McFadden Will

108 A.2d 247, 177 Pa. Super. 37, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1954
DocketAppeals, Nos. 16 and 17
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 A.2d 247 (McFadden Will) 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
McFadden Will, 108 A.2d 247, 177 Pa. Super. 37, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Woodside, J.,

We are concerned here with the legal residence of a testatrix at the time of her death and whether an issue devisavit vel non should be framed.

Anna L. McFadden, a spinster, died July 21, 1950 in a nursing home in Scranton, at the age of 74. What purported to be her last will and testament was admitted to probate by the register of wills of Lackawanna County and letters testamentary were granted to Marjorie W. Gleason on August 25, 1950. An appeal was taken from the probate by Anna McFadden Helferty and William P. McFadden, niece and nephew of the decedent, being heirs at law and beneficiaries in the probated will.

The deceased had as her closest living relatives 7 nieces, 7 nephews, 5 grandnieces and 6 grandnephews. Marjorie W. Gleason, a grandniece, was given the residue of the estate and named executrix in the probated document.

The grounds upon which the appeal was taken from the register of wills were: “(1) Lack of probate jurisdiction, in that the domicile of the decedent at the time [40]*40of her death was in East Maneh Chunk, Carhon County, this Commonwealth.

“2. Testamentary incapacity and/or undue influence.”

Before any testimony was taken Marjorie W. Gleason died and her husband Frank A. Gleason was subsequently issued letters of administration d.b.n. c.t.a. on the estate of Anna L. McFadden and substituted as a party for his late wife in this action.

After extended hearings on the preliminary question of domicile, the court affirmed the jurisdiction of the register of wills holding that the deceased was domiciled in Lackawanna County at the time of her death. The parties thereupon filed a stipulation that the evidence presented at the hearings on domicile and jurisdiction along with the record of probate, without the production of further evidence, be used to determine the question of testamentary incapacity and undue influence.

The court concluded that there was no substantial dispute of a material fact as to the testamentary capacity of the testatrix nor as to undue influence at the time the will was executed and dismissed the appeal.

There are some facts in the case concerning which there is little or no dispute. Anna McFadden was reared in Scranton. When she was a young woman she left there for New York where she served as a waitress in Wanamaker’s Tea Room for 25 years. From there she went to Atlantic City where she resided for a number of years. Thereafter for a- time she lived with her brother in Philadelphia and in Margate, New Jersey. This brother predeceased her and she inherited from him. Thereafter gradually becoming crippled by arthritis, she spent relatively short periods of time in a number of different nursing homes. There is evi[41]*41dence that during all of her life she returned to Scranton for visits with relatives and referred to that city as “home”.

In 1946 she left a nursing home in Philadelphia and went to White’s Nursing Home in Scranton. After staying there for a year and a few months she went to East Mauch Chunk in May of 1947. There she resided in an apartment at 315 South Street with a friend.

There can be no doubt that she established a bona fide domicile and residence in East Mauch Chunk in Carbon County. She had her furniture there, her bank account and securities there (except one bank account in Philadelphia), licensed her automobile from that address, filed her income tax returns from that address, had a telephone in her name there, became an active church member there, contacted a funeral director from there concerning her burial, and in other ways left no doubt that East Mauch Chunk was her domicile, and that she, while there, intended it to be such until the time of her death. The trial judge found that she had established a domicile in East Mauch Chunk.

There is no merit to appellee’s contention that she was a transient and “at all times . . . she considered Scranton her home and domicile.” There cannot be the slightest doubt that from May 1947 to January 1950 East Mauch Chunk, Carbon County was her domicile.

Whether her domicile was in Carbon or Lackawanna County at the time of her death depends on whether or not she transferred from the former to the latter during the six month period immediately prior to her death.

According to the testimony of Frank A. Gleason, while the deceased was in Scranton at White’s Nursing-Home he visited her about three times a week and his [42]*42wife visited her daily. But from the time she went to East Mauch Chunk in May of 1947 until he saw her in the hospital in Allentown in January of 1950 the Gleasons had not seen or heard from her. At Christmastime, 1949, a number of checks were given to relatives by the deceased. The Gleasons were not among those remembered.

There is no indication that the deceased had any mental weakness while residing in Carbon County. She found it difficult to walk because of her arthritis, and she was not in the best of health, but prior to her entry into the Sacred Heart Hospital at Allentown she was not seriously ill.

She was taken to the hospital in Allentown on January 28, 1950. There she was found to be “mentally confused”, “not oriented” and “very incoherent.” Her physician called in a specialist to determine whether she had a brain tumor. While in the hospital in a very serious condition the Gleasons arranged for her removal by ambulance to the Hahnemann Hospital in Scranton. According to the testimony they visited her at her request made through a nurse who accompanied the deceased to Allentown from East Mauch Chunk. According to Gleason they arranged to transfer her to Scranton upon her request made to them during their visit in Allentown.

When she arrived at the hospital in Scranton on February 1, the Gleason family’s physician took over. He found her to be “very seriously ill,” suffering from cerebral apoplexy, acute infectious pneumonia, generalized arteriosclerosis and the long standing arthritis. She had a temperature of about 101, and had difficulty in swallowing and talking because of a throat condition believed by the physician to be due to a condition of the brain. But, he says, she was clear of mind, alert and possessed of an excellent memory. He ad[43]*43mitted later that at times she was irrational, bnt he attributed that to sedatives, and said she was otherwise clear and knew what she wanted.

The physician testified, with the hospital record before him, that her temperature remained up “for a week or two, or maybe a little longer, maybe about three weeks, then the temperature came down” although “the lungs never cleared up completely.”

Although the apoplexy paralyzed her one side for a while this condition “later cleared up” although how much “later” is not clear.

When Miss McFadden was brought to Scranton she had an estate in excess of $55,000. On the eighth day she was there she signed a power of attorney giving the Gleasons complete control over all her property. They immediately went to East Mauch Chunk and obtained possession of all her property there including her household furniture, her personal belongings, her bank accounts, her securities and other contents of her safe deposit box and a will which was in possession of a lawyer in Carbon County. Thus the Gleasons, while the deceased was seriously ill with pneumonia, apoplexy and arteriosclerosis, “moved her” from Carbon County to Lackawanna County.

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Bluebook (online)
108 A.2d 247, 177 Pa. Super. 37, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadden-will-pasuperct-1954.