Opinion by
This appeal from a final decree of the Orphans’ Court of Lackawanna County involves a dispute between a daughter of decedent and decedent’s estate concerning the ownership of a diamond ring. Basically,
Forest F. Hendrickson died, testate, 2 June 27, 1954, survived by 7 daughters and 2 sons. After decedent’s death the executor found a 3 stone diamond ring, valued at $900, in decedent’s safe located on the 3rd floor of his home.
Blanche Reid — a daughter of decedent and the appellant — excepted to the inclusion in the executor’s account of the diamond ring, alleging the ring belonged to her, not to decedent. After hearing, Judge Beady on May 3, 1956 disallowed appellant’s claim and dismissed her exception. Exceptions filed to this adjudication were finally dismissed by the court below on October 8, 1956 and this appeal was taken.
Appellant’s position is that sometime prior to 1938 decedent purchased and gave this diamond ring to his wife, Eva Hendrickson (appellant’s mother) and that she, shortly before her death in March, 1938, gave the ring to appellant. In support of her claim, appellant presented her own testimony and that of H. V. Cutler: (1) Mr. Cutler, a jeweler, testified that, at the decedent’s instruction, he made up this ring, that decedent gave the ring to his wife and she wore the ring
It is urged that the court below erred in two respects: (1) in concluding that the unexplained possession by the decedent of the ring for 16 years following his wife’s death was sufficient to infer ownership of the ring by decedent and his estate; and (2) in concluding that appellant’s testimony was incompetent under the Act of 1887, supra.
An examination of appellant’s statement of the first question involved in this appeal indicates her misunderstanding of the lower court’s conclusion of law on the question of possession. The court below did not find that the mere possession of the ring by the decedent raised a presumption that the decedent owned the ring.
3
On the contrary, the court found that the unexplained possession of the ring for 16 years by the decedent was sufficient to establish a prima facie case of ownership which cast upon the appellant the bur
In
Rogers Estate,
Unfortunately for appellant proof of her title depended principally, if not solely, on her own testimony. The court below held that her testimony was incompetent under the Act of 1887, supra, and the propriety of this ruling is now questioned. Appellant contends the testimony is competent because the decedent had no right to the ring which passed to his executor, a party of record.
Competency of a witness is the rule and incompetency the exception:
Gumbes Estate,
Section 4 of the Act of 1887, supra, 28 PS §314, states the general rule that no “interest, or policy of law, . , . shall make any person incompetent as a witness”. To this rule the statute makes four exceptions,
4
Under this exception three conditions must exist before any such witness is disqualified: (1) the deceased must have had an actual right or interest in the matter at issue, i.e. an interest in the immediate result of the suit; 5 (2) the interest of the witness — not simply the testimony — must he adverse; 6 (3) a right of the deceased must have passed to a party of record who represents the deceased’s interest 7
Williams v. Lucas,
Appellant places great reliance on
Cumbes Estate,
supra. The
Cumbes
decision is clearly distinguishable; such distinction is evidenced from the very language of the court (p. 64) in that case: “The witnesses in question therefore were not rendered incompetent although their interest was adverse to any right of Charles W. Cumbes, because in denying the claim of ownership asserted in the petition for the citation, Rebecca and Ross Whitemarsh claimed in their own right and in so doing, represented themselves and not the interests of his estate.
To effect a disqualification under the statute it must appear that the rights of the deceased have passed to the other party on the record who represents his interest.
Broadrick v. Broadrick,
The learned court below correctly and properly dismissed the claim of Blanche Reid.
Decree affirmed at appellant’s costs.
Notes
The will makes no disposition of decedent’s property but simply appoints an executor.
The language of some decisions would seem, at first blush, to recognize the existence of a presumption “that personal property is owned by him who has it in possession”:
Dick v. Cooper,
The 1st exception concerns convicted perjurers; the 2nd exception concerns confidential communications between attorney and client, etc.; the 3rd exception concerns testimony of husband and wife adverse to one another.
Davis v. Hawkins,
Dickson et ux. v. McGraw Bros.,
Royer v. Ephrata Borough,
