Reed Estate

27 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedJune 12, 1962
Docketno. 416 of 1962
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Pa. D. & C.2d 527 (Reed Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed Estate, 27 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Shoyer, J.,

Decedent died October 7, 1960, intestate, not survived by a spouse, and leaving, as appears from the statement of proposed distribution, as the sole person entitled to her estate under the intestate laws, a first cousin, B, who is stated to be sui juris and to have had notice of the audit.

Letters of administration were granted to the accountant on November 16, 1960, and proof of publication of the grant of same is hereto annexed.

Transfer inheritance tax has not been paid.

The claim of the first cousin presents an unusual situation, because both she and decedent were illegitimate. So far as I have been advised, this is the first time in this Commonwealth that an illegitimate has made claim to the estate of a collateral illegitimate. The right of claimant rests on section 7(a) of the Intestate Act of April 24, 1947, P. L. 80, 20 PS §1.7(a), which reads as follows:

“(a) Child of mother. For purposes of descent by, from and through an illegitimate, he shall be considered the child of his mother but not of his father.”

By undisputed documentary records of birth, baptism and death, it was proven that decedent was born out of wedlock in 1916 to Mabel B. when the latter was [529]*52919 years of age. At that time, the household consisted of Mabel, her sister, Mildred, their mother, May, and their aunt, Martha. Mabel assumed the name of “Mrs. Reed” upon the insistence of her mother and aunt. Some 24 years later, Mildred B., the younger and only sister of Mabel, bore the claimant, B, out of wedlock. Mabel died in 1928. B grew up in the same household with decedent and Mildred, thfe other members of the family having died, and was raised to believe that decedent, her first cousin, was the sister of B’s mother instead of her niece. B began to wonder about the true relationship when she was about 17 years old. Shocked by the realization that she had been raised in deception, she ran away from home.

B was married in West Virginia, misrepresenting her age by some two years, in order that a license could be obtained without her mother’s consent.

She returned to her mother’s home in October of 1959. Her mother’s death followed shortly, on November 18, 1959. B, together with her husband and baby, continued to live with her cousin Isabelle until the death of the latter on October 7, 1960. B and decedent were the sole issue of their respective mothers who apparently were never married. No evidence was presented as to the existence of possible paternal kin of decedent.

It seems certain that under the law of Pennsylvania as it stood prior to the Intestate Act of 1947, B could not have inherited from her first cousin. The Intestate Act of 1917 restricted lineal inheritance to the mother and maternal grandparents of the illegitimate (section 15 (a), 20 PS §92), and collateral inheritance to the brothers and sisters of the illegitimate (section 15(b), 20 PS §93). “The intent of this section is to legitimate an illegitimate child only so far as is provided by clauses (a) and (b) hereof”: Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 429, sec. 15(c), 20 PS §94.

[530]*530There is an illuminating parallel between illegitimacy and adoption in both intestate acts. The language of the 1917 Act gave broader rights of inheritance than theretofore existed to adopted persons by providing that the adopted person and “the adopting parent or parents shall, respectively, inherit and take, by devolution from and through each other . . .” (section 16(a), 20 PS §101). Thus, the adopted daughter of a man who predeceased the decedent, his brother, inherited the share of her adoptive father in Cave’s Estate, 326 Pa. 358 (1937). In construing the 1917 Act, our Supreme Court said (pp. 364-366) : “. . . We have no hesitancy now in deciding . . . that the Intestate Act of 1917 permits of no reasonable construction other than that, by its terms, an adopted child has the same right of inheritance from the collateral kindred of his adoptive parents as a natural child of such parents would have. The court below [held] . . . that an adopted child is not entitled to inherit an estate in which his adoptive parent never had a vested interest. Such a construction of section 16 of the Intestate Act is wholly untenable. It gives no effect to the word ‘through.’ If it be held that the adoptive parent must have had a vested interest in property in order to entitle the adopted child to inherit it, the Intestate Act has added nothing to previous legislation, since that had already provided for direct inheritance by the adopted child from the adoptive parent of property owned by the latter. But the Intestate Act, copying the phraseology of the Act of May 28, 1915, P. L. 580, provided for inheritance by the adopted child and the adopting parent ‘from and through each other.’ The word ‘from’ contemplates the death of either the adopted child or the adoptive parent, the statute giving the survivor the right to inherit from the deceased. But the word ‘through’ extends the inheritance rights of both the adopted child and the adoptive parent to [531]*531those arising by virtue of representation of each other for purposes of devolution, thereby qualifying them to inherit, not merely from one another, but from one another’s relatives and kindred through the channel left open by the death of either. The word ‘through’ presupposes the death of the adopted child or the adoptive parent, leaving the other surviving, and entitling him to inherit from a third person in the right of the one thus deceased. When a child inherits from a parent property of which the latter is seised, he takes ‘from,’ but not ‘through,’ such parent. When, on the other hand, he inherits property from a third person by right of representation of his parent who would have inherited the property were he living, he takes ‘through,’ not ‘from,’ his parent. By the use of both words — ‘from’ and ‘through’ — it is clear the legislature intended that the adopted child should have the right' to inherit not only property in which his adoptive parent himself owned a vested interest, but property of kindred of his adoptive parent which the latter would have inherited had he been living, and which, by reason of his death, passes ‘through’ him to his adopted child as it would have done, to use the language of section 16(a), ‘if the person adopted had been born a lawful child of the adopting parent or parents.’ ”

Although the language in the 1947 Act was changed slightly, it was intended to retain the rule of Cave’s Estate. See the comment of the Joint State Government Commission to section 8, 20 PS §1.8. The Commission’s comment to section 7, 20 PS §1.7 is even more pertinent and is as follows: “Commission’s Comment: Section 7 (this section) on illegitimates and section 8, 20 PS §1.8, on adopted persons have been rewritten to provide simpler language than that contained in sections 14, 15, and 16 of Act 1917, June 7, P. L. 429, 20 PS §§91-95, 101, 102. So far as possible, the language of each section has been made to conform [532]*532with the language of the other section so that court interpretation of either by analogy will apply to the other.”

Following the reasoning of our Supreme Court in Cave’s Estate, supra, we conclude without hesitation that B has the same right of inheritance from the collateral kindred of her mother that her mother would have had. So long as the claim of inheritance is exclusively through the maternal line, it matters not that decedent and B were both illegitimate.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Pa. D. & C.2d 527, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-estate-paorphctphilad-1962.