Patterson's Estate

128 A. 100, 282 Pa. 396, 38 A.L.R. 1340, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 636
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 15, 1925
DocketAppeal, 171
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 A. 100 (Patterson'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
Patterson's Estate, 128 A. 100, 282 Pa. 396, 38 A.L.R. 1340, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 636 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

The court below confirmed the report of an auditor which awarded the entire estate of a deceased unmarried woman to her only child, an illegitimate son, born after the date of his mother’s will and not. provided for therein: this appeal is by the residuary legatee, to whom testatrix left the bulk of her property, in the language of *399 the will, “without any condition, restriction or limitation whatsoever.”

The will was executed June 12, 1920; the son was born August 21,1920; and the testatrix died August 25, 1920. The child, named Alexander, still lives, and his guardian claims under sec. 21 of the Wills Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, 410, asserting an- intestacy as to his ward, owing to the fact that he is not provided for in the will of his mother, and contending that, since the intestate law makes this boy the sole heir of decedent, he is entitled to her whole estate.

The section in question provides: “When any person, male or female, shall make a last will and testament, and afterward......shall have a child or children not provided for in such will, and shall die, leaving...... such child or children, although such child or children be born after the death of their father, every such person, so far as shall regard the surviving......child or children born after the making of the will, shall be deemed and construed to die intestate; and such child or children shall be entitled to such purparts, shares and dividends of the estate, real and personal, of the deceased, as if such person had actually died without any will.”

Appellant, — despite the above-quoted language, of the absolute and unrestricted devise to him, and admitting the absence of any reference to appellee’s ward, or of provisions for his benefit, in the will, — claimed that a secret parol trust existed, through an understanding between him, the residuary legatee, and decedent, by which a substantial part of the estate was to be paid to the child, and that the circumstances of the case made this trust tantamount to an express provision for the latter within the meaning of section 21 of the Wills Act; and therefore no intestacy existed as to him. Appellant offered to prove this alleged trust by conversations between himself and decedent; by her declarations to other persons named by him as beneficiaries under the *400 alleged trust; and by an unsigned memorandum in writing entitled “Distribution of Estate,” which was found with the will, and which contained the initials of the residuary legatee, those of other personal friends of decedent, and of her unborn child (according to the name which the testimony shows she had intended it to bear), with amounts opposite the respective initials. To bring this memorandum into the case, appellant testified that, in their conversations, decedent had stated she would give him written instructions for the distribution of her estate; but that, as a matter of fact, she never gave or sent any such instructions to him and he did not receive the memorandum produced before the auditor until after the death of decedent.

Appellant further claimed in the court below, and contends here, that, because of illegitimacy, the boy Alexander is not within the purview of section 21 of the Wills Act or entitled to its protection. In support of this contention, which we shall dispose of first, he takes the position that, “in the absence of some qualifying expression,” the word “child” in legislative enactments, as in legal parlance, generally means “only and exclusively a legitimate child” (citing Overseers v. Overseers, 176 Pa. 116, 121, and other cases), and the present child, being illegitimate, does not come within the protection of the statute. He says, further, that the language employed in section 21 of the Wills Act “negatives the thought that an illegitimate child was in contemplation of the legislature,” because the provision in question uses the words “although such child or children be born after the death of their father,” contending that this wording shows the act was to apply only to legitimate children, for, “under both the common law and the statute law, an illegitimate child has no father.” We think it is quite clear, however, that reference to “their father,” in section 21 of the Wills Act, and in prior legislation of similar import (see Walker v. Hall, 34 Pa. 483, for history of the earlier acts), was placed *401 there for the mere purpose of showing the lawmakers intended the provision for after-born children should apply to posthumous children; and, since in general contemplation children are never born after the death of their mother, the legislature evidently thought it unnecessary to mention such a contingency. The words “their father” cannot warrantably be given the significance which appellant claims for them; and in considering the contention that the word “child” always means one born in lawful wedlock and not an illegitimate, we must keep in mind the fact that at the time of the adoption of the Wills Act there was upon the statute books of Pennsylvania the Act of July 10, 1901, P. L. 639, which by section 1 provides in express terms that “illegitimate children shall take and be known by the name of their mother, and the common-law doctrine of nullius filius shall not apply as between the mother and her illegitimate child or children, but the mother and her heirs and her illegitimate child and its heirs shall...... enjoy all the rights and privileges, one to the other, in the same manner and to the same extent as if the said child or children had been born in lawful wedlock.” This section was not repealed by the Wills Act of 1917, and is still in force. Subsequent sections, namely 2, 3 and 4, though formally repealed, were incorporated in the Intestate Act of 1917 as sections 15a, 15b and 15c (P. L. 429, 439); of these, section 4 particularly states the intent of the legislature (see Com. v. Mackey, 222 Pa. 613, 616) “to legitimate an illegitimate child as to its mother and her heirs,” and the effect of the act clearly was to place such a child, so far as its mother and her estate are concerned, in the position of a legitimate. All subsequent legislation, including the Wills Act of 1917, must be understood accordingly, and, there being no express or implied exclusion of illegitimate children from the benefits of the last mentioned statute, it must be construed, in the light of the Act of 1901, as though illegitimates were expressly included as entitled *402 to the benefits of section 21. Moreover, when reading cases involving the construction of wills and the rights of illegitimate children thereunder, decided prior to the Act of 1901, its absence at that time must be kept in mind.

Appellant’s attempt to place an illegitimate child in the same category with an adopted child so far as the application of section 21 of the Wills Act is concerned, and thereby to exclude the former from its protection (Boyd’s Est., 270 Pa. 504), lacks force, because the provision in question, in its reference to after-born children, applies to physical birth alone: see McCulloch’s App., 113 Pa. 247, 255. An adoption was not considered in law as tantamount to physical birth (see Boyd’s Est., supra, 507), for the purpose of satisfying the requirements of section 21 of the Wills Act in that regard, until the recent Act of May 20,1921, P. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 A. 100, 282 Pa. 396, 38 A.L.R. 1340, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pattersons-estate-pa-1925.