Simon Will

113 A.2d 266, 381 Pa. 284, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1955
DocketAppeals, Nos. 37 and 38
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 113 A.2d 266 (Simon Will) 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
Simon Will, 113 A.2d 266, 381 Pa. 284, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 479 (Pa. 1955).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearne,

The appeals are from a decree of the Orphans’ Court of Allegheny County dismissing proponents’ motions for judgment non obstante veredicto or for a new trial following a verdict of a jury, in a consolidated trial of two issues devisavit vel non, which set aside and invalidated a probated will and declared invalid a later dated will offered for probate. The special verdict found that both wills had been obtained by proponents from decedent through undue influence, duress and con[286]*286straint, and that neither will had been prepared by or at the direction of decedent, nor had they been signed by her.

Rose Simon, the decedent, a widow, over eighty years of age, died July 7, 1949, without issue, leaving surviving as her sole next of kin a sister, Marie Svobodova, the contestant, a resident of Czechoslovakia. The proponents are Mara Cieslak and her husband, John Cieslak. The sister-contestant and also proponent, John Cieslak, died during this litigation and their personal representatives have been substituted. The value of the estate is estimated at $40,000. The jury trial was held in the Orphans’ Court, authorized by the Orphans’ Court Act of August 10, 1951, P. L. 1163, sec. 746, 20 PS 2080.746. The trial was conducted by President Judge Boyle with care and acumen. It required six days to try. The printed record constitutes over 775 pages and exhibits.

Since the testimony in this protracted contest has been so exhaustively and scrupulously considered by the trial Judge and by all the Judges of the learned court below, we will not again recite the facts in their minutiae.

Decedent was an aged, illiterate Croatian. She understood little English — “just a word here and there”. Witnesses testified as to her • inability to read, write and understand the English language. Apparently she could sign her name. Decedent lived alone in a rented apartment. It appeared that decedent and her sister, the contestant, remained on friendly terms. Proponents, the Cieslaks, were undertakers. It was testified that at or prior to 1943 Charles C. Cieslak, a brother of proponent, John Cieslak, had been in the undertaking business and had conducted the funeral of decedent’s husband. While the questioned wills described proponents as “life long friends” the record is [287]*287silent as to the length or exact nature of such friendship.

Contestant charged the proponents, particularly Mara Cieslak, with chicanery, trickery and fraud in securing from decedent a will or wills whereby contestant was disinherited and proponents were devised and bequeathed decedent’s entire estate. Proof of such charges included direct testimony and much circumstantial evidence. We are required to review the record in order to determine whether or not there was sufficient evidence to support the findings of the jury and whether the correct principles of law were properly applied in the court below.

Four papers or purported wills are involved in this contest. All are interrelated. The first is an unexecuted carbon copy of a will dated “-day of July, 1943”. The original of this will, which is missing and not therefore produced, was prepared by a reputable Pittsburgh attorney, and was stated to have been executed by decedent. Ordinarily such a document would, possess no evidential value. However, contestant alleges that the language in this copy of will, except for a bequest of $100 to a friend and changes of residuary beneficiaries, is similar to that in the three questioned alleged wills. It is to be observed that had the execution of the 1943 will been established, decedent’s funeral would have been directed to be conducted by Charles C. Cieslak (brother of a proponent) at $1,000 expense and in the manner described. The residue would have passed one-half to contestant (decedent’s sister) and the remaining one-lialf to the sister’s three children. A trust company was named as executor.

All three remaining alleged wills bear the purported signature of decedent. All three are identical in their dispositive provisions. The alleged testamentary direction is that proponent, M. J. Cieslak (wife of pro[288]*288ponent John) shall conduct the funeral at the expenditure of $2,000 and in addition supply flowers in the amount of $100 and arrange for Masses. The residue of the estate is devised and bequeathed to proponents who are named executors. The alleged wills may be indicated as follows: Paper No. 1 (exhibit C) is dated December 2, 1948, and is not witnessed. The validity of this instrument is not in issue. No proof of execution has been made. Proponents have not offered it for probate. Paper No. 2, in dispositive terms, is identical with preceding paper, exhibit C. It is dated December 7, 1948, purported to be signed by decedent and witnessed by Adam Belajac and George J. Kochka. It was probated July 12, 1949. Both witnesses swore that they “. . . were present and did see and hear [decedent] . . . sign, seal, publish and declare the same as and for her last Will and Testament. . . .” Proponent, Mara Cieslak, testified that at the purported execution of the paper, one of the witnesses, George Kochka, did not see the decedent or Adam Belajac, the other witness, sign the instrument; and further, there is no testimony that decedent did or could have seen the witnesses sign so that her direction might be implied. See Wills Act of April 24, 1947, P. L. 89, sec. 4, 20 PS 180.4 requiring proof by two competent witnesses.

Whether because of the above recited infirmity in execution, or because as Mara Cieslak, proponent, at first testified that the above No. 1 and No. 2 papers had been lost, the last, or No. 3, will was produced by proponents and is in evidence. John Cieslak, the other proponent (husband of Mara Cieslak), petitioned the Orphans’ Court to open the probate of the No. 2 will, above referred to, so that No. 3, the later will, dated May 31, 1949 (identical in dispositive terms with No. 1 and No. 2 wills), and purported to be signed by decedent and witnessed by Kathryn Spangler and Wil[289]*289liam Wiemert, could be probated. While these two witnesses testified that they saw decedent sign the will in their presence and in the presence of each other, there is testimony in the record that the witness was unable to describe the person whose will she had witnessed. There was also testimony that, at the date of this paper, decedent was ill at her home and hence could not have been at the proponents’ funeral establishment where, it was testified, the paper had been executed. Furthermore, a duly qualified handwriting expert testified that the purported signature of decedent on this paper is a forgery. It was testified that the decedent’s purported signature had been drawn or traced from or over the signature appearing on No. 1 will (neither probated nor offered for probate).

It is noted that the scrivener of the first and third wills has not been disclosed. Mara Cieslak testified that the first will was signed by decedent at proponents’ funeral home, but it was not witnessed and proponent did not know who wrote it. Proponent testified that she told decedent that this will was invalid because it was unwitnessed. There is testimony that proponent, Mara Cieslak, went alone to a public stenographer and had her prepare the No. 2 will (which was probated) and which was executed as recited. Proponent testified that decedent believed wills No. 1 and ■No. 2 had been lost and that decedent came to her with No. 3 will which was executed as narrated..

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Bluebook (online)
113 A.2d 266, 381 Pa. 284, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-will-pa-1955.