Baker v. Shapiro

63 Pa. D. & C. 20, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326
CourtCambria County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJanuary 14, 1948
Docketno. 461
StatusPublished

This text of 63 Pa. D. & C. 20 (Baker v. Shapiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cambria County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Shapiro, 63 Pa. D. & C. 20, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

This is an action of ejectment brought by a plaintiff who claims under a sheriff’s deed, based upon a judgment entered against a husband, under which judgment the sheriff sold the husband’s interest in a certain piece of land situate in Allegheny Township, Cambria County, title to which was in the name of the wife. Defendants claim as grantees from the purchasers at a sheriff’s sale held on a foreclosure proceeding, based upon a mortgage given by the wife.

This proceeding is under rule 227 of our rules of court, which reads as follows:

"If the plaintiff’s abstract of title fails to disclose a full title in the plaintiff, the defendant, upon exceptions filed and hearing thereon, shall be entitled to judgment for land described in the writ, provided that [21]*21the court may in any proper case permit amendments of the plaintiff’s abstract.”

Pursuant to the rule of court above quoted, defendants filed exceptions to plaintiff’s abstract of title, and averred that said abstract failed to disclose a full title in plaintiff. A hearing was had upon the exceptions, and defendants asked that judgment be entered for the land described in the writ.

In chronological order, the essential facts in the case are as follows:

In February 1939 Louise Katherine Edwards purchased the land in dispute from a stranger.

February 25,' 1943, an exemplification of a judgment from Allegheny County against her husband, Horace S. Edwards, only, was entered in the Prothonotary’s Office of Cambria County. Along with the exemplification of the record from Allegheny County was filed the record of an examination of defendant in the judgment, Horace S. Edwards. It appears from this examination of Horace S. Edwards that he was asked about the property in Cambria County, and then asked:

“Q. Whose name is the title in?

“A. Mrs. Edwards.

“Q. Whose money paid for it?

“A. I think my money paid for it.”

March 6, 1943, a mortgage from Louise Katherine Edwards, joined in by her husband, in favor of Carrie Patterson, was recorded in Cambria County.

In September 1943, by sheriff’s sale on a vend, ex., the interest of Horace S. Edwards in the land in dispute was sold to plaintiff.

In 1945, under a proceeding to foreclose the mortgage of Carrie Patterson, the sheriff sold the land in dispute to defendants’ grantor, who in 1946 conveyed to defendants.

Plaintiff’s abstract of title consists of these items:

[22]*221. A reference to the sheriff’s deed to plaintiff, dated September 20, 1943.

2. A reference to the vend. ex. upon which the land was sold.

3. A reference to the judgment in the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County entered upon the exemplification of the record from Allegheny County.

4. A reference to the deed from a stranger (Ada Lentz Sheets et vir.) to Louise Katherine Edwards.

It will be noted that plaintiff acquired a deed for whatever interest the husband might have had in the land in dispute in September 1943, but during the intervening years did not proceed against the wife while she held title to the property, subject to a mortgage, and instituted the present action on August 19, 1946, after the wife’s interest had been sold by the sheriff under a mortgage foreclosure and after the purchaser at such sheriff’s sale had conveyed title to defendants.

Plaintiff relies upon the following notation from Hunter v. Baxter, 210 Pa. 72:

“A deed of real estate to a married woman in the absence of proof that it was made as a gift to her, or that it was paid for out, of her separate estate will be présumed to have been made in the interest of her husband, and the real estate will be subject to the claims of the husband’s creditors.”

A reading of the case of Hunter v. Baxter, however, reveals the fact that all parties knew of the husband’s interest in the property. Plaintiff also cites the case of Jack v. Kintz et al., 177 Pa. 571. Here it appears that the wife’s vendee had actual knowledge of the husband’s (and so his creditor’s) equity in the property. Other cases cited by plaintiff are: Shaw et al. v. Newingham, 287 Pa. 304, Rhinesmith’s Case, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 300, Spering v. Laughlin et al., 113 Pa. 209, and Adams v. Bleakley, 117 Pa. 283. In all of these cases, however, the actions were brought while the wife still held title to the land, so that the issue in each [23]*23case was between the wife and the creditors of the husband.

In speaking of Jack v. Kintz, supra, the Supreme Court in Cameron, Secretary of Banking, v. Peoples’ Bank of Maytown, 297 Pa. 551, said:

“In the cases on which the court below relied, the contest was between the husband’s creditors and the wife herself. Here the contest is between the creditors and the wife’s vendee. In Jack v. Kintz, 177 Pa. 571, it is true the property was disputed between a judgment creditor of the husband and the wife’s grantee, but in compelling the vendee to meet the same burden of proof cast on the wife, we distinctly stated that it was because the vendee had actual knowledge of the husband’s (and so his creditor’s) equity in the property. ...

“. . . We are here faced with the clear question whether the mere fact of coverture is enough to charge a purchaser from the wife with notice of equities in favor of the husband.”

The court decided that the fact of coverture was insufficient to charge a purchaser from the wife with such notice, and said further:

“In a contest between the wife and the creditors, it is feasible for her to explain the manner in which she acquired the property; hence she suffers no real injury; but the same explanation may be impossible for her vendee.

“. . . The burden which fell on her by reason of coverture is not passed over to the vendee, without showing he knew, or should have known, of the equitable interest or tainted character (as to creditors) of the title purchased. ...”

In order to bring himself in line with the facts of the case of Jack v. Kintz, supra, therefore, plaintiff in this case should have proceeded against the wife, Mrs. Edwards, during the period of more than two years after his sheriff’s deed, and before her title was [24]*24divested by a foreclosure of her mortgage. Since plaintiff waited this period of time, and until the title of the wife was divested, it would be unreasonable to require the present owners to explain the manner in which the wife, Mrs. Edwards, originally acquired title to the property.

“As between creditors of the husband and a bona fide purchaser at a sale under a mortgage given by a purchaser from the wife, there has been held to be no presumption that the conveyance of the property to the wife by a stranger was for the husband’s use”: 41 C. J. S. 757. It will be noted that the authority relied upon in Corpus Juris Secundum for the above statement of principle is Keichline v. Keichline, 54 Pa. 75.

As a matter of fact, even though the money of the husband were used to purchase the property — and the testimony shows that he said, “/ think my money paid for it” — nevertheless, if it were a gift from him to his wife under proper circumstances, the wife’s title could not be attacked.

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Related

Cameron, SEC. of B. v. P. Bk. of Maytown
147 A. 657 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Shaw v. Newingham
135 A. 260 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Keichline v. Keichline
54 Pa. 75 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Spering v. Laughlin
6 A. 54 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Adams v. Bleakley
10 A. 884 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1887)
Kinyon v. Leonard
24 A. 224 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1892)
Jack v. Kintz
35 A. 867 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Hunter v. Baxter
59 A. 429 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Rhinesmith's Case
25 Pa. Super. 300 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Pa. D. & C. 20, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-shapiro-paqtrsesscambri-1948.