Dexter v. Billings

1 A. 180, 110 Pa. 135, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 A. 180 (Dexter v. Billings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dexter v. Billings, 1 A. 180, 110 Pa. 135, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 394 (Pa. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sterrett

delivered the opinion of the court, October 5th, 1885.

It is claimed by plaintiffs that the land on which the alleged trespasses were committed was part of ten thousand acres of timber land of which Silas Billings in 1853 died seised and intestate, leaving as his heirs at law seven children, among whom were Silas X. Billings, defendant’s intestate, and Mary C. Dexter, one of the plaintiffs, who in 1860 married John M. Dexter; that in 1858 said timber lands were sold for taxes by the treasurer of Tioga county and purchased by Silas X. Billings, who, until his decease in 1879, continued to hold the same, except that portion thereof which in 1862 was conveyed to his sister, Mrs. Dexter, and her husband; that Silas X. Billings, always recognizing the undivided interest of his brothers and sisters in the lands, from time to time purchased the respective shares of each, except that of Mrs. Dexter, who, preferring to retain her interest in that portion of her father’s estate, declined to sell; that he thereupon exhibited to her a map of the lands and requested her to select therefrom her one-seventh; and after she had so selected fourteen hundred and twenty-four and five-eighth acres as her share or portion of the 10,000 acres, the same was conveyed by deed of September 22d, 1862, but by mistake the deed was made to “ John M. Dexter and Mary C. Dexter ” instead of to “ Mary C. Dexter ” alone; that as soon as the mistake was discovered, the husband, who never claimed any interest in the land, executed a quit-claim deed to his wife for the purpose of vesting the legal title wholly in her as was originally intended.

In January, 1881, after death of Silas X. Billings, an action of assumpsit was brought by Dexter and wife, to use of the latter, against his administratrix to recover the value of timber alleged to have been cut and removed from the premises convejmd as aforesaid. By leave of court.the action was changed to trespass quare clausiwi fregit under the Act March 29th,1824, and to the amended declaration the pleas were “ not guilty, and Statute of Limitations.”

On the trial of the issue plaintiffs offered the deed of September 22d, 1862, to be followed by parol evidence of the facts set forth in the offer recited in first specification of error, for [140]*140the purpose of showing that Mrs. Dexter owned the land on which the trespasses alleged in the declaration were committed. The learned judge, treating the offer as an attempt to reform the deed, excluded the parol evidence tending to show the origin of her title and the actual consideration of the conveyance. This action of the court is the subject of complaint in the first specification.

The record was then amended by adding the name of John M. Dexter as one of the beneficial plaintiffs.

For the purpose of proving the alleged trespasses the plaintiffs, inter alia, offered to prove the facts recited in the second specification. The offer being objected to was rejected by the court for the reason that the proposed testimony did not tend to prove the commission of any trespass by defendant’s intestate within six years prior to his decease on October 13th, 1879.

The court having ruled that any trespass committed more than six years prior to the last mentioned date was barred by the statute, as to both plaintiffs, notwithstanding Mrs. Dexter was a married woman when the trespasses were; committed and so continues until the present time, directed a verdict for defendant.

It is claimed by defendant that plaintiffs’ bill of exceptions,' which forms the basis of the first specification, was waived by the subsequent amendment of the record, adding the name of John M. Dexter as a beneficial plaintiff. We do not think so.It is true plaintiffs might have rested, and relied solely on their exception to procure a reversal of the judgment, if the ruling of the court was wrong, but they were not bound to do so under penalty of abandoning their exception. Without waiving their right to the full benefit of their first bill of exceptions, they were at liberty to amend and endeavor to recover to the extent of Mrs. Dexter’s interest, as shown by the deed itself, a.nd thus raise the questions now’presented by the second to fifth specifications inclusive. If the court erred in the ruling referred to, plaintiffs were undoubtedly prejudiced thereby, and are therefore entitled to a reversal of the judgment which followed such erroneous ruling. This brings us to the consideration of the question involved in the first specification of error.

The rejected evidence was offered not so much for the purpose of reforming the deed or establishing a resulting trust arising from payment of consideration money as to prove title in Mrs. Dexter long anterior to the conveyan ce ; that she was originally one of several tenants in common of the large body of timber lands of which her father died seised, and that the transaction between herself and her brother was in substance and effect an amicable partition of the land, in which her in[141]*141terest therein was set apart in severalty. The proposed testimony tended to prove these facts, and if uncontradicted would have warranted the jury in finding them to be true. If they had so found, the fact that the conveyance was made to Mrs. Dexter and her husband jointly would not have the effect of even partially divesting her title, unless it was further shown affirmatively that she made a gift to her husband of a joint interest in her share of the land.

If the transaction was in fact an amicable partition and the deed for the wife’s purpart had been made to her husband alone, he would not have thereby become the beneficial owner of the land. He would have held the title for her and not for himself. This position is sustained by both principle and authority: Davis v. Davis, 10 Wright, 342. That was a case where, in pursuance of a family agreement and partition, the joint owners of land conveyed to the husband the allotment or portion which had been received by the trustee of his wife in satisfaction of her legacy, and it was held that the husband took the title for her and not for himself; that the title was in her, and upon her decease descended to her heirs. In delivering the opinion of the court in that case, Mr. Justice Strong said: “ When the other joint owners, in consummating what was in effect a partition, conveyed to Archibald Davis, Sr., instead of to his wife, he necessarily held for her and not for himself. The consideration for the title was all hers. The deed to him converted that which had been a tenancy in common into a tenancy in severalty. ' It could do no more.” The same principle is recognized in other cases, among which are the following: Kean v. Ridgway, 16 S. & R., 60; Snevily v. Wagner, 8 Barr, 396; Trimble v. Reis, 1 Wright, 448; McKinney to use v. Hamilton and wife, 1 P. F. Smith, 63. The last is a case in which the wife’s real estate was sold, and for a portion of the purchase money a mortgage was taken in the name of both husband and wife. It was held that they could not be regarded as joint mortgagees, and hence payment to the husband and satisfaction entered by him did not discharge the mortgage, and the wife, as sole owner of the security, was permitted to recover in an action of scire facias. In Trimble v. Reis, supra, Mrs. Trimble’s share of her father’s real estate having been conveyed by the other heirs to herself and husband jointly, they afterwards sold a portion of the land and took a mortgage to themselves jointly for part of the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
1 A. 180, 110 Pa. 135, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-v-billings-pa-1885.