268 Pa. 7 | Pa. | 1920
Opinion by
Albert S. Weber, late a resident of the City of Reading, died 3d of February, 1919, unmarried and leaving to survive him as his next of kin five brothers and two sisters. No will having been produced after his death, letters of administration on his estate were granted by the register to Rudolph S. Weber, the eldest brother of the deceased. In a few weeks thereafter Charles O. Filbert filed his petition with the register of wills in which he alleged that decedent had died testate, but that shortly before his death he had inadvertently or accidentally torn the will he had executed without any intention of
The assignments of error raise several questions which relate to, but are subordinate to, what we regard as the main and controlling question, and therefore do not call for separate consideration here. If we assume that the evidence adduced before the register is sufficient to establish the fact that decedent on the 20th of June, 1916, executed a last vHI duly attested, which he retained in Ms possession until a day in December, 1917, and that, at the date last mentioned, when engaged in
The next step in the order of proof would have been to lay sufficient ground to make admissible the secondary evidence by which it was proposed to show the contents of the missing will, by showing that the original was irrecoverable because lost or destroyed. It seemed to be assumed in every stage of the case that the missing will was a destroyed will — that it was destroyed by the testator himself on the occasion and in the manner referred to by the testator in his conversation with the witness Goldman. Unless what testator said to Goldman can be fairly taken as an acknowledgment by the testator that he had accidentally destroyed the will, disappearance of the will stands wholly unexplained, and the legal presumption would remain, until overcome by evidence, that testator at some time or other, subsequent to the incident related, had done something to the will animo revocandi, which prevented its recovery.
It is important in this connection to have in mind just what Goldman said. He had already testified that being on close and confidential terms with the testator, himself a photographer and the decedent a cigar dealer, the latter asked him to prepare a will for him; that having been given the data he prepared such will expressive of testator’s desires which he submitted to the testator, and upon its approval by him he wrote it out more formally but in exactly the same language throughout and gave it to the testator with a view to its execution; this was in June, 1915; that, some days after, testator told him he had executed the will the witness had written and gave him the names of the two subscribing witnesses. He further testified that on several subsequent occasions, up to the summer of 1918, the testator referred
But the correctness of this disposition of the case does not rest alone upon the circumstances we have discussed. An additional fact disclosed by the evidence, of much importance, is that the will had remained in the exclusive custody of the testator from the time it was made certainly to the time when he told Goldman, the witness, that he had accidentally torn it, and there is not the slightest evidence that it had ever passed ont of his custody into that of another. Giving to the declaration of the testator to Goldman its true significance and the meaning which its words naturally import, it is impossible to construe it into an admission that testator had himself destroyed the will and made its production impossible, when all he asserted was that he had torn it. With the fact appearing that the will had been in the custody and control of testator up to the time of his death, — and there is nothing in the evidence that suggests anything to the contrary, — and upon his death it could not be found, the accidental destruction goes out of the case and the presumption at once arises that the testator had himself destroyed it animo revocandi, and the burden of overcoming this presumption rested upon the proponent: Foster’s App., 87 Pa. 67. We are strongly of opinion that this is the more reasonable way of interpreting the facts disclosed by the evidence. The testator lived some two months succeeding the conversation testified to by Goldman; his extreme illness when he was unable to make physical exertion lasted only several days; during the remainder of this period, with the will in his custody, he very readily could have destroyed it. What is there in the evidence to raise an inference that he did not do so? We find nothing; whereas, if the copy
The assignments of error are overruled and the decree is affirmed. Costs to be paid by the appellant.