75 Pa. Super. 32 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1920
Opinion by
Plaintiff, defendant’s stepmother, obtained a verdict and judgment in assumpsit for breach of obligation assumed by defendant under the will of his father. “to board and take care of his mother,” and for use and occupation by defendant of premises devised to her for life.
The will provided: “Second. I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Mary J. Laughlin, the house and lot in which I now reside during her lifetime and her decease to go Robert L. Laughlin and to his absolutely and to hold him. and his heirs forever, and further Robert L. Laughlin is to board and take care of his mother, and my wife Mary J. Laughlin is to receive forty dollars $40 each year for spending money to do with as she may see fit. Third: I give, devise and bequeath to my son John Laughlin the house and lot on which he now resides, to be his absolutely and to hold him and his heirs forever my son John Laughlin is to pay his share of the forty dollars to his mother the same as Robert L. Laughlin each to share alike in making payment.”
Testator appointed his sons, John and Robert L., executors and after his death on May 29, 1915, they proved the will and qualified as executors. When the will was executed, July 28, 1913, testator’s household consisted of himself, his wife and his son, the defendant; at testator’s death, defendant’s son and daughter-in-law also lived with them. Plaintiff was then 82 years old. For about four weeks after her husband’s death, she remained with the defendant and his son and daughter-in-law. She then became dissatisfied there, and went to live with one of her own children, where she died after the trial of this case; her death was suggested of record September 6, 1919, and her administrator was substituted as plaintiff. After she left defendant’s household, he continued to occupy the house.
The assignments of 'error are numerous and as we are all of opinion that they lack substantial merit, we shall not refer to them separately.
By the will plaintiff received a life estate in the premises, and defendant the remainder. He assumed the obligation “to board and take care of his mother”; he and his brother made the annual payments of $40 as required by the will and he also made repairs to the house, paid taxes and insurance.
Defendant’s difference with plaintiff appears in his answer to the following question:
“Q. Then your position was that she had either to live with you or else you were not bound to keep her?
“A. That is the way I understand from the way the will reads.”
Defendant concedes that he did not “board and care for” plaintiff save during the four weeks she lived with him; he states that he was prepared to do so in his own household, which she left, and that she left without reasonable cause. Whether she was to receive board and care in his household and whether she was justified in leaving were submitted to the jury, a course not prejudicial to appellant, for in this case the court might properly have instructed the jury that the widow was not required to remain in defendant’s household to receive the board and care specified in the will of her husband: Steele’s App., 47 Pa. 437, and cases cited at page 440; see also South Mahoning Township v. Marshall, 138 Pa. 570; Walter’s Est., 197 Pa. 555. Appellant cannot complain that plaintiff declared and recovered for the speci
The judgment is affirmed.