Stoner Estate

56 A.2d 250, 358 Pa. 252, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 25, 1947
DocketAppeal, 185
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 56 A.2d 250 (Stoner 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
Stoner Estate, 56 A.2d 250, 358 Pa. 252, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 295 (Pa. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Jones,

Harriet Stoner, a resident, of Lancaster County,.died on October 11, 1944, leaving a last will which was duly probated before the Register of Wills for the County. She devised and bequeathed, the whole of her net estate to her six children, respectively, in six equal shares. Minnie B. Hess, a daughter of the decedent and a legatee under the will, is the present appellant. She appeals from a final decree of the Orphans’ Court of Lancaster County awarding the entire balance for distribution, as shown by the executrices’ first and final account, to the Lancaster County Institution District and to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in separately specified sums for the reimbursement of the distributees for the support and institutional care of the testatrix’s weak-minded daughter, Agnes Zimmerman, and four weak-minded adult grandchildren, being the children of Agnes. For the period of time here relevant Agnes was an inmate of the Lancaster County Institution District’s Hospital and the Harrisburg State Hospital where she died on September 5, 1945. Surviving her were her husband, Martin, and five children. Three of the children were inmates of the Lancaster County Hospital. A fourth child, a daughter, Minerva, was in the custody of an agency of the Lancaster County Institution District from October 1936 to July 1943, having been adjudged a neglected and dependent child. The fifth child, another daughter, does not figure in this proceeding.

The proofs show and the court below found that Martin Zimmerman was unable to support'his family or provide proper care for them because of his poor health and limited mentality. By an order of the Quarter Sessions Court of Lancaster County, dated May 27, 1938, he had been required to pay four dollars a week to the Children’s Bureau for the support of his then minor daughter, Minerva. He complied with that order so long as he continued to work at a job on a W. P. A. project where he was employed for a time. But, upon being *255 discharged therefrom, he was thenceforth unable to earn a livelihood or to pay anything further on account of the support order with the result that an unpaid balance due under that order accumulated. No other court proceedings to enforce Martin’s liability for the support of his indigent wife and children were ever instituted against him. The court below specifically found, and the finding is fully supported by the evidence, that any such further proceeding would have been vain and useless, and a needless expense to the County by way of court costs. Likewise, no proceeding for the' support and maintenance of the weak-minded dependents was instituted against Harriet Stoner, the decedent, in her lifetime.

Liability for the support and institutional care of Agnes Zimmerman, the daughter, was imposed by the court below upon the decedent’s estate pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 of the Act of June 1, 1915, P. L. 661, 71 PS § 1783, 1 while liability for the support and care of the four weak-minded grandchildren was likewise imposed under Section 3 of the Act of June 24,1937, P. L. 2045, 62 PS § 1973. 2 That the decedent’s daughter and grandchildren were confined to the respective County and State institutions for the periods of time for which claims were made and that the amounts of the claims were correct are admitted facts.

*256 It is the liability of the Harriet Stoner estate for the support and institutional care of the daughter and grandchildren which the appellant disputes, contending in that connection that (1) the Orphans’ Court was without jurisdiction of the controversy, (2) jurisdiction of Harriet Stoner’s liability for the specified claims was in the Quarter Sessions Court and, not having been availed of in Mrs. Stoner’s lifetime, cannot now be invoked, (3) the Orphans’ Court was without power to make material findings and an adjudication in the premises, (4) liability for the care and support of an indigent relative attaches in the order of the persons named in the pertinent statutes, and (5) there has been no showing of an exhaustion of remedy against Martin Zimmerman, the husband and father of the indigents, for his cognate ■ liability. As the matters material to contentions (1) and (3) above (relating to the jurisdiction and power of the Orphans’ Court) are closely connected, we shall treat with them together.

It is too plain for discussion that the Orphans’ Court has jurisdiction of decedents’ estates and of all matters pertaining thereto, such as the payment and collection of debts owing by or to a decedent: Sec. 9(e) and (f) of the Orphans’ Court Act of 1917. And, no less, valid claims for support are debts of a decedent and, as such, cognizable in an Orphans’ Court upon the settlement of the debtor’s estate. Section 4 of the Support Law of 1937, as amended, cit. supra, provides that “. . . Any claim for the expenses of support . . . held by any public body or public agency, shall have the same force and effect against the real estate of a deceased indigent person as other debts of a decedent, and shall be ascertained and recovered in the same manner”. While we have not been cited any appellate court cases on the question of liability, here involved, as affected by the Act of 1937, supra, there is a decision by a lower court (Ginder’s Estate, 50 Lancaster L.R. 95 (1946)) whose conclusion we approve and wherein a decedent’s (grandmother’s) estate was *257 held liable by the Orphans’Court of Lancaster County for the maintenance of indigent grandchildren. Under the prior Support Act of 1915 adjudications by Orphans’ Courts imposing liability for the support of indigent persons upon the estates of deceased relatives were upheld by both this Court and the Superior Court: see Brubaker Estate, 346 Pa. 339, 30 A. 2d 135; Boles’s Estate, 316 Pa. 179, 173 A. 664; Harnish’s Estate, 268 Pa. 128, 110 A. 761; Geisler Estate, 76 Pa. Superior Ct. 560. Perhaps, the best statement to. be found in these cases on the matter under consideration is. in Harnish’s Estate, supra, where it was said at p. 132: “Here the statute imposed a liability upon the father for the. support of his son, and, since the former’s death, the. proper forum for its enforcement is the orphans’ court; . . . Undoubtedly the liability of living parties in such cases is properly adjudicated in the court of common pleas [Act of 1915]; what we now decide is that where one upon whom the statute has placed the burden [of sup-fort] dies, the lack of such [common pleas] adjudication does not prevent the allowance of the Commonwealth’s claim by the orphans’ court”. No logical reason appears why jurisdiction for the enforcement of the duty under the Act of 1937 of supporting indigents should be construed (in the absence of specific statutory direction to the contrary) any differently than it was under the prior Acts. Accordingly, we hold that the Orphans’ Court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the instant case and the power to adjudicate all related issues of fact or law.

The appellant next contends that the decedent’s liability for the support and care of her indigent daughter and grandchildren arose in her lifétime and should, therefore, have been imposed upon her by due proceedings in a court of Quarter Sessions.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A.2d 250, 358 Pa. 252, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoner-estate-pa-1947.