Vallish Estate

244 A.2d 745, 431 Pa. 88, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 6, 1968
DocketAppeal, No. 375
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 244 A.2d 745 (Vallish 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
Vallish Estate, 244 A.2d 745, 431 Pa. 88, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 594 (Pa. 1968).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This appeal challenges the validity of a decree of the Orphans’ Court of Columbia County which, because of the existence of an antenuptial agreement, revoked and vacated an election by a surviving spouse to take against the will of her deceased husband. The sole issue is the validity of that antenuptial agreement.

Walter B. Vallish [decedent], died, testate, on May 14, 1965, survived by Stella Vallish, his widow, three daughters by a prior marriage and several grandchildren. According to the inventory filed, decedent at the time of his death owned realty valued at $10,000 and personalty, including stocks, bonds, a mortgage, bank account, etc., valued at approximately $100,000.

Under the terms of decedent’s will, Mrs. Vallish was given an option either (a) to receive $50 monthly until receipt of the total of $5,000 or (b) to live in decedent’s residence in Locust Township, Columbia County, “for as long as she desires so long as [the] residence is maintained all year round and so long as she bears responsibility for and pays all maintenance, costs and expenses and keeps the property in a proper state of repair and maintains it in its present condition.”1

On July 30, 1965, Mrs. Vallish filed an election to take against decedent’s will. On January 13, 1966, Dorothy Linnet, a daughter of decedent and decedent’s personal representative, joined in by decedent’s other daughters, a son-in-law and two grandchildren, petitioned the Orphans’ Court of Columbia County for a [91]*91rule upon Mrs. Vallish to show cause why her election should not be revoked and vacated. This petition was predicated on the fact that on December 3, 1958, — 27 days prior to decedent’s marriage to Mrs. Vallish — an antenuptial agreement had been executed wherein decedent and Mrs. Vallish each agreed to relinquish any and all claims which each party might have in property then owned or thereafter acquired by the other. The court granted the rule and Mrs. Vallish filed an answer alleging, inter alia, that the antenuptial agreement was invalid because decedent had not fully and fairly disclosed to her the extent and value of his property and that the consideration for the agreement was neither adequate nor reasonable. After several hearings, the court entered a decree revoking and vacating Mrs. Vallish’s election to take against the will and from that decree the instant appeal lies.

Mrs. Vallish contends, in substance, that: (1) the finding of the court below that prior to the execution of the antenuptial agreement there had been a full and fair disclosure of decedent’s assets lacks evidentiary support; (2) the court erred in excluding from the record proof offered by her of the extent and value of decedent’s assets at the time of execution of the ante-nuptial agreement; (3) the court was biased and prejudiced against her.

The agreement recites, inter alia, that decedent owned certain realty and personalty “the value of which has been fully disclosed to the intended wife”, that the prospective Mrs. Vallish owned certain personalty, “the full value of which has been disclosed to the intended husband”, and that it was the intention of each party to relinquish any share or interest which either party might acquire, by reason of the prospective marriage, in property then owned or thereafter acquired by the other party. This agreement, which made no provision whatsoever for the intended [92]*92wife, recited as the consideration thereof the marriage, the parties’ mutual promises and $1.00. That the agreement was executed by decedent and Mrs. Vallish and witnessed by one Frank Valeski and Howard R. Berninger, the scrivener, is admitted. No schedule of the parties’ assets was attached to the agreement.

Decedent and Mrs. Vallish had been previously married, their respective spouses were deceased, and each had children born of such prior marriage; Mrs. Vallish’s first husband had come with decedent to this country from Poland; Mrs. Vallish first became acquainted with decedent when she was a ten year old child living in Mount Carmel, Northumberland County; Mrs. Vallish and her first husband had resided for approximately 40 years in Ohio and she and her then husband saw decedent very infrequently during that period; Mrs. Vallish and decedent renewed their acquaintance in July 1958 and, thereafter, until the time of the antenuptial agreement had seen each other only three or four times; at the time of the agreement, Mrs. Vallish was aged 67 and decedent over 70 years.

Recently, our Court has set forth certain criteria for the determination of the validity of antenuptial agreements. In Gelb Estate, 425 Pa. 117, 122, 123, 228 A. 2d 367 (1967), we stated: “While antenuptial agreements are presumptively valid, they, nevertheless, depend upon there being either a reasonable provision made for the wife, or, in the absence of such a provision, a full and fair disclosure to the wife of the husband’s worth [citing authority].”

In Kaufmann Estate, 404 Pa. 131, 171 A. 2d 48 (1961), we held that an antenuptial agreement is presumptively valid and the burden of proving its invalidity is upon the person who so charges and we further stated that, in evaluating the reasonableness of the provision made for a wife in an antenuptial agreement, such reasonableness must be determined as of [93]*93the date of the agreement and not by hindsight and that reasonableness depends upon the financial worth of the husband, the financial status of the wife, the age of the parties, the number of children each has, the intelligence of the parties, whether the wife aided in the accumulation of the wealth, etc.

In Shea’s Appeal, 121 Pa. 302, 318, 319, 15 A. 629 (1888), this Court said: “The relation [between betrothed persons] is one of such extreme mutual confidence that a special duty of full disclosure arises which has no place in the ordinary contractual relation. Thus, in the case of Kline v. Kline, 57 Pa. 120, we said: ‘There is perhaps no relation of life in which more unbounded confidence is reposed than in that existing between parties who are betrothed to each other. Especially does the woman place the most implicit trust in the truth and affection of him in whose keeping she is about to deposit the happiness of her future life. From him she has no secrets; she believes he has none from her. To consider such persons as in the same category with buyers and sellers, and to say that they are dealing at arms’ length, we think is a mistake. Surely when a man and woman are on the eve of marriage, and it is proposed between them, as in this instance, to enter into an ante-nuptial contract upon the subject of the enjoyment and disposition of their respective estates, it is the duty of each to be frank and unreserved in the disclosure of all circumstances materially bearing on the contemplated agreement.’ We held that the relation existing between betrothed persons was one of the confidential relations which require uberrima fides in all transactions between them.”

The court below, upholding the antenuptial agreement, assumed but did not decide that the provisions therein for Mrs. Yallish were unreasonably disproportionate to the assets of the decedent but concluded that a full disclosure of decedent’s assets had been made at [94]*94the time the agreement was executed. It is clear beyond any question that the agreement made no provision for Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 745, 431 Pa. 88, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vallish-estate-pa-1968.