Court Opinion

ID: 6280636
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:14:57.140993+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:11.303052
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam,
This is an appeal from a decree of distribution. It is asserted, on behalf of the appellant, that he was entitled to participate in that distribution for the reason that he *319was a son of the decedent, born in lawful wedlock of the body of Anna Bisbing, the alleged surviving widow. Anna Bisbing, the mother of the appellant, asserted the right to participate in the distribution of the estate as wddow, and produced evidence which it was contended ought to have been held by the court below to establish the fact that a lawful marriage relation had existed between her and the decedent. The rights of Anna Bisbing and her son, this appellant, to participate in the distribution of the estate were entirely dependent upon the fact of the existence of the marriage relation between the mother and the decedent. Much testimony was taken tending to show the relations which had existed between the decedent and Anna Bisbing, who was asserting that she had been his wife. The court below held, after consideration of the evidence, that Anna Bisbing had never been the wife and was not the widow of the decedent.
Anna Bisbing, the alleged widow, appealed from that decree to the Supreme Court, and we have here an appeal from the same decree by the guardian ad litem of her minor child. The Supreme Court, on March 8,1920, in Bisbing’s Est., 266 Pa. 529, filed an opinion holding that the court below did not err in decreeing, upon the evidence presented, that Anna Bisbing had not been the wife of the decedent and was not entitled to participate as the widow in the distribution of his estate. We can, upon this appeal, consider only the questions which were raised in the court below, the evidence which was there produced, and the findings of the court based upon that evidence. The record and the evidence are precisely the same which were considered by the Supreme Court, and the decision of that court must control the disposition of this appeal.
The appeal is dismissed at appellant’s cost.