Bridgeford v. Groh Et Ux.

156 A. 612, 102 Pa. Super. 138, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 144
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 1931
DocketAppeal 416
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 156 A. 612 (Bridgeford v. Groh Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridgeford v. Groh Et Ux., 156 A. 612, 102 Pa. Super. 138, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 144 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

This is an action of dower unde nihil habet, brought by the plaintiff, Mary Bridgeford, to establish her interest in certain real estate that her husband, John J. Bridgeford, acquired and conveyed, without her joinder, since the effective date of the Intestate Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 429; the said John J. Bridgeford having died intestate on October 29, 1926, and having previously (1914), and while still married to plaintiff, gone through a wedding ceremony with one “Helen O. Bridgeford” by whom he had two children. The land in question was conveyed to Bridgeford on May 19, 1919, subject to a mortgage. The same day he placed on it a second mortgage, in which “Helen,” described therein as his wife, joined, and then conveyed the property, subject to both mortgages, to Helen. On Sep *141 teraber 29, 1921, Helen and her “husband,” Bridge-ford, deeded this property and the adjoining premises, which had been conveyed to her directly on September 22,1919, to the defendants in this action, with covenant of general warranty.

The court left to the jury but one question of fact, viz., whether the plaintiff was married to Bridgeford in 1893, as alleged by her, in which event they were directed to find a verdict for the plaintiff, leaving the court to determine the interest in the land to which she was entitled, dependent on whether the clause in section 3 of the Act of 1917, supra, hereinafter quoted at length, is constitutional or not. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff; the court held that the clause of section 3 above referred to was constitutional; and entered judgment for the plaintiff accordingly, subject to certain deductions or allowances for improvements made by defendants, concerning which an appeal by the plaintiff is pending in the Supreme Court but does not affect the questions before us.

From this judgment the defendants have appealed to this court.

Three questions are raised by the appellants.

(1) Appellants offered to prove that a check for the surplus of $80.36, remaining out of $1,200 deposited by Bridgeford with the title company for settlement purposes when the property in question was purchased, was made out by the title company to “Helen C. Bridgeford, ’ ’ as showing that the purchase money had been paid by her, and that Bridgeford took title only as a trustee for her, and was not himself the owner; in which event the plaintiff would not be entitled to any dower or interest in the land. The court ruled otherwise, and held that the offer of evidence did not logically or relevantly support the conclusion that the purchase money had been furnished by or belonged to her. We agree with the ruling. The offer did not state the circumstances under which the title company *142 made out the check for this small amount to her order. It might have been directed by Bridgeford, as a gift to Helen, or he might have, for other purposes of his own, asked the title company to make out the check to her order, and it complied with that request. Nor is there any more probative force in the other offers made by the defendants for the samé purpose and rejected by the court. The facts that Helen Bridge-ford a few months subsequent to the first transaction took title to the adjoining property directly in her own name, and that when both properties were afterward sold she signed and approved the settlement as grantor and received the check for the purchase money, and that Bridgeford said to the defendants, when they were negotiating for the purchase of the properties, that Helen was the owner, are all irrelevant and inadmissible as tending to prove that Helen Bridgeford had paid the money for the purchase of this particular property. The properties did belong to her when they were sold to these defendants, and a statement by Bridgeford to that effect was the natural expression of an existing fact, having no relation to the original purchase of this property; it was equally natural that she should have attended the settlement with defendants and received the purchase money inasmuch as she was admittedly the owner at that time. As to her taking title to the adjoining property directly in her own name, this Avould throw no light on the question as to her oavu money being used in the purchase of the property involved in the present case; if anything it would indicate a difference in the two transactions, since in the property here involved the title was taken originally in the name of Bridgeford and transferred by him to her. None of the offers of evidence rejected, nor all of them together, measured up to the clear and satisfactory proof required: Haupt v. Unger, 222 Pa. 439; Byers v. Perner, 216 Pa. 233.

(2) Appellants also contend that by an agreement *143 entered into between the plaintiff and her husband, John J. Bridgeford, in January, 1924, which purported to release and discharge him from any and all claims the plaintiff might have against him, she had thereby surrendered her inchoate dower right or interest in any lands previously aliened by him without her joinder. We agree with the court below in refusing it this effect, for three reasons: First, a release of her “claims against him” would not constitute a release of her rights against others in property which he had aliened; second, the release was to be voided if the sum of $9,000 was not deposited by Bridgeford within ninety days from the date of the agreement (subsequently extended a further period of ninety days from May 24, 1924), and there is no evidence in the record that such deposit was ever made; and, third, the entire agreement was illegal and void as against public policy, because its object was the securing of a divorce between them in order that he might legally marry the woman he was living with: Com. v. Glennon, 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 94; Shannon’s Est., 289 Pa. 280, 283; Mathiot’s Est., 243 Pa. 375. In Kaiser’s Est., 199 Pa. 269, relied on by appellants, the wife for a sufficient and valuable consideration signed a separation agreement by which she released all her rights in the real and personal property he then, possessed or might possess in the future, and the Supreme Court held that she could not claim dower in the land of which he died seised, even though she had not separately acknowledged the agreement. It does not apply here.

(3) Appellants’ third contention — and this relates solely to the quantum of the plaintiff’s interest — is that the clause of section 3 of the Act of 1917 above referred to is unconstitutional (Art. Ill, section 3), because relating to a subject not clearly expressed in the title; and if overruled on that point, then, because the act embraces more than one subject. The clause in question reads as follows: “Section 3. The shares *144 of the estate directed by this act to be allotted to the widow shall be in lieu and full satisfaction of her dower at common law, so far as relates to land of which the husband died seised; and her share in lands aliened by the husband in his lifetime, without her joining in the conveyance, shall be the same as her share in lands of which the husband died seised.

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Bluebook (online)
156 A. 612, 102 Pa. Super. 138, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgeford-v-groh-et-ux-pasuperct-1931.