29 A.2d 521 | Pa. | 1942
Nicholas (or Nickolay) Nikitka (or Mikitka), an illiterate coal miner who immigrated to this country from Russia, died intestate, a resident of Luzerne County, on August 11, 1939. Letters of administration were granted to Michael Yeosock, the undertaker and principal creditor of the estate, on September 7, 1939. At the audit of the first and final account of the administrator, filed *65 October 31, 1940, appellant, Veronica Patzi Nikitka, claimed she was the common-law wife of decedent and entitled to share, as his widow, in the distribution of the estate. This claim was resisted by Anna Nikitka and her two sons, Adam and Pavel, citizens of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, who claimed to be the wife and children of decedent by a marriage in Russia in 1907. The Orphans' Court of Luzerne County rejected the claim of appellant, upon a finding that she and the decedent were never married, and entered a decree in favor of the Russian claimants. This appeal was then taken.
Appellant admits no ceremonial marriage was ever performed, but urges there is on the record evidence of cohabitation and reputation from which the fact of marriage might properly be inferred. This contention must be rejected. As indicated inMcGrath's Estate,
Disregarding the effect of appellant's failure to testify as to the terms of the alleged contract, and entirely apart from her own admissions, the rejection of her claim is fully warranted on another ground. As said in Commonwealth v. Stump,
In view of the finding that no marriage was ever contracted between decedent and appellant, not because decedent was legally incapacitated, but because there was in fact no mutual agreement to become husband and wife, decedent's marital status at the time of the alleged marriage becomes immaterial. The law, of necessity, imposes a heavy burden on one who grounds his claim on an allegation of common-law marriage. As said by President Judge KELLER in Baker v. Mitchell,
Decree affirmed and appeal dismissed at appellant's cost.