184 A. 303 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1936
Argued March 10, 1936. By the sixth clause of her will, the testatrix bequeathed one thousand dollars to "William Strubinger, his heirs and assigns."
The bequest was claimed by William D. Strubinger, a nephew, aged 64 years, who has resided in Washington, D.C., for the past 17 or 18 years, and by William F. Strubinger, a grand nephew, — aged 32 years, son of William D. Strubinger's brother Charles —, who resides in York, Pa., a few doors away from where the testatrix lived.
There was thus a latent ambiguity in the will and the auditor received testimony on behalf of both claimants in order to clear up the ambiguity and determine which *552 of the two William Strubingers was the person for whom the bequest was intended.
Counsel for appellant, although he himself produced testimony for that purpose, now objects and argues that it should not have been received. The law sustains the auditor's action in this respect. In Brownfield v. Brownfield,
There is no intrinsic evidence in the will that points clearly to either one of the claimants as the one intended by the testatrix. The legacy in the fifth clause is "to my nephew, Frank Strubinger"; the devise in the *554 eleventh clause is "to my nephew, Charles Strubinger;" the legatee in the sixth clause is not described as `my nephew' or `my grand-nephew.' The legacy in the seventh clause is simply, "to Clara Strubinger Delone," who was a niece; that in the eighth clause simply, "to Jennie Strubinger of Philadelphia," who was a grandniece; while the devise in the tenth clause was "to my niece Henrietta Strubinger Throne," who was really a grand-niece.
The auditor, after hearing all the evidence held that the clear preponderance of the testimony led inevitably to the conclusion that the decedent intended the bequest for William F. Strubinger. The court below approved the findings of the auditor. Both of them applied the rule that the burden was on the appellee to show by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the testatrix intended that he should receive the legacy rather than his uncle, the appellant, who was nearer of kin to the testatrix — See Grim's App.,
The appeal is dismissed at the costs of appellant.