Godding v. Swanson

77 Pa. D. & C. 451, 1950 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County
DecidedDecember 28, 1950
Docketno. 80
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Pa. D. & C. 451 (Godding v. Swanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Godding v. Swanson, 77 Pa. D. & C. 451, 1950 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Wade, P. J.,

George Godding and Anna M. Godding brought this action in ejectment against John Albin Swanson and Esther E. Swanson, claiming that defendants were wrongfully in possession of a tract of eight acres of land in Cherry Grove Township, Warren County, Pa. Plaintiffs began their abstract of title with the will of Anna Deshner Hacka-thorne, dated April 13, 1935, probated December 3, 1935, which left, inter alia, a larger tract of land which included the disputed tract to her husband, James Edward Hackathorne, for life with the remainder to her children. The life tenant died, and the owners of the remainder deeded their interests in the larger tract by a quitclaim deed to O. M. Borden on September 28, 1937, which deed was recorded on November 15, 1937. The abstract contains a reference of a quitclaim deed from O. M. Borden and Georgia E. Borden to C. J. Cooper and one Mary McBee, dated June 22, 1938, and recorded November 17, 1938. C. J. Cooper, single, and Mary McBee, single, gave a general warranty deed to E. H. Beshlin on November 20, 1940, which deed was recorded October 10, 1942; E. H. Beshlin and Marill E. Beshlin, his wife, gave a special warranty deed, dated October 10, 1942, recorded October 12, 1942, to plaintiffs in this case, covering the larger tract.

Defendants claim title to eight acres, the land in question, by virtue of a tax sale held August 7, 1939, of the larger tract, to W. J. Knupp for the nonpayment of the 1937 taxes. W. J. Knupp made a quitclaim deed of the larger tract to C. J. Cooper on November 3,1941, which was recorded February 18, 1942. Then C. J. Cooper and Rose Cooper, his wife, made a deed of the disputed eight acres to defendants on June 4, 1942, which deed was recorded June 11, 1942.

The issue in this case is very simple and without any complications whatsoever; it is merely a question of whether or not on June 4, 1942, defendants knew or [453]*453had reason to know that their grantors had already conveyed this eight acres, which was included in the larger tract of 57% acres, when grantors made the deed to E. H. Beshlin on November 29, 1940. This latter deed was not recorded until October 10, 1942, and obviously there was no notice under the recording acts until October 10,1942, sometime after defendants had received and recorded their deed.

On November 18, 1948, this case was tried before a jury, hut, on motion for binding instructions made by defendants, this court took the case from the jury on the basis that plaintiffs had not made out a case, since the record did not show title being out of the Commonwealth or a common source of title. This court took the view that a tax title is a new and inceptive title and does not derive its efficacy from any title of the reputed owner. This court further took the view that the purpose of including the name of a reputed owner in an assessment is merely for the purpose of identification, the same as a warrant number or ad-joinders, so that a person desiring to pay his taxes will be led to the identification of the land through the assessment. For example, many tax titles in Pennsylvania are based on assessments to “Unknown”, where there are other sufficient means of identification of the land in the assessment. However, the Superior Court on July 15, 1949 (165 Pa. Superior Ct. 193) reversed the ease and sent it back for a new trial, holding that there was a common source of title where the assessment was to Anna Deshner Hackathorne and a tax sale was had thereunder, and where there was a conveyance by the heirs of Anna Deshner Hackathorne. In so holding the Superior Court cited California law and placed the basic theory of tax titles on the California law, which makes a tax title no better than the title of the reputed owner.

[454]*454The case was again tried on July 21, 1950, before a jury which found in favor of plaintiffs on the narrow question of fact as to whether or not defendants knew or should have known of the prior conveyance of their grantor.

During this trial it was discovered for the first time that in the deed from O. M. Borden and Georgia E. Borden, dated June 22, 1938, and recorded November 17, 1938, the transaction had been closed in Attorney S. D. Blackman’s office with only C. J. Cooper as grantee, and that subsequently and without authority the name of Mary McBee had been inserted as an additional grantee. At the trial the court held that the deed had been destroyed as to its legal efficacy, but that the estate to the original grantee, C. J. Cooper, had not been destroyed. The effect of the law in this regard is to nullify the deed so that no suits may be brought on its warranties, and deed may not be used as actual evidence of the transfer of title. Of course, such an alteration does not prevent a subsequent holder of the title from showing the nature of the transaction in some other way than by using the deed as an item of evidence. This holding is under the authority of such Pennsylvania cases as Rifener v. Bowman et al. 53 Pa. 313 (1866). The Supreme Court said at page 318:

“If a grantee of land alter or destroy his title-deed, yet his title to the land is not gone. It passed to him by the deed, the deed has performed its office as an instrument of conveyance, and its continued existence is not necessary to the continuance of title in the grantee— but the estate remains in him until it has passed to another by some mode of conveyance recognized by law. It is the instrument which is rendered void, not the estate: 1 Greenl., §568; Withers v. Atkinson, 1 Watts 236.”

The subject matter has been discussed in 1 R. C. L. 1004:

[455]*455“Title does pass and it is not divested by the subsequent alteration, and notwithstanding the unauthorized erasures or interlineations, it is open to the grantee named in the paper to show, by any competent evidence, the passing of title into him.”

There is authority for the proposition that although there is an alteration in the deed, and the deed itself may not be adduced as evidence, yet the deed, so far as unaltered, may be used as a memorial of the transaction. 10 R. C. L. 1145 holds:

“Some courts hold that not only is the right which has passed by such an executed instrument unaffected by the kind of destruction of the paper — as it would be unaffected by the physicial obliteration of the paper— but also that the paper itself, eliminating the unauthorized alterations of it, continues to be a memorial of the right or title, and may be adduced in evidence to prove the passing and vesting of such right or title.”

The court, following the Pennsylvania law, at the trial did not permit the use of the deed as a memorial of the transaction, but did permit plaintiffs to prove the passing of title to C. J. Cooper on June 22, 1942, by oral testimony. The question now resolves itself as to whether or not there was sufficient proof of this conveyance of June 22,1942, to C. J. Cooper. For this purpose plaintiffs called O. M. Borden and his wife, Georgia E. Borden, to the stand and they were examined and cross-examined about this transaction. 0. M. Borden was first examined about the deed, dated September 28, 1937, and he said he did obtain title to the larger tract of 57% acres and that he did take possession. Then he was examined and cross-examined concerning his transfer of title to C. J. Cooper on June 22,1938. He first declared that he no longer owned the 57% acres of land, and he said: “I sold it to C. J. Cooper”.

[456]*456“Q.

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Related

Godding Et Ux. v. Swanson
67 A.2d 814 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Rifener v. Bowman
53 Pa. 313 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Withers v. Atkinson
1 Watts 236 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1832)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 Pa. D. & C. 451, 1950 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godding-v-swanson-pactcomplwarren-1950.