O'Connor's Estate

2 Pa. D. & C. 229, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Washington County
DecidedApril 7, 1922
DocketNo. 11
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 229 (O'Connor's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor's Estate, 2 Pa. D. & C. 229, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Hughes, P. J.,

The dispute now before us for decision is raised by an exception filed by John J. O’Connor, surviving husband of the decedent, to the adjudication and decree of this court sur audit of the first and final account of Hugh Cairns, administrator, which exception assigns as error the action of this court in awarding the net balance for distribution (left after the payment of administration costs and the decedent’s debts) to her collateral relations as her next of kin, instead of to the exceptant, as her surviving husband, under his claim for a spouse’s allowance. This net balance for distribution is shown to total $1993.37 by the schedule of distribution attached to and forming a part of the said adjudication and decree sur audit. The controversy to be decided, therefore, narrows down to a single and simple question, to wit: Should such $1993.37 have been distributed to the excep-tant as the surviving spouse, or to and among the collateral kindred, as was directed by the auditing judge in said audit adjudication and decree?

Let us first recall to mind the material facts. Mary O’Connor, a resident of Charleroi, this county, died intestate on Sept. 26, 1920, survived by no children or issue, but by a husband, John J. O’Connor, and certain collateral relatives, to wit, a brother, Hugh Cairns, the administrator of her estate, and fifteen nieces and nephews, children of her deceased brothers and sisters. At the time of her death she was seized of a small amount of personalty and also of a dwelling-house property, situate in the town of Roscoe, this county, which, under orders of this court, the administrator subsequently sold for the payment of her debts. Such personalty and realty composed her whole estate, and the proceeds of the sales thereof are the subject-matter of the administrator’s account here before us.

When this account was duly called for audit and confirmation, the excep-tant did not appear, either in person or by attorney. The administrator’s petition sur audit certifying that there existed a marriage settlement between the decedent and her husband, and counsel for the accountant orally at bar representing the existence of such marriage settlement, and averring that Hugh E. Fergus, attorney for the said John J. O’Connor, had been given actual notice of the filing of the said account and of the said audit, and because, as has been said, neither the said husband nor any attorney for him appeared at the said hearing, the auditing judge (the writer hereof) was [230]*230misled into believing that such husband had, either through the alleged marriage settlement released or voluntarily abandoned all rights or claims in and to her estate, and, hence, the said net balance was thereupon, in the said audit adjudication and decree, awarded to and distributed among her said collateral relatives as her lawiul next of kin.

Before the nisi period of such adjudication and distributing decree had expired, the said husband appeared by counsel and caused to be filed thereto the exception now before us, wherein the exceptant maintains that said net balance should properly have been awarded to him under his claim for a $5000 allowance as surviving spouse, made in the proceedings to that end theretofore instituted by him in this court to No. 3, May Term, 1921, Orphans’ Court. No doubt it would have been better practice had such husband, instead of filing the said exception, petitioned this court for the vacation and setting aside of the said adjudication and decree and for the opening of the audit for the taking of further testimony, to the end that he might be given an opportunity to present and substantiate his claim for such balance. However, the exception so filed served to preserve his rights; but, in order that he might have his day in court to prove his claim, a novel procedure was resorted to and permitted, to wit, a trial under an exception, all parties interested being sui juris, represented of record and making no objection to such irregular procedure.

At this trial sur exception it developed that the decedent and her husband had never in fact executed any marriage settlement as certified in the administrator’s petition sur audit and as averred by the administrator’s counsel at bar, and, moreover, that the husband had never in fact abandoned his rights in her estate as suggested. The evidence adduced at the audit showed, on the other hand, that he had taken positive steps from time to time to preserve, procure and possess himself of, the share and interests in her estate to which, under the law, he was entitled; the public records offered in evidence showing that he had applied to the Register of Wills for the grant to him of letters of administration, had made claim for, and instituted proceedings to recover, a $5000 allowance as surviving spouse, had consented of record to the consummation of the administrator’s sale of her said real estate, expressing such consent and withholding the pursuance of said spouse’s allowance proceedings, upon the express understanding that his conduct would not be deemed a waiver or in prejudice of his said rights and claims to and upon the funds to be distributed at the audit of the administration account.

The husband’s claim, therefore, now comes before us for determination de novo and unprejudiced by laches or estoppel. The collateral relatives, all of whom are sui juris and appear of record (among whom the said net balance was, in the said adjudication, decree and schedules of distribution, awarded), maintained that the said exceptant is barred from here sharing in his wife’s estate because, they allege, he wilfully failed to support and maliciously deserted her for the period of more than one year immediately prior to her death; the truth of which charges the exceptant denies.

The evidence adduced at the hearing sur exception establishes that the decedent, Mary O’Connor, and John J. O’Connor were married in April, 1913, and lived together as man and wife until the month of November, 1918, when he left their common abode, and since which time they have never lived or cohabited together. On Dec. 17, 1918, the wife made an information before a justice of the peace, charging her said husband with having deserted their home on Nov. 9, 1918, and with refusing thereafter to support her. The husband having thereupon been arrested and bound over to the Court of Quarter [231]*231Sessions of Washington County, the cause was heard before Mcllvaine, P. J., who, after withholding an adjudication therein for some months in the hope that the parties might themselves adjust their differences (which result, however, was not accomplished), filed on Sept. 25, 1919, an opinion with suffixed decree, requiring the said husband to pay to his wife $10 per month so long as he should refuse to furnish her a home and live with her, and further requiring him to furnish a bond in the sum of $500, conditioned on his compliance with the said order of maintenance; which bond was thereupon duly furnished, approved and filed. In compliance with the said decree, the defendant thereafter made to his wife the required monthly payments, beginning with the date of the said decree and continuing the same down to the date of her death, which, as has been said, occurred on Sept. 26, 1920. After the said separation, the husband continuously resided in the same town where they had theretofore lived together, but all efforts of friends and attorneys to effect a reconciliation proved utterly unsuccessful. Did such course of conduct on the part of the husband forfeit his rights and shares in her estate?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C. 229, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnors-estate-paorphctwashin-1922.