Opinion by
This appeal presents a familiar and recurring human drama. The executor of the estate of John Dzierski filed a petition for citation against the appellant, Mrs. Jean Maleski, daughter of the decedent, asking that she be ordered to turn over to the executor a sum of some |47,000, the sole discoverable asset of the estate. Appellant, however, based a claim to ownership of that fund on the fact that she was the surviving joint tenant of the balance in a savings account which had been held jointly with her father. After a hearing, the auditing judge ordered appellant and the savings and loan association in which the account was maintained to pay the balance to the executor of the estate. Exceptions were filed and overruled by a court en bane on March 29, 1972, and this appeal followed. 1 We affirm the turn-over decree.
The lower court found upon the evidence of record that undue influence had been practiced on the deceased by his daughter Jean and for that reason held invalid the purported gift transaction. 2 Appellant’s *288 position is that the record does not contain the amount of or quality of evidence required to overcome the presumption of gift from father to daughter arising from the signature of the former on a joint account card. It is unnecessary, however, for us to reach the question of whether the record supports the lower court’s finding of undue influence, as we are of the view that the evidence was sufficient to establish the kind of relationship which operates to shift from the personal representative to the purported donee the burden of proving that this transaction was intended by the father to be a gift. At the hearing on the executor’s petition, Mrs. Maleski chose not to testify at all and objected, through her attorney, to being called by the executor. Consequently, the record is barren of evidence which would explain the circumstances under which Mrs. Maleski’s signature came to appear on the account card. Her burden of proof, accordingly, has not been met.
It is the general rule in Pennsylvania that the burden of proving that a transfer of property such as that involved here was not a gift rests on the party so asserting (here the executor), and that the burden of proof is met only by the production of evidence of a clear, strong or compelling nature.
Treitinger Estate,
It is not possible to state with precision that any single circumstance or g’roup of circumstances will compel a finding of confidential relationship. See 9 Wig-more, Evidence §2503, at 364-66 (3d ed. 1940). And while the fact that the alleged donee was the child of the alleged donor does not of itself establish a confidential relationship as between the two,
Gerlock v. Gabel,
The lower court made the following findings of fact, all of which are supported by evidence in the record and will therefore not be disturbed on appeal.
Pittsburgh Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Virginia Manor Apartments,
After the death of her father, Mrs. Maleski, although in sole possession of a fund of some $47,000 (the balance in the joint savings account), refused to pay or contribute to payment of the funeral expenses. She stated at the time: “I’m not going to pay it, that’s not mine.”
From these facts it appears that John Dzierski, at the approximate time of the transaction in question, was in a weakened state, both mentally and physically, and was dependent upon his daughter for his needs. The daughter, however, judging from her refusal to provide burial expenses, entertained no great affection for her father, and he, in turn, was suspicious of her intentions towards him. The alleged gift transaction was completed on a banking form printed in English only, while the deceased at the time was shown to be incapable of conducting his affairs in that language. We do not hesitate in concluding that on these facts the relationship and circumstances of the parties was such as to require Mrs. Maleski to carry the burden of proof, a burden she chose not to meet. 3
Decree affirmed. Costs on appellant.
Notes
Our jurisdiction is found in the Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1970, Act of July 31, 1970, P. L. 673, art. II, §202(3), 17 P.S. §211.202(3) (Supp. 1972-73).
AppeUant filed exceptions to the opinion and order by Judge McKenna and those exceptions were overruled by a court en bane of Judges McKenna, Boxee and Rahauser. The latter two were of *288 the opinion that a confidential relationship existed which required appellant to carry the burden of proof.
At the bearing on the executor’s petition, the appellant’s attorney objected to the admissibility of conversations and occurrences occurring during the lifetime of the deceased and testified to by the executor, citing Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, §5, cl. (e), 28 P.S. §322. While that objection may have been well taken had the general rules on burden of proof and establishment of a prima facie gift prevailed, it is otherwise when the gift is not presumed valid and the burden of so proving is placed on the donee.
Donsavage Estate,
