McClellan's Estate

189 A. 315, 325 Pa. 257, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 1936
DocketAppeals, 122 and 134
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 A. 315 (McClellan's Estate) 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
McClellan's Estate, 189 A. 315, 325 Pa. 257, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 361 (Pa. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Barnes,

The question here involved is whether the decedent made a valid nuncupative will. 1

*259 Ethel May McClellan, an unmarried woman, thirty-three years of age, died on February 27, 1935, possessed of an estate consisting entirely of personalty valued approximately at $49,000. Her nearest and only surviving relatives were two maternal aunts and an uncle.

According to the evidence, she became ill at her home in Mt. Lebanon, Allegheny County, on February 9, 1935. At first she suffered from influenza, but when her physician was called on February 12th, he diagnosed her illness on that date as acute hemorrhagic nephritis. At the direction of the physician she was removed on February 22nd to the South Side Hospital in Pittsburgh, where her condition grew worse, due to the development of encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain. She was delirious and incoherent on February 24th, and the possibility of death was so near that her relatives were summoned. She died in the hospital on the morning of February 27th, 1935.

While at the hospital there was one period during which the decedent rallied and showed an improvement in her condition. This was on the morning of February 25th, when for nearly three hours, lasting until noon, she became rational and her speech was coherent. The doctor visited her at ten o’clock on that morning, and remained about twenty-five minutes. Soon after he left, Mrs. Daugherty, a close friend of Miss McClellan, and one of the appellants in this case, came into the room. A nurse, Miss Brinkman, was also in the room. After exchanging greetings, Mrs. Daugherty spoke of a ring belonging to Miss McClellan,, which she had in her possession, and asked her what she desired her to do with it. Decedent gave instructions for the disposition of the ring, “when I am gone,” and then said that there were other things, some money, several mortgages, and an interest in a trust fund that she would like to take care of now. Miss Brinkman thereupon asked her if she were trying to make a will, to which decedent replied, “Yes, while I can remember *260 these things.” When questioned whether she had already made a will she answered, “No,” that she did not think she would get well, that she was afraid it was too late — “I can’t write.” During this conversation, the nurse, apparently of her own volition, made upon a small sheet of paper a notation of decedent’s directions concerning the stones in the l’ing.

Before she had proceeded further than to dispose of the ring, Miss Brinkman suggested that she would get another witness. The nurse then called an interne of the hospital, Dr. Stiller, who came into the room and read what the nurse had written concerning the disposition of the ring. Decedent continued to relate to those present, Miss Brinkman, Mrs. Daugherty and Dr. Stiller, what she wanted done with her estate. She named each item and each beneficiary. Included among the gifts were certain stocks, a $25,000 trust fund, three mortgages and various articles of furniture. Referring to the three mortgages, she spelled the names of the mortgagors to indicate the particular mortgage she wished to be given to a designated beneficiary. As decedent expressed her wishes the nurse continued to write down on the paper the items and the names of the beneficiaries. It required approximately an hour for decedent to give these directions for the disposal of her property. 2

Mrs. Daugherty having left the room, Dr. Stiller, in the presence of the nurse, repeated to decedent the items which were contained in the nurse’s memoran *261 dum and asked her if she were satisfied with this disposition of her estate, to which she replied, “I have given, told you what I want done with my belongings; I am tired; let me alone.” She then became exhausted and fell asleep, before the doctor completed the taking of a blood count. From this time until her death at ten o’clock on the morning of February 27th, two days later, the evidence shows that decedent was either delirious or in a coma most of the time.

Upon petition, answer, and after testimony was taken, the register of wills admitted to probate the alleged nuncupative will of decedent. Thereafter, on' appeal from the register, the court below held there was not sufficient compliance with the requirements of the Wills Act, and declared the will invalid. Exceptions to the decree setting aside the probate were dismissed by the court in banc, and from the decree accordingly entered these appeals are taken by two of the beneficiaries under the alleged will.

The testamentary capacity of this decedent is not in dispute. The sole question for us to decide is whether the nuncupative will here set up complies with the requirements of the Wills Act.

In considering the oral declarations of a decedent made with dispositive intent during a last illness, which are thereafter sought to be probated as a last will and testament of personal property, we are faced with conditions imposed by statute, a strict compliance with which is necessary in order to entitle such will to thq sanction of probate. From an early day our courts have held consistently that the absence of a rigid observance of these statutory requirements is necessarily fatal to the validity of such an instrument. In their essence, these restrictions are not merely arbitrary rules of law. They have their foundation in the depths of experience, and are regarded as fundamentally essential to safeguard the estates of deceased persons against fraud and perjury in setting up death-bed wills of this *262 nature. For that reason often it has been repeated, in the cases dealing with the subject, that unwritten or nuncupative wills, though tolerated, are by no means favorites of the law: Yarnall’s Will, 4 Rawle 45; Boyer v. Frick, 4 W. & S. 357; Porter’s Appeal, 10 Pa. 254; Taylor’s Appeal, 47 Pa. 31; Rutt’s Estate, 200 Pa. 549; Megary’s Estate, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 243; Schouler on Wills, 6th Ed., Yol. 1, p. 533.

This Court many years ago in Werkheiser v. Werkheiser, 6 W. & S. 184, stated the rule which still holds true today, that “every one who undertakes to make a testamentary disposition of his property, must conform to the law regulating such disposition; and if he does not care to do so, the law cannot uphold it. Now the Act of Assembly requires that all wills shall be in writing, signed by the testator, and permits a verbal or nuncupative will only in extreme cases, where the party by the effect of disease is incapacitated from making a written will. To sanction a verbal will, where there is time to make a written one, would tend to the introduction of all the doubt, uncertainty, litigation, fraud and imposition which uniform experience has shown attend the allowance of verbal wills in ordinary cases.”

It is a basic requirement of a nuncupative will that it be made during the last sickness of the testator. 3

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Bluebook (online)
189 A. 315, 325 Pa. 257, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclellans-estate-pa-1936.