Hanley v. Stewart

39 A.2d 323, 155 Pa. Super. 535, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 541
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1944
DocketAppeal, 159
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 A.2d 323 (Hanley v. Stewart) 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
Hanley v. Stewart, 39 A.2d 323, 155 Pa. Super. 535, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 541 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The plaintiff, Florence Sullivan Hanley, claiming to be the owner of a one-sixteenth interest in a farm of 160 acres, known as the William Hawk farm, situate in Greenwood Township, Crawford County, Pennsylvania, on June 29,1942 filed this bill in equity against her co-tenants asking for a partition of said real estate.

'She averred in her bill that Cornelius Sullivan, her grandfather, ¡died intestate in April, 1891, seized of the said real estate.

Ann Arndt, who, ,as sole devisee of Ella Sullivan, a daughter of said Cornelius Sullivan, was admitted by the plaintiff to be the owner of one-fourth of said real estate, but who, !as sole devisee of Ella Sullivan, claimed ownership of the whole farm in the right of said Ella Sullivan, by virtue of the latter’s alleged adverse possession of the farm for more than twenty-one years, in her answer 1 did not deny the foregoing averment in the bill, but contented herself with pleading lack of knowledge, and stating, “if the same became material, she demands strict proof of the same.” This was not a sufficient denial of the averment in the bill and operated as an admission of the fact averred: Cameron v. Carnegie Trust Co., 292 Pa. 114, 118, 119, 140 A. 768.

The evidence established that Cornelius Sullivan left *538 to survive him a widow, since deceased, and four children, as follows: (1) a daughter, Mary, who married one Stewart, and who is living; (2) a daughter, Ella, who died unmarried on August 6, 1941, having left a will, duly admitted to probate, .by which she left all her estate, real and personal, to the defendant, Ann Arndt; (3) a son, John, who died intestate on August 10, 1933, leaving to survive him a widow, Mary Tobin Sullivan, and four children, Florence Sullivan Hanley, the plaintiff, Anna Sullivan Mahoney, John Bernard Sullivan, and Ethel Sullivan McNamara; (4) a son, Dennis Sullivan, who died intestate April 23, 1937, leaving to survive him a son, Cornelius.

The said Ann Arndt, who was the only defendant who appeared and opposed the plaintiff’s right to a partition of the real estate, ,set up a claim to sole ownership of the land in question on two grounds:

(1) By right of adverse possession in her devisor, Ella Sullivan, under the Act of March 26, 1735, 2 Sm. L. 299, sec. 2.

(2) That the title of said Ella Sullivan to said real estate had been adjudicated in an action brought by her to No. 31 February Term, 1918, in said County.

She also alleged that the plaintiff’s laches barred her right to ask for a partition of the real estate.

The court below, after a trial in court, dismissed the bill of complaint for three reasons:

(1) Because the plaintiff had not averred or proved ownership of the land in fee simple by Cornelius Sullivan at the time of his death, but only that he “died seized” of it, which amounted only — the learned court said — to an averment of simple possession, and not an averment of seisin or possession in his demesne as of fee, and hence did not aver a title that would pass to his heirs under the intestate laws; and, therefore, there was no competent proof that Ella Sullivan was a co- *539 tenant with the other heirs of Cornelius Sullivan; and hence the well-known rule that the possession of one co-tenant is the possession of all did not apply to this case.

(2) That the defendant, Ann Arndt, had sufficiently established title by adverse possession — limited as above set forth — in her devisor, Ella Sullivan.

(3) That the plaintiff was guilty of laches, barring her right to bring this suit.

We are of opinion that the court was wrong in all three of its grounds or conclusions.

(1) The defendant, Ann Arndt, had not in her answer set up the first ground relied on by the court. On the contrary she had acquiesced in the plaintiff’s use of the word ‘seized’, as meaning, ‘seized in fee simple’, by using it in the same sense in her answer. In paragraph 14 of her answer she averred, “And further that the said Ella Sullivan died seised of the said premises by reason of actual, visible, hostile, open, notorious, exclusive, adverse and uninterrupted possession of said premises for a period of more than fifty (50) years.” Where both parties use the word in the same sense, there is no reason or justification for the court, of its own motion, to go outside the record and decide the ease on a point not raised in the pleadings or on the trial, and which, if it had been raised could probably have been determined by a reference to the deed to Cornelius Sullivan or by other evidence showing the nature of his tenure.

Furthermore there is substantial competent authority for the position that ‘seized’, used by itself, commonly refers to a possession in fee simple. We refer to the Oxford English Dictionary.

“Seise, verb, Law. The usual spelling of seize, verb, in the sense: To put in possession, invest with the fee simple of. ('Stee seize V. 1, 2).”----
*540 “Seize, verb.
I. To put in possession
1. Law. ...
b. Passive, To be seised of nr |in: to be the • legal possessor of ...; to be the holder of the fee simple.”
Among the illustrative citations given is:
“jarman — Powell’s Devises II. 108, If a devisor being seized of both Blackacre and Whiteacre, devise Blackacre to A. in fee.”

Unless he was seised in fee of Blackacre he could not devise it in fee.

In Lucet et al. v. Beekman et al., 2 Caines’ Reports 385 (1805) the 'Supreme Court of Adjudicature of New-York — comparable to the present Court of Appeals— said: “If a party named in a petition for partition be stated to be seised of a certain portion, the court will intend it to be of a fee.”

President Judge Rice in the opening statement of his opinion in Sanders’s Est., 41 Pa. Superior Ct. 77, 79, an orphans’ court partition proceeding, used the word, seized, in that sense when he said: “Elizabeth Sanders died intestate, seised of land, and leaving to survive her five children”, etc.

See also, South End Mining Co. v. Tinney, 22 Nev. 19, 36, 35 Pac. 89, 94, where the word, ‘seized’, was construed as meaning ‘seized in fee simple’.

(2) The main ground relied on by the court below having been found to be untenable, the second falls with it, for the court’s disposition of this ground, viz., the finding that Ella Sullivan had established her ownership of the farm by adverse and uninterrupted possession for more than twenty-one years, was based on.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bezjak, J. v. Diamond, M.
135 A.3d 623 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)
Spears v. Spears
769 A.2d 523 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
Chesney v. Stevens
644 A.2d 1240 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)
Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Pucci
523 F. Supp. 1310 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1981)
Stephens v. Hurly
563 P.2d 546 (Montana Supreme Court, 1977)
Balkiewicz v. Asenavage
178 A.2d 591 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1962)
Potter v. Reliance Mutual Life Insurance
21 Pa. D. & C.2d 603 (Lycoming County Court of Common Pleas, 1960)
Yarnall Estate
103 A.2d 753 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Moser v. Granquist
66 A.2d 267 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
McSwigan v. Bove
58 A.2d 137 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)
Medusa Portland Cement Co. v. Lamantina
44 A.2d 244 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 323, 155 Pa. Super. 535, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-stewart-pasuperct-1944.