Chamberlain's Estate
Chamberlain's Estate
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Jennie S. Chamberlain, the decedent, died testate, leaving to survive her a husband, Julias L. M. Chamberlain, the appellee. Her personal property was insufficient to pay her debts. Her will was duly proved and letters testamentary issued to Otto Kohler, the executor therein named. The surviving husband declined to take under the will and asserted his right as tenant by the curtesy in the real estate of which she died seized, and by proceedings had in the orphans’ court it was adjudged that he was entitled to such curtesy. Upon proper proceedings by the executor a part of the real estate was sold for the payment of debts of the decedent and the amount realized from said sale was more than sufficient to pay said debts. The fund for distribution consists of the surplus thus realized from the sale of real estate, after payment of the debts. The court below, in making distribution, held that the surviving husband, who claimed adversely to the will, was entitled to the income of this fund during his life, the principal to be properly secured, and to be paid, upon the death of the husband, in accordance with the provisions of the will. Otto Kohler appeals from that decree.
The appellant asserts that he was entitled to have at once paid to him the sum of $1,000, by virtue of the following item of the will: “I give and bequeath to Otto Kohler, hereinafter named as my executor, for services heretofore rendered and as compensation for discharging the duties
When the appellee declined to accept under the will the intestate laws superseded the will as to him; as to him there is no will and his rights are to be determined as if none ever had been written. He was entitled to the share of the estate remaining after payment of debts and reasonable expenses of administration, given him by the intestate laws: Murray’s Estate, 28 Pa. Superior Ct. 474, and cases there cited. The clause of the will upon which the appellant relies cannot be construed as an admission by the decedent that she was indebted to the appellant in any specific sum, nor that she was legally hable to be called upon to pay him any sum whatever. That clause is evidence rather that she was grateful to him for services which he had voluntarily rendered, for which it had not been in the contemplation of the parties that any obligation to pay should arise. Even if the clause be considered as an acknowledgment that there was some existing indebtedness, it utterly failed to indicate the amount of such indebtedness. Part of the legacy was given in compensation for past.services and part as compensation for the discharge of the duty as executor, but how much is to be paid for one thing and how much for the other?
If this were a controversy between parties claiming under the will, the appellant might be entitled to priority
The decree of the court below is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.