Comito's Estate

13 Pa. D. & C. 302, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Berks County
DecidedJuly 6, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Pa. D. & C. 302 (Comito's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Berks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comito's Estate, 13 Pa. D. & C. 302, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Marx, P. J.,

— This matter comes before us upon petition and answer. From these pleadings we find facts as follows:

1. On Nov. 29, 1912, Elizabeth E. Palm conveyed to Francesco Comito and Maria Grazia Comito, his wife, in fee simple, the following real estate: All [303]*303that certain lot or piece of ground, together with the three-story brick dwelling-house thereon erected, situate on the west side of North Third Street, between Penn and Washington Streets, and being No. 38 North Third Street, in the City of Reading, County of Berks and State of Pennsylvania, bounded on the north by property now or late of J. Allison Orr, on the east by North Third Street, on the south by property now or. late of Isaac Francis and the estate of John Buchanan, and on the west by Thorn Street, containing in front or width 30 feet and in depth 230 feet.

2. On April 6, 1915, Francesco Comito conveyed, by direct conveyance, in fee simple, to his wife, Maria Grazia Comito, “an undivided one-half interest” in said real estate. The wife did not join, as grantor, in this conveyance.

3. On Aug. 19, 1917, the said Maria Grazia Comito died, leaving a last will and testament, dated Jan. 23, 1913, and a codicil thereto, dated May 22, 1917, which were duly probated on June 18, 1918. Under the aforesaid will and codicil, testatrix gave unto her niece, Mary Grazia Comito, the sum of $500, to be paid on her arrival at the age of twenty-one years, or on the date of her marriage, whichever happened first.

4. The personal estate of Maria Grazia Comito, according to an inventory and appraisement filed, aggregates the sum of $100.

5. Subsequent to the death of Maria Grazia Comito, Francesco Comito married Maria Comito.

6. On Dec. 15, 1922, Francesco Comito and Maria Comito, his wife, conveyed the aforesaid real estate in fee simple to Charles Gison.

7. On the same day, Dec. 15, 1922, Charles Gison and wife conveyed, in fee simple, said real estate to Francesco Comito and Maria Comito, his wife.

8. On or about Oct. 19, 1928, Francesco Comito died, survived by his wife, Maria Comito.

9. The legacy of $500 to Mary Grazia Comito has never been paid; the personal assets of the testatrix are insufficient for payment of the same, and any interest which Maria Grazia Comito may have had in the aforesaid real estate at the time of her death was not specifically devised, and was the only real estate which said testatrix may have possessed.

Discussion.

The petition and answer raise two questions for consideration, to wit:

1st. Did Francesco Comito convey to his wife, Maria Grazia Comito, an interest in the premises described which survived the death of the said Maria Grazia Comito and which was subject to her testamentary disposition?

2nd. May a legacy, in default of sufficient personal assets, be charged upon real estate of the testator not specifically devised?

The petition by the Berks County Trust Company, guardian of Mary Grazia Comito, legatee under said will and codicil of Maria Grazia Comito, asks that said premises, No. 38 North Third Street, Reading, be charged with payment of said legacy of $500, with interest from Aug. 19, 1918.

In the eighth paragraph of the petition it is admitted that, by operation of law, Maria Comito, the second wife, became seized of the fee at the death of Francesco Comito. In the tenth paragraph of the petition it is again admitted that Maria Comito is at present the owner in fee of the described premises. In spite of these admissions, the petitioner argued that by virtue of the conveyance of April 6, 1915, Maria Grazia Comito died possessed of an indefeasible fee in said premises, or in a part thereof. For this reason, we deem it necessary to consider the first question proposed.

[304]*304Under the conveyance from Elizabeth E. Palm, Francesco Comito and Maria Grazia Comito, his wife, held by entireties. This estate comes to us from the common-law and retains, unchanged, the common law characteristics of the relationship of husband and wife. Detailing and distinguishing the elements of an estate by entireties, our Supreme Court, in an opinion by Lewis, C. J., said in the leading case of Stuckey v. Keefe’s Exec’rs, 26 Pa. 397:

“A conveyance to husband and wife creates neither a tenancy in common nor a joint tenancy. The estate of joint tenants is a unit made up of divisible parts; that of husband and wife is also a unit, but it is made up of indivisible parts. In the first case there are several holders of different moieties or portions, and upon the death of either, the survivor takes a new estate. He acquires by survivorship the moiety of his deceased co-tenant: In the last case, although there are two natural persons, they are but one person in law, and upon the death of either, the survivor takes no new estate. It is a mere change in the properties of the legal person holding, and not an alteration in the estate holden. The loss of an adjunct merely reduces the legal personage holding the estate to an individuality identical with the natural person. The whole estate continues in the survivor, the same as it would continue in a corporation after the death of one of the corporators: Rogers v. Grider, 1 Dana, 242; Taul v. Campbell, 7 Yerger, 319. This has been settled law for centuries. The distinction may seem a nice one, but it is founded upon the nature of marriage and rights and incapacities which it establishes.”

“Coke tells us that ‘there can be no moieties between’ husband and wife: Co. Lit., 187 b; Thomas Coke, 855; 2 Yeates, 462. Littleton says that the reason is that they are one person in law: Id. Blackstone tells us that for that reason ‘they cannot take the estate by moieties, but both are seized of the entirety:’ 2 Bl. Com., 182; 2 Cruise Dig., 492. If they are ‘one person in law’ — if ‘there be no moieties between them’ — if ‘they cannot take by moieties,’ but both ‘must be seized of the entirety’ — the intention to create a tenancy in common is immaterial, for the rule is that the very same words which create such an estate between other parties create an entirety in husband and wife. The case of Green v. King was determined, not on any supposed intention of the parties to the conveyance, but on the sole ground of the absolute incapacity of the husband and wife, who are regarded as one person in law, to take, during coverture, separate estates: 2 BI. Rep., 1211.”

Being one person, husband and wife took per tout, and not per my or per my et per tout. The only estate which they could together hold, regardless of the words of the grant, came to them, and to each of them, as a whole, and in their hands and between them was and must remain indivisible.

Comito, by his deed of April 6, 1915, undertook to convey to his wife “an undivided one-half interest” in the premises held by them in entireties. Whether, believing his wife and he held by moieties, he intended to convey his moiety, thereby lodging both in her, or, believing he held the whole by a fee defeasible by his death, he intended to divide the whole and fix in his wife an absolute and an indefeasible fee in the moiety, we cannot say. In either event, he undertook to do what cannot be done — divide and convey in parts what is indivisible, an estate by entireties. In the case of Hetzel v. Lincoln, 216 Pa. 60, the facts were as follows: Reed conveyed land to Lincoln and wife “jointly” in 1874. In 1893, Mary A.

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Related

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Rogers v. Grider
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Bluebook (online)
13 Pa. D. & C. 302, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comitos-estate-paorphctberks-1929.