25 Pa. Super. 225 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904
Opinion by
On March 29, 1900, Joseph C. Broadrick became a member of the Pennsylvania Railroad Voluntary Relief Department, and received a certificate entitling the beneficiary designated therein (Louisa Broaderick, his mother), to $500 upon his death, which occurred on December 14, 1901. In the meantime, on April 10, 1901, a wedding ceremony was performed between him and one Belle Halen. It appears, however, that at this time Joseph Broadrick had a living wife. Upon his death the money due from the relief department was claimed by Louisa Broadrick by virtue of the designation of her as beneficiary, as above stated, and by Belle Halen, or Broadrick, by virtue of an alleged antenuptial contract whereby Joseph Broadrick, in consideration of her marrying him, obligated himself to have her substituted as beneficiary, which under the rules of the relief department he had a right to do. The relief department paid the money into court and a feigned issue was awarded, in which Belle Broadrick was plaintiff and Louisa Broadrick was defendant, to determine the ownership of the fund. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment having been entered thereon the defendant took this appeal.
1. The first question raised by the assignments of error is as to the competency of the plaintiff to testify to matters occurring in-the lifetime of Joseph Broadrick and especially as to the antenuptial contract between her and him. The defendant
2. The defendant testified that she and Joseph Broadrick were married on April 10, 1901, in Camden, New Jersey, by a minister of the gospel, and that the latter then and there gave her a certificate of marriage. If, as we have determined, she was a competent witness to matters occurring in the lifetime of Joseph Broadrick, we see no reason to doubt the admissibility in evidence of the certificate in connection with her testimony. But the certificate is not such an instrument as proves itself, and if it had been offered by itself, without proof of the signature of the person by whom it purports to have been signed, and of his authority under the law of New Jersey to perform the marriage ceremony, it would not have been admissible: Hill v. Hill’s Admr., 32 Pa. 511.
3. This case was tried with a similar case in which Belle Broadrick was plaintiff and Louisa Broadrick, the defendant in this case, and John Broadrick, her husband, were defendants. Upon the question of the marriage of the plaintiff and Joseph Broadrick it was relevant to show that these defendants, being his parents, recognized them as husband and wife. As proof of this relevant fact the plaintiff offered in evidence certain letters purporting to have been written by John Broadrick. These were objected to upon the ground] principally, that there was not sufficient proof that they were in his handwriting. One of the recognized means which a witness has of becoming acquainted with a person’s handwriting is by seeing him write. The witness in the present case had seen the party write but once, nevertheless she was quite positive as to the genuineness of the papers in question. It must be conceded that the evidence that the letters were in the handwriting of John Broad-rick was very slight, but we cannot say that it was incompetent, or insufficient to warrant the admission of the letters in evidence for what they were worth, which, after an examination of them, seems to us very little: 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 577; McNair v. Com., 26 Pa. 388; Watson v. Brewster, 1 Pa. 381; Shitler v. Bremer, 23 Pa. 413 ; Wilson v. Van Leer, 127 Pa. 371.
All of the assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.