DocketNumber: Appeal, 20
Citation Numbers: 139 A. 129, 290 Pa. 374, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 664
Judges: Moschziskeu, Frazer, Walling, Simpson, Kephart, Sadler, Schaffer
Filed Date: 5/23/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued May 23, 1927. Testator, Gustavus C. Ralston, gave his residuary estate equally to the Masonic Home, located at Elizabethtown, and the Odd Fellows Orphans' Home, situated at Orphanage near Sunbury, to which institutions the orphans' court awarded the bequests.
This appeal is by Anna S. Smiley, a daughter of the decedent, who asserts that Fred C. Miller, one of the subscribing witnesses to the will, was not a disinterested witness owing to the fact that at the time he attested the document he was a member of the Masonic Fraternity and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.
The court below determined that the Odd Fellows Orphans' Home is not a charity, relying in his conclusion upon Sharp's Est.,
To differentiate the two residuary legatees, determining one to be a charity and the other not to be, might require a dividing line of hairlike proportions. We have already decided that a bequest to the Masonic Home at Elizabethtown is for charitable uses: Phila. v. Masonic Home,
As already stated, Miller was both a master mason and an Odd Fellow. Appellant urges these as the factors which should lead to the conclusion that he was not a disinterested witness so far as the Masonic Home is concerned. Title to the home is in five trustees, members of the grand lodge appointed by it. All contracts for the erection of buildings are made by the grand lodge which appropriates annually a sum for the estimated expenses required for its maintenance and upkeep, the money being derived by the grand lodge from an addition of $40 to the initiation fee paid by each new member of a subordinate lodge, and the grand lodge also assesses each subordinate lodge a per capita tax of $2 annually for maintenance.
It is argued that, under Kessler's Est.,
The same argument is made as to the Odd Fellows' institution. So far as Miller's status as an Odd Fellow is concerned, the record discloses as to that organization the following: He was a member of a subordinate lodge, not of the grand lodge. The orphanage, to which the bequest we are considering was made, is a corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth and is a subordinate body of the grand lodge of this State and subject to the rules and regulations prescribed by it. The details of administration of the orphanage are in the hands of local officers and its general policy is dictated by the grand lodge, which maintains it by a per capita levy upon all members of subordinate lodges. To secure admission to the orphanage one must be an orphan of a deceased Odd Fellow, who was a member of a lodge located in the home district and must be over three years of age and under twelve. Application for admission must be made by the lodge of which the parent was a member. The question of admission is determined by a committee of the grand lodge. While not important factors in our conclusion, the record discloses that when Miller witnessed the will he was more than forty years of age and hence not eligible for admission to the orphanage, was a bachelor and so remained until his death, so that no orphan can obtain admission to the institution through him.
We do not intend to review again the many cases which we have determined under the Acts of Assembly covering the situation before us — the Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 328, section 11; the Act of June 7, 1911, P. L. 702, and the Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, section 6, which latter act covers the will now before us; we have quite recently considered them; a reference to a very few cases will suffice. In Channon's Est.,
In the light of these authorities, and others which might be cited, our conclusion must be that Miller was a competent witness to the will and that the gifts to the *Page 380 Masonic Home and to the Odd Fellows Orphans' Home are good.
The decree of distribution is affirmed at appellant's cost.