Fiscus's Estate
Fiscus's Estate
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I am unable to agree with the conclusion reached by a majority of the court in the matter of the commissions awarded the administrators. They were allowed jointly by the court below - $1,100, on an estate of about $22,000. This it is conceded
I am therefore of opinion that the action of the court below fixing the commissions should not be disturbed.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Three distinct questions are raised by the assignments of error. 1. Was the note of $1,000 executed by the decedent and given to his son, without consideration and obtained by undue influence, the decedent being at the time of weak or unsound mind? 2. Was. the evidence in regard to the gift of the traction engine, thresher and clover huller sufficient under the circumstances to establish a gift inter vivos ? 3. Were the commissions charged by the administrators for the settlement of the estate of decedent under the peculiar circumstances excessive ?
We will consider these questions in their order, briefly stating such facts in regard to each as are necessary to an intelligent understanding of them.
1. The claimant, the son of decedent, worked upon his father’s farm for some ten years after he attained his majority, without any special contract as to wages. He lived in the family, was allowed by his father to raise a colt or a calf occasionally— seemed to be allowed the proceeds of a country coal mine upon the farm and had by special agreement the one half of the proceeds of the earnings of the thresher and clover huller for work done for the neighbors, so that at the time of the death of the decedent the son had some money at interest. There seemed to be in the mind of the father some recognition of the claim of the son for further compensation and, in view of the testimony, we think there was sufficient evidence to warrant the finding of the auditor that there was a valid consideration for the note.
The evidence in regard to the decedent’s mental condition at the time the note was given was not very strong. It may be
2. This rule, however, cannot be successfully invoked in regard to the whole of the engine thresher and clover huller. In the claim to it the question is not, was there evidence — conflicting evidence — as to its ownership which makes the finding of the auditor and approval by the court conclusive, but was there sufficient evidence in law to support the finding ? The effort is made to establish a gift inter vivos. In Fross’s Appeal, 105 Pa. 258, where there had been a finding by an auditor and an approval by the court, the Supreme Court reversed the decree of the orphans’ court, because the evidence was not sufficient to support the finding. Mr. Justice Cl auk, in the opinion at page 267, says: “Nor can the claim be sustained as a gift inter vivos. A gift is a contract executed and must be accompanied with such a delivery of possession as makes the disposal irrevocable; the delivery must be according to the nature of the subject and the donor must in some form relinquish not only the possession but all dominion over it. Where these essential requisites are complied with, the gift is perfect and irrevocable. After the decease of the alleged donor, the transaction should be established by clear and satisfactory evidence.” In Scott v. Reed, 153 Pa. 14, it was said: “ But, where an alleged donor has been surrounded during his last sickness by the family and relatives of the alleged donee and the claimant has had opportunities to obtain possession of the subject of the alleged gift without title, the proof in support of the claim ought to be clear and satisfactory upon every point essential to title by gift.” The dangerous character of such claims and the necessity of insisting upon the most convincing evidence in support of them was pointed out in Wells v. Tucker, 3 Binn. 366, and has been recognized in subsequent cases (Rhodes v. Childs, 64 Pa. 18), and tried by the standard here set up and uniformly adhered to. The evidence in regard to the one half of the thresher, etc., was not the clear and satisfactory character which is essential to the validity of such an alleged gift. It may be admitted that the testimony may be
3. The charge of the administrators for services in settling the estate was $ 1,100. This, under ordinary circumstances, would not be excessive. But the administration of this estate and the distribution to and among the heirs was not attended with ordinary trouble and responsibility. The entire debit side of the account amounted to $21,782.73, which was increased by the finding of the auditor $110. Of this amount $14,075, consisting of stock and mortgage, were turned over to the heirs in kind, without conversion into money. The administrators assumed no risk and no responsibility in relation thereto. “ Commissions are given as a compensation for labor and responsibility and, where neither the one has been performed nor the other incurred, there is nothing to be compensated : “ McCauseland’s Appeal, 38 Pa. 466. “ But after all on all authority, it is a question not of percentage but of compen
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.