89 Pa. Super. 531 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued November 8, 1926. This is an appeal from an order of the Orphans' Court of Lancaster County directing the administrator of the decedent's estate to have appraised and set apart for Barbara Stauffer, his widow, personal property of the value of $500, as a widow's exemption.
By section 12 (a) of the Fiduciaries Act of 1917, P.L. 447, 471, it is provided that unless she has forfeited her rights, the widow may retain or claim either real or personal property, or the proceeds of either real or personal property, belonging to her husband's estate, to the value of five hundred dollars.
The learned judge of the court below was apparently of the opinion that the forfeiture referred to in said section was that declared by the Intestate Act of 1917, P.L. 429, Sec. 6, p. 435, to-wit, "No wife who shall have, for one year or upwards previous to the death of her husband, wilfully and maliciously deserted her husband, shall have the right to claim any title or interest in his real or personal estate after his decease, under theprovisions of this Act." (Italics ours.) But such is not the case. Section 6 of the Intestate Act, supra, is an exact reenactment of the second paragraph of the Act of May 3, 1915, P.L. 234, which placed a wife on a substantial parity with her husband in case of wilful desertion for one year or upwards; except that instead of the words "under the intestate laws of this Commonwealth" as they appeared in the Act of 1915, the Intestate Act of 1917 says, "under the provisions of this Act," which means precisely the same thing. The widow's exemption is not a title or interest passing under the intestate laws: Hildebrand's Est.,
It is undisputed that, in the present case, the wife was not living with the decedent at the time of his death and had not been for one year and fifteen days. She herself testified that during that time they had not met, visited each other, written to each other, or maintained the family relation. They were married in 1917 *536
and lived together in Elizabeth Township until April 22, 1925, when, while he was away attending a funeral, she moved her goods to a house she had bought in Ephrata and thereafter, until his death, resided there, apart from him. Her grounds for doing this were that prior to their marriage he had agreed to move away from Elizabeth Township, and pursuant thereto they had looked at several properties at Brownstown and Lititz but found none to suit them; and that she was homesick. It appeared that her husband did not object to her going but refused to go with her. The separation may not have been by mutual agreement, but it seems to have been consentable. We agree with the learned court below that the testimony as a whole did not establish a wilful and malicious desertion on her part, such as to bar her from claiming any title or interest in her husband's estate, under the intestate laws; but it showed that she was voluntarily living apart from her husband, without such reasonable cause as would entitle her to a divorce; that she did not maintain the family relation with her husband and her absence from him was not from some temporary or accidental cause: Hettrick v. Hettrick,
"The act [granting the widow's exemption] contemplates the case of a wife who lives with her husband till his death and faithfully performs all her duties to his family, not one who voluntarily separates herself from him and performs none of the duties imposed by the relation": Odiorne's Est.,
Of the cases cited by the court below, Arnout's Est.,
The assignment of error to the final order is sustained and the order reversed at the costs of the appellee.