58 A.2d 42 | Pa. | 1948
These appeals are from an order of the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County dismissing a petition to review a final decree of that court. The decree, which, on appeal to this Court, was affirmed (
The petitioners and present appellants are Margaret J. Layton and her husband, John E. Layton, the nominated executors of the alleged will, as well as its proponents, and Isabella Logan Kruger who, with Mrs. Layton, her sister, were the residuary legatees named in the writing. Mrs. Layton and Mrs. Kruger were nieces of Stewart's wife who predeceased him. Stewart died August 5, 1943, leaving to survive him, as his sole heir at law and next of kin, a brother, Andrew Stewart, a native of Ireland, resident in Beltrim, Gortin, Tyrone County, in that country.
Andrew Stewart, acting by a local attorney in fact under a duly executed and proven power, instituted a contest of the alleged will by appealing to the Orphans' Court from the Register's probate thereof. The contestant assigned as reasons for the document's invalidity a lack of testamentary capacity on the part of John Stewart and also that he was the victim of undue influence. On May 23, 1945, the Orphans' Court, after full hearing, awarded an issue d.v.n. to determine whether the alleged "last will of John Stewart, deceased, was *436 procured by undue influence, duress and constraint practiced upon the said decedent" by the proponents. Thereafter the matter was thoroughly litigated with the result as already stated. Between the conclusion of the preliminary hearing to determine whether the dispute concerning the alleged will was substantial and the date of the awarding of the issue, Andrew Stewart died, to wit, on May 18, 1945. That fact was never put upon the record in the will contest nor was it otherwise disclosed to anyone connected therewith locally until several months after this Court's affirmance of the final decree.
The appellants contend that the power of attorney from the heir, pursuant to which the contest proceeding was instituted and carried on by the attorney in fact, became functus officii
with the death of Andrew Stewart and that, therefore, the decree invalidating the alleged will should now be revoked and the petitioners placed in statu quo as of May 18, 1945, the date of the heir's death. In support of their contention, the appellants argue that a simple power of attorney, uncoupled with an interest, expires with the death of the donor, citing Restatement, Agency, § 120; Yerkes' Appeal,
The learned court below (citing additionally Kern's Estate,
The reason thus assigned by the learned court below for its decision in the premises is not open to reasonable question. The jurisdiction of the Orphans' Court to inquire into the alleged invalidity of the probated writing was competently invoked. No one does or can dispute that. Moreover, the will contest was a proceeding in rem undertaken with notice to all interested persons and the decree therein by a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter was conclusive as against the world of the fact that the alleged will was not a valid instrument. In Miller's Estate,
While the proceeding in the Hoopes case, supra, was dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the Register to entertain a petition to open a final decree of the Orphans' Court refusing probate of an alleged will, what this Court there said, upon affirming the dismissal, with respect to the binding effect of the decree invalidating the alleged will is peculiarly apposite here. The pleadings in that case showed that hearings in the Orphans' Court in the matter of the probate of a paper writing alleged to be the last will of Joshua Hoopes had been begun onDecember 17, 1894. All legatees under the alleged will had appeared by counsel and were so represented. However, Sarah Hoopes, one of the named legatees, had died on January 18,1895, intestate; but letters of administration on her estate had not been taken out until August 26, 1897. In the meantime, to wit, on January 6, 1896, the Orphans' Court after several hearings in the matter had entered a decree refusing probate of the writing on the ground that, at the time of its execution, the alleged testator lacked testamentary capacity; and, on appeal, that decree had been affirmed on March 16, 1896: see
It is to be borne in mind, moreover, that the granting of a bill of review in any case calls for a dispensation of equity's grace and not for the recognition of a legal right: Marr'sAppeal,
Furthermore, the appellants are without standing to complain. They had their day in court where the death of the heir neither hindered nor prevented them from fully presenting their case and where no right was denied them. Their argument, that, with the heir dead at the time of the trial of the issued.v.n., had the jury's verdict been in favor of the will and had a decree been entered thereon, it would not have been binding upon the heir, is both irrelevant and erroneous, — irrelevant, because the thing of present importance is the binding effect of the decree on the appellants, the present supplicants; and erroneous, because the decree was conclusive, as we have already seen, as to everyone including the contestant and those claiming through him. The confirmation by the heir's executor of the actions of the *440 attorney in fact throughout the contest proceeding and the filing thereof nunc pro tunc, as permitted by the learned court below, was done out of an excess of caution.
The order is affirmed at the costs of the respective appellant in each appeal.