassi and Francis Pfister, who were patrons of the restaurant, to act as witnesses. The decedent could speak Italian but only a little English, and Mr. Ambrogio asked Mr. Tomassi to participate because Mr. Tomassi knew both Italian and English. The decedent, Mr. Tomassi, Mr. Pfister, and Mr. Ambrogio gathered around a table near the bar. Mr. Tomassi explained the will to the decedent in Italian and English. The decedent said that he understood, and he put his mark on the signature line at the end of the will. Mr. Ambrogio wrote the decedent’s first name to the left of the mark, and his last name to the right, and Mr. Tomassi and Mr. Pfister signed as witnesses. (There is some conflict in the testimony as to whether Mr. Tomassi and Mr. Pfister signed their names before or after Mr. Ambrogio signed the decedent’s name.) Either that day or the next, Mr. Ambrogio mailed the completed will back to the decedent’s attorney.

The principal witness regarding the decedent’s inability to sign his name was Mr. Ambrogio. On direct examination he testified that “[i]t was necessary” for the decedent “to put his ‘X’.” N.T. 14. On cross examination he acknowledged that the decedent “had, in the past several years, been able to sign his name,” N.T. 24, and, in response to a question from the court, that he had seen the decedent sign his name, id.) but he went on to say that that had been in *533 1977, and that “at the time of the Will,” the decedent could not sign his name, N.T. 24-25. In addition, the attorney who had prepared the will testified that

I mailed the will out to Mr. and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
472 A.2d 205, 324 Pa. Super. 527, 1984 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-estate-of-coniglio-pa-1984.