The Orphans’ Court properly found that a coin collection was purchased with money from a joint account and was owned by the decedent and the surviving spouse as tenants by the entireties, and the property rights of the surviving spouse were not subject to any forfeiture because she was not making any claim against the decedent’s estate. The Orphans’ Court also properly ordered an examination of the contents of safe deposit boxes held by the decedent’s son when there was evidence demonstrating a high likelihood that assets of the decedent were in the boxes. The $231,000 in cash found in the safe deposit boxes was found to be the property of the decedent based on credible testimony that the decedent had hoarded cash during his lifetime, that the decedent’s son had access to the decedent’s residence and his lockbox, and that the son had gone into the safe deposit boxes for only the second time two days after the decedent’s death, but the son had no credible explanation for the source of what he claimed was his cash. In re: Estate of David B. Clapper, 1081 WDA 2024 (Pa. Super. 2/25/2025) (non-precedential).