Beeruk Estate.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
April 16, 1968
429 Pa. 415
Each party to bear own costs.
Beeruk Estate.
John M. Dudrick, for Wladyslaw Biruk.
John J. McCarty, with him Henry C. McGrath, Leon E. Sperling, and Richter, Lord, Cavanaugh, McCarty & Raynes, for Mary Beeruk.
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, April 16, 1968:
We are faced with cross appeals from a decree dividing the residue of Frank Beeruk‘s estate between his widow and his nephew, Wladyslaw Beeruk. Frank Beeruk‘s first wife died in 1959; at approximately the time of her death, Frank consulted with an attorney concerning the emigration from Poland of his only living relative, his nephew Wladyslaw. After an extensive exchange of correspondence, Wladyslaw and his family (a wife and two children) arrived in the United States in January of 1963. Several days after Wladyslaw‘s arrival, decedent and his nephew visited decedent‘s attorney at which time a will was prepared pursuant to decedent‘s directions. This will, properly executed, left the residue (after three pecuniary bequests totaling $600) of Frank‘s estate to Wladyslaw and his
Decedent then remarried and in April of 1964 executed a new will, leaving the same pecuniary bequests but giving the residue to his new wife. Upon his death, the 1964 will was probated; Wladyslaw filed a claim for the entire residue contending that decedent had contracted to leave the residue to him. We are convinced that the court below properly applied the principles contained in our most recent case concerning contracts to make wills, Fahringer v. Strine Estate, 420 Pa. 48, 216 A. 2d 82 (1966), and that it correctly concluded that Wladyslaw had demonstrated that decedent had contracted to leave the residue of his estate to his nephew.
Of the issues considered by the court below,1 only
Our cases are in accord with Professor Corbin‘s analysis. The statute itself contains no directive as to what writing constitutes a sufficient memorandum. See
Furthermore, Liggins Estate, 393 Pa. 500, 143 A. 2d 349 (1958) has impliedly, albeit sub silentio, overruled any requirement contained in Anderson that the will must specifically refer to the alleged contract. In Liggins, a husband and wife in 1951 executed mutual wills leaving the residue of their estates to the survivor; after the death of the wife, the husband‘s will was destroyed, and new mutual wills executed between the husband and his son-in-law, leaving the property in
Our disagreement with the court below turns on the last issue—whether the nephew is entitled to decedent‘s entire estate less the three charitable bequests of $600. The widow argues that at best the nephew is entitled to damages based upon the value of the services he rendered. Support for this view can be found in dictum contained in Fahringer v. Strine Estate, supra at 50 n.1, 216 A. 2d at 84 n.1: “[I]f the contract established a promise by decedent to give not a specific amount but an amount vague or undetermined, such as the ‘whole’ or ‘part’ of his estate, then the measure of damages would be the value of the services rendered and not the estate promised to be given.” Cited are several cases which do support this rule; however, the Court does not mention cases such as Pavlinko Estate, 399 Pa. 536, 160 A. 2d 554 (1960) in which a claimant successfully recovered the entire estate and the contract promised decedent‘s entire estate in exchange for services rendered.4
The decree of the Orphans’ Court of Luzerne County is vacated and the record remanded for entry of a decree consistent with this opinion. Each party to pay own costs.
Mr. Justice COHEN dissents.
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE O‘BRIEN :
I disagree with both aspects of the majority opinion. There was no memorandum sufficient to satisfy the Statute of Frauds, which requirement must be met because the alleged contract included real property. Not only do almost all the other jurisdictions which have passed on the question require the superseded will to refer to the alleged contract in order to con-
Moreover, even if there were a provable contract, I believe that the majority has chosen the wrong alternative in not requiring proof of the value of the services rendered. I agree with the majority that it makes no sense to distinguish between the situation where the contract establishes a promise to give a specific amount (where the value of the services rendered need not be proven), and the situation where the contract establishes a promise to give an amount vague or undetermined, such as the whole or part of his estate (where the value of the services must be proven).
However, rather than dispense with proving the value of the services in all cases, I think a much more salutary rule would be to require the value to be shown in all cases. Since the creditor does stand ahead of the widow, courts should take pains to prevent the diminishing of the widow‘s share through the simple expedient of a contract to leave either a specific amount or a portion of the estate in the husband‘s will.
