Foley v. Smay

39 A.2d 158, 155 Pa. Super. 644, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 519
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1944
DocketAppeal, 45
StatusPublished

This text of 39 A.2d 158 (Foley v. Smay) 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
Foley v. Smay, 39 A.2d 158, 155 Pa. Super. 644, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 519 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

This was an action in ejectment tried, by agreement *646 of the parties, by the court without a jury, under the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109, as amended by the Act of July 10, 1935, P. L. 640, 12 PS §688 et seq. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment entered in favor of defendants.

The procedure prescribed by the Act of 1874, as amended, was followed, and there is no merit in plaintiffs’ complaint to the contrary. Following the trial, the court filed its decision in writing. Exceptions to the findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed by plaintiffs. Upon argument the court in banc ordered judgment to be entered according to the decision previously filed.

On June 29, 1928, John Palmer died, and under his last will and testament his widow, Mary Jane Palmer, became the owner of a house and lot in Derry Township, Westmoreland County. On or about February 20, 1929, Mrs. Palmer executed two deeds for the property above mentioned to her daughter, Olive Foley, one of the plaintiffs in the present case. On October 19, 1929, Mrs. Palmer brought a bill in equity against her daughter, Olive Foley, and the latter’s husband, James Foley, to recover the conveyed property on the ground that the deeds had been acquired by undue influence and fraud. The chancellor found the controlling facts and legal conclusions in favor of Mrs. Palmer. A re-conveyance and retransfer of the property in question was ordered. The decree was affirmed upon appeal to the Supreme Court in Palmer v. Foley et ux., 305 Pa. 169, 157 A. 474. The property was reconveyed by Olive Foley and her husband, James Foley, to Mrs. Palmer by deed dated June 15, 1931.

On May 25, 1931, in a proceeding for the appointment of a guardian of the estate of Mrs. Palmer instituted under the Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292, as amended, 50 PS §941 et seq., Mrs. Palmer was declared to be weakminded and unable to take care of her prop *647 erty, and the Barclay-Westmoreland Trust Company of Greensburg, Pa., was appointed guardian, and filed its bond.

In Palmer v. Foley et ux., supra, 305 Pa. 169, at page 176, 157 A. 474, at page 476, it was said: “When this bill was filed, a proceeding was instituted on the law side of the court to have a guardian appointed for Mrs. Palmer, because of her incapacity. This was never formally concluded, but the lower court, in disposing of the case at bar, decreed that defendants transfer the property in question to a designated trustee for plaintiff’s use, and further decreed that she was so weak mentally as to be liable to become the victim of designing persons and fritter away her estate and therefore appointed the said trustee as her guardian. It is immaterial to the defendants whether the property be returned to Mrs. Palmer or to a trustee for her use. Hence, they have no standing to raise that question. A decree, although irregular, will not be reversed except at the instance of a party injured thereby. Treating the appointment of guardian as made in the pending proceeding on the law side of the court, the appeal therefrom should be to the Superior Court.”

The action of the court in appointing a guardian for Mrs. Palmer was not challenged in the manner indicated by the Supreme Court.

On June 15, 1933, the Barclay-Westmoreland Trust Company, guardian of the estate of Mary Jane Palmer, petitioned the court to authorize a private sale of the real estate of its ward to defendants. The petition set forth, inter alia, “That the following are the children of the said Mary Jane Palmer and the only persons capable of inheriting said estate: Olive May Foley, daughter, William Palmer, son, Laura Belle Doumont, daughter. A copy of this petition, together with notice that your petitioner intends to present the same to the Court on the 15th day of June, 1933, was duly served *648 on each of said persons as well as the said Mary Jane Palmer, as will appear by Exhibit ‘C’ hereto attached.” On June 26, 1933, the court refused to authorize the private sale of the property and ordered the same.to be sold at public sale. At the public sale the property was purchased by defendants. The court confirmed the sale on August 16, 1933, and in compliance therewith a deed was executed and delivered to defendants by the guardian.

Mere procedural irregularities which do not go to the jurisdiction of the court to make the order of sale should have been raised in the proceeding in which the order was made. They cannot be attacked collaterally in the present case by one who was before the court by service of copy of petition and notice. The complaint of Olive Foley, one of the plaintiffs, that she had insufficient notice is without merit at this time. “The truth of the record, as to matters within the jurisdiction of the court, cannot properly be questioned here”: Patchin v. Seward Coal Co., 226 Pa. 159, at page 166, 75 A. 250, at page 25'2. As said by the court below in its opinion: “At any time after its service, and even after the confirmation of the sale, she could have appeared and objected to the sale on this ground. In view of her recent experience in the equity case, in which this very property was recovered from her by her mother, it is highly unlikely that she was in ignorance of the sale at the time it was made. Yet she voluntarily chose to do nothing, and remained silent from' 1933 until this proceeding was begun in 1937, long after her mother had died and the estate had been settled, before taking any steps to set aside the sale. Balked in one effort to cheat her mother of the property, she is in no equitáble position to upset a judicial sale to a bona fide purchaser for vaiue upon such a ground. Her silence when she could, and should in all fairness have spoken promptly, is equivalent to her waiver of *649 the irregularity of the service and consent to the sale.” “The principle that the integrity of a judgment of a court having jurisdiction,' except for fraud, cannot be questioned collaterally is so indurated in our judicial policy that citation of authority to support it would seem vain and useless iteration”: Kennedy v. Baker et al., 159 Pa. 146, 149, 28 A. 252, at page 253. See Yaple et al. v. Titus et al., 41 Pa. 195, 202.

We agree with the court below that it had jurisdiction to act upon the petition of the guardian for the sale of the real estate of Mrs. Palmer. The jurisdiction of the bourt was determined from the facts set forth in the petition, and this disclosed no fact which would deprive the court of jurisdiction to make an order of sale. Mitchell v. Spaulding, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 296, 301, affirmed 206 Pa. 220, 55 A. 968. An examination of the record shows no lack of jurisdictional facts. In the petition the names of those capable of inheriting the estate of Mrs. Palmer were given. There was nothing to indicate the existence of any other. It is not sufficient to deprive the court of jurisdiction that an unnamed potential heir existed. The state of the record is unlike that in Mitchell v. Spaulding, supra, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 296, 300, where it showed upon its face that one of the next of kin of the lunatic, within the meaning of the statute, had not been given legal notice; and for that reason the sale was set aside.

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Related

Palmer v. Foley Et Ux.
157 A. 474 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Voshake's Estate
189 A. 753 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Yaple v. Titus
41 Pa. 195 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1862)
Kennedy v. Baker
28 A. 252 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1893)
Fricke v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
38 A. 601 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Mitchell v. Spaulding
55 A. 968 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)
Patchin v. Seward Coal Co.
75 A. 250 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)
Mitchell v. Spaulding
20 Pa. Super. 296 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 158, 155 Pa. Super. 644, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-smay-pasuperct-1944.