10 A.2d 835 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1939
Argued September 28, 1939.
The question in this appeal has to do with the construction of section 12(a) of the Fiduciaries Act of June 7, 1917, P.L. 447, 20 PS 4711 providing an exemption to a widow or children of a decedent. This section is founded upon the Act of April 14, 1851, P.L. 612, and is a codification of the earlier statutes with additions which have been written into the former acts by judicial construction. There is nothing in the Fiduciaries Act indicating that the legislature intended to change the existing law on the subject. The authorities construing these former statutes, therefore, are persuasive in the interpretation of the section under consideration: *13 Crawford's Estate,
Abraham C. Bell died May 2, 1937. At the time of his death his wife was on her death bed and she died ten weeks later without having claimed her widow's exemption. It is admitted that during the whole of the period by which she survived her husband, she was inarticulate and was incapable, both physically and mentally, of claiming the benefit of the statute. After her death an adult daughter who had lived with her parents "forming part of the family" claimed the exemption in the estate of her father and was refused. This appeal followed.
The exemption provision in the Act of 1917 is not a statute of distribution, and the exemption is not an inheritance. It is wholly a gratuity, based upon the existence of the family relationship at the time of decedent's death: HildebrandEstate,
The present act provides for an exemption to the children if the widow has forfeited her right; the same effect was given to the former acts by judicial construction. A widow's right may be forfeited by desertion (August Braum's Estate,
We are thus back to the main question, whether the bare fact that decedent was survived by a mentally incompetent widow, on whose behalf the right was not asserted and who died shortly after her husband, will defeat the claim of the daughter. We are of the opinion that the legislature did not so intend. To sustain the order disallowing the claim, it would be necessary to give the act a strict and literal construction which wholly ignores its broad purpose. The statutory exemption is a preferred claim or gift of the law prompted by consideration of public policy; Peeble's Estate,
In Henkel's Estate, supra, the widow had entered into a separation agreement with her husband and was no part of his family at his death. The Supreme Court in Odiorne's Appeal,
Judgment reversed at the cost of the estate.