Shenandoah v. City of Philadelphia

438 F. Supp. 981, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11770
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 20, 1976
DocketCiv. A. 72-2388
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 438 F. Supp. 981 (Shenandoah v. City of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shenandoah v. City of Philadelphia, 438 F. Supp. 981, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11770 (E.D. Pa. 1976).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

FULLAM, District Judge.

The plaintiff in this action is the mother of the late Leroy Shenandoah. She is also the Administratrix of his estate, pursuant to letters of administration issued by the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County. The decedent was shot and killed by a Philadelphia police officer on March 2, 1972, during a confrontation which occurred on a balcony-fire escape of a center city hotel in front of numerous witnesses. For reasons which have never been explained, decedent lay on the balcony for some time after the shooting without any medical attention whatsoever. When the police finally brought him to the emergency room of a hospital two blocks away, he was pronounced dead of shock due to loss of blood. He had been shot five times.

The original Complaint asserted a civil rights claim on behalf of the decedent’s estate. 1 Subsequently, plaintiff amended the Complaint to add claims arising under the Pennsylvania survival and wrongful death statutes (20 Pa.C.S.A. § 3371 and 12 P.S. § 1601 et seq., respectively). The state claims are not merely pendent to the federal civil rights action; they are properly before the Court by virtue of the parties’ diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C. § 1332.

Shortly before the case was scheduled to proceed to trial, the parties began, at my suggestion, to explore in earnest the possibility of settlement. Because the case entailed numerous issues which I would be called upon to decide at trial, I did not participate in settlement negotiations, but turned the role of mediator over to my colleague Judge Edward R. Becker. Through his diligent efforts and the cooperation of counsel, the parties agreed to settle the case for $130,000. Judge Becker memorialized the settlement in a Memorandum filed June 2,1975. He did not attribute the settlement to any single claim or divide the *985 fund between or among the various causes of action asserted in the Amended Complaint, although he did suggest that plaintiff’s negligence claims were a good deal stronger than her civil rights theory of recovery.

On June 26,1975, plaintiff petitioned this Court for approval of her proposal for distribution of the settlement proceeds. She urged that, after deduction of costs and counsel fees, the entire fund be given to her husband and herself, as decedent’s parents, 2 “pursuant to the usage, practice, law and custom of the Onondaga Tribal Nation. . ” 3 On June 30, 1975, an objection to the petition was delivered to my office, in the form of a letter from counsel for one Ann Bush Schenandoah LaForce. 4 To my knowledge the objection was never formally filed with the Clerk of the Court. The gist of the letter was that Mrs. LaForce had married the decedent in 1957 and remained his “legal” wife until he died. (She remarried in 1973.) She claimed a surviving spouse’s share of the settlement proceeds (relying on Pennsylvania law) and requested a hearing on the petition to permit the presentation of evidence in support of her claim. I granted the request and set the matter down for hearing on July 11, 1975.

At the hearing, Ann LaForce testified that she and the decedent lived together as spouses “at least” during the last seven months of his life and that they had done so, although intermittently, for the bulk of their marriage. She attributed the sporadic nature of their cohabitation to decedent’s migratory employment pattern; he often lived for months at a time in different cities while employed as an ironworker on bridge and skyscraper construction projects. Several of Mrs. LaForce’s relatives and acquaintances testified in support of her claim. Also at the hearing, and apparently for the first time, Mrs. LaForce asserted a claim on behalf of Mitchell David Shenandoah, a child born to her in 1967, on the theory that he was the legitimate issue of her marriage with decedent and, as such, entitled to share in the settlement proceeds.

The plaintiff and her witnesses bitterly disputed this evidence. According to them, Ann LaForce deserted her husband in 1964 while he was serving in the military, and never again lived with him as his wife. Her son, they charged, was fathered by another man, and her egregious misconduct in the form of abandonment and adultery, was such that she had forfeited any right to claim a share in her husband’s estate or the proceeds of an action for his wrongful death. 5 In support of this argument they pointed out that at a “Dead Feast” held shortly after decedent’s death, the Onondaga tribal council had distributed decedent’s real and person effects to his parents, and that Mrs. LaForce, who within several days of the death had visited the reservation and taken possession of a snowmobile which she claimed to have purchased jointly with the decedent in February 1972, was prevailed upon by the tribal council to return that item to decedent’s parents in accordance *986 with the decree of the Dead Feast. 6 Alternatively, plaintiff argued that Mrs. LaForce had forfeited her rights as surviving spouse under the laws of New York or Pennsylvania, whichever this Court deemed controlling, if it were not persuaded to follow Indian law. In further rebuttal to Mrs. LaForce’s evidence on the issues of cohabitation and condonation two sisters of the decedent testified that, for the last five years of his life, their brother lived, not with his legal wife, but with a series of two other women, and that each of these liaisons produced a child and appeared to be an exclusive relationship while it lasted.

At the close of the hearing of July 11, I made several observations from the Bench which I specifically addressed to the parties as well as their attorneys. I said, first, that this bitter intrafamily dispute struck me as unseemly and was a dishonorable reflection upon the decedent’s memory. I then urged the parties to agree upon a sensible, fair distribution of the settlement fund, one which would achieve the equity that “Mr. Shenandoah presumably would have wanted were he still alive.” (Tr. 194.) Thereupon, I adjourned the hearing, but agreed to leave the record open for a suitable period of time to permit the filing of additional evidence.

At the parties’ request, a second hearing on this matter was held on September 29, 1975, at which time both sides filed supplemental documents and produced new witnesses. Among the witnesses produced by the plaintiff at the second hearing were Roseanne Shenandoah and Deena J. Shenandoah. It was decedent’s relationships with these two women about which his sisters had testified at the first hearing.

In the course of the hearing on September 29, Ann LaForce admitted that it was biologically impossible for decedent to have fathered her son Mitchell. She also conceded that Roseanne Shenandoah was the mother of decedent’s son, Marcus Lee Shenandoah (born in Ohio in 1969), and that Deena J. Shenandoah was the mother of decedent’s daughter, Melinda Jill Shenandoah (born in New York in 1971). Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 F. Supp. 981, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shenandoah-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-1976.