McGuigan Estate

37 A.2d 717, 349 Pa. 581, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1944
DocketAppeals, 60 and 61
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 717 (McGuigan 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
McGuigan Estate, 37 A.2d 717, 349 Pa. 581, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 503 (Pa. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearne,

There are two appeals. One is by an aged non-resident, of conceded mental capacity, who assigns as error the refusal of the court below to vacate its decree appointing guardians for her estate within this Commonwealth. The other is by the surety of a removed guardian, of the same estate, from a judgment entered against it on the audit of the account of the removed guardian.

Appellant, Emma E. L. McGuigan, is a resident of Los Angeles, California. She is a widow, with no children or grandchildren. At the commencement of these proceedings she was apparently 75 years of age. On April 7,1941 the California court appointed Louis Day, of Los Angeles, California, (in whose family Mrs. Me *584 Guigan resides) as guardian of her person and estate. In the California petition for the appointment of the guardian it was averred that Mrs. McGuigan was “in possession of her mental faculties with due allowance for her age”. The declared purpose of the appointment was that Mrs. McGuigan was “in need of constant care because of the infirmities of old age”. The order making the appointment recited that she “. . . is unable, unassisted, to manage and take care of herself or her property”. It was also averred that Mrs. McGuigan had “given Power of Attorney to a woman, [resident in Pennsylvania] inexperienced in law or business”; and that she desired “. . . a Guardian be appointed for her affairs within the State of Pennsylvania, where she is possessed of property”.

On May 7, 1941, Louis Day, the non-resident guardian of the estate of Mrs. McGuigan, the non-resident adult, petitioned the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, for appointment as guardian of Mrs. McGuigan’s estate in this Commonwealth. Attached to the petition was a copy of the California decree of appointment quoted above. On the same day, the petition was granted. These words are contained in the order: “(appellant) is not able, owing to her advanced age and general weakness, to take care of her property”. A surety bond was ordered in the sum of |30,000, which was filed the next day by Day and his corporate surety (appellant in the second appeal herein).

It is to be observed that neither in the original proceeding in California nor in the subsequent one in Pennsylvania, was there averment or proof that appellant was incapacitated by reason of mental weakness.

Day, the Pennsylvania guardian, on June 2, 1941, received from Jennie L. Steiner, a resident of Westmoreland County, and a niece of appellant, the sum of $7,-760.50 belonging to Mrs. McGuigan, which, with other moneys, Mrs. Steiner had collected for her under a power of attorney dated October 5,1940. This sum was removed by Day to California.

*585 On July 19, 1941, Mrs. Steiner filed a petition in tlie court below, alleging that Mrs. McGuigan is a resident of Westmoreland County and that the Los Angeles court was without jurisdiction to appoint Day her guardian. It was also averred that the Westmoreland County court had no power to appoint a guardian for Mrs. McGuigan in that county upon the grounds recited in the order. The petitioner asserted that the general power of attorney given to her by Mrs. McGuigan was still “valid and subsisting”, and requested the court to revoke the appointment of Day as guardian in Westmoreland County.

A copy of this petition was served upon the resident attorney of Day, and upon Day by registered mail, together with a rule to show cause why his appointment should not be revoked. No answer having been filed, the court below, on August 13,1941, entered a decree revoking the appointment of Day and directing him to file his account. In the same decree, however, the learned president judge asserted that it appeared by “duly authenticated papers” that the California court “duly found Emma E. L. McGuigan to be incompetent by reason of mental weakness to properly care for her property according to the laws of the State of California,” and that it “further” appeared to be “necessary that a guardian be appointed for Emma E. L. McGuigan, of the assets situate in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” It may be noted that no notice appears to have been given to the subject of this litigation, her residence being conceded by the courts to be in California, and no testimony as to her mental condition was introduced. Pursuant to its “finding”, the court appointed Mrs. Steiner and the First National Bank in Greensburg guardians of the estate of Mrs. McGuigan in Pennsylvania.

Louis Day having failed to file his account, the new guardians petitioned the court to adjudge him in contempt of its order, which it did on November 25, 1941. Thereafter, on December 1, 1941, the same petitioners requested the court to take testimony to determine what *586 surcharge, if any, should be made against Day. The court fixed a day for hearing, but in the interim, Mrs. McGuigan, the object of all this solicitude, filed her own petition averring that she is a resident of California, that on October 23,1941, the Superior Court in Los Angeles had adjudged her competent and capable of managing her own property, and requesting the court below to vacate its appointment of Mrs. Steiner and the First National Bank in Greensburg as appellant’s guardians. The court issued a rule upon the two Pennsylvania guardians to show cause why their appointment should not be vacated, but pending the return day, heard the testimony of Mrs. Steiner, ex parte, concerning the assets delivered by her to Day. Thereafter the Pennsylvania guardians filed an answer to Mrs. McGuigan’s petition, averring that their appointment, not having been appealed from, was res adjudicata; that the California court had no jurisdiction to pass upon the competency of Mrs. McGuigan because all of her assets were located in Pennsylvania, and that she had not complied with the laws of this State regarding the establishment of hex-restoration to competency. After argument, the court dismissed Mrs. McGuigan’s petition because the statutory procedure for the discharge of domestic guardians had not been followed. This order was filed March 23, 1942. An appeal was taken to this court by Mrs. Mc-Guigan, but it was discontinued.

On October 2, 1942, no further proceedings having been taken, the court entered an order surcharging Day in the amount of $7,760.50 less costs and counsel fees. This was followed, on November 9,1942, by an order directing the Pennsylvania guardians to proceed against Day’s surety. The surety company filed a petition setting forth its interest and requesting the court to accept an accompanying report by Day as his account. The petition further asked that the surcharge be vacated, that the report be audited, and that Day be credited with certain expenditures authorized by the Los Angeles court. *587 A petition was filed by Mrs. MeGuigan, expressly approving tbe report filed on behalf of Day. The report itself contained the allegation that Mrs. Steiner, one of the Pennsylvania guardians, had fraudulently deprived Day and his ward of $2,000. out of the fund collected by Mrs. Steiner under her letter of attorney from Mrs. MeGuigan.

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Related

Owens Appeal
74 A.2d 705 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1950)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 717, 349 Pa. 581, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguigan-estate-pa-1944.