Heckman v. Nye

15 Pa. D. & C. 493, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 126
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County
DecidedJuly 3, 1930
DocketNo. 1600
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Pa. D. & C. 493 (Heckman v. Nye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heckman v. Nye, 15 Pa. D. & C. 493, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 126 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Shanaman, J.,

Pleadings and issue.

Plaintiffs filed a bill in equity praying that it be decreed that plaintiffs own certain land, that defendants be restrained from conveying and encumbering plaintiffs’ estate therein, that a certain mortgage of plaintiffs’ interest, executed by defendants Roat to defendant Brumbach, be declared of no effect as to plaintiffs’ interest, and that defendant Nye pay into court certain moneys received for the sale of plaintiffs’ alleged interest. Plaintiffs joined the vendor, the vendees and the mortgage holder as defendants. Nye, the vendor, and Brumbach, the mortgage holder, neither appeared nor answered. The vendees answered, setting up title through defendant Nye, the vendor.

The questions at issue are:

1. Whether or not Nye was a tenant by entireties and was, therefore, successor in title to his deceased wife Carrie, the controlling matter of fact in this regard being whether or not Clayton P. Nye and Carrie Heckman (Nye) were husband and wife at the time they received title to the property in question; and

2. If not husband and wife, are Nye’s deed and his vendees’ mortgage good against the plaintiffs, who are heirs of Carrie Heckman, by estoppel or other rule of law?

Findings of fact.

1. Carrie Heckman was divorced by her husband, Thomas Heckman, on November 1, 1920. For some years prior to her divorce she had meretricious relations with one Clayton P. Nye. At the time of her divorce she was living apart from her husband and was- dwelling and cohabiting with said Nye. After the divorce from Heckman she lived for some months with her daughter and for some months with Nye.

2. On July 26, 1921, Samuel F. Fisher and Ada J. Fisher conveyed, by deed duly recorded, the premises No. 1657 North Ninth Street, Reading, Pennsylvania, to Clayton P. Nye and Carrie A. Nye, his wife. Thence and thereafter the pair resided and cohabited sexually in the said house until the death of Carrie A. Nye on November 8, 1927.

3. At the time of the conveyance to Nye and Carrie A. Nye, his wife, the couple executed on the same day a bond to John N. Leedom for $2200, in which the obligors were stated to be Clayton P. Nye and Carrie A. Nye, his wife. On the same day they executed and delivered to Leedom a mortgage securing payment of said bond upon the said property. In said mortgage the mortgagors were stated to be Clayton P. Nye and Carrie A. Nye, his wife. Furthermore, they introduced themselves as husband and wife to the notary public, who did not know them to be otherwise, but took their acknowledgments as such. The mortgage was recorded eo die.

4. During the years 1922 to 1927, school and city taxes were billed in the names of Nye and wife, and the woman’s personal tax of 30 cents in each year was assessed to Mrs. Carrie Nye. Interest on the mortgage was annually billed to Clayton and Carrie A. Nye. Bills for electric wiring and house painting were billed by tradesmen to Clayton and Carrie Nye and to Clayton P. Nye and wife. Mail matter was addressed to Mrs. Carrie Nye. We might perhaps take judicial notice that the local directory, in the years 1923, 1924, 1925 and 1927, contained the following line: “Nye, Clayton P. (Carrie A.) laborer, 1657 North 9th.” However, such fact in no way influences the decision at which we shall arrive.

[495]*4955. On one occasion, when a stranger asked the next-door neighbor of the Nyes whether she knew Clayton Nye, Mrs. Nye, who happened to overhear the question, said, “That’s my husband.” The decedent once said to one of the plaintiffs that she would never marry Nye, that he was no good, but that she would battle it out with him to the end and for her own protection would not leave him. When Nye sent flowers to decedent’s funeral, he told the florist to mark them “From a Friend,” and the saleslady wrote on the card, at his direction, “From a Friend, Clayton Nye.” At the funeral Nye said he was ashamed because all the relatives were there and he wasn’t related. When, preparatory to the funeral, Reverend Brownmiller called at the house, Nye received him and told him his wife had died. Brownmiller then started to write the obituary and wrote “Carrie, wife of Clayton Nye.” He then read it to Nye and the children, and the children stopped him and said it wasn’t correct, whereupon Nye said he wasn’t certain who married them, and Brown-miller said he would omit reference to that, to which Nye rejoined that he thought that would be the better plan.

6. Mrs. Trostle, the next-door neighbor, recollected that the neighbors spoke of decedent sometimes as Mrs. Nye and sometimes as Mrs. Heckman. Weisser, interested in the purchase, testified that the neighbors called her Carrie Nye. Mrs. Weisser, who lived next door to the Nyes during the spring and summer of 1921, knew her as Mrs. Nye. Nye upon one occasion said: “We [meaning himself and Carrie Heckman] are just like man and wife.”

7. Mrs. Phillips, a neighbor, knew decedent as, and only as, Carrie Heck-man up to the time of her death. She was of opinion that most neighbors called the decedent Mrs. Heckman. She testified that the decedent upon one occasion said that she was mistreated by Nye, but could not arrest him as they were not married. About two years before decedent’s death, Nye told the witness that he was single and free to go with another woman.

8. Mrs. Daisy Crouse testified that about two years before decedent’s death decedent denied she was married to Nye, and said that Nye was so ugly to her that she would never marry him.

9. Mrs. Emma Watson, a neighbor living a block away from them, knew both Nye and decedent, and always heard decedent referred to as Mrs. Heck-man.

10. Philip Quell, a neighbor, heard of the decedent always and only as Mrs. Heckman, and questioned her once, and she replied that she wasn’t married. When she would sometimes say that she would never marry Nye, Nye, in the witness’s presence, merely laughed.

11. William Hoffert, a neighbor, is a butcher and grocer who sold articles to the decedent. He knew her as Mrs. Heckman. This name she gave when she asked for credit.

12. The couple were at no time generally reputed to be married.

13. Clayton P. Nye and Carrie Heckman never were married, either by ceremony or at common law.

14. Clayton P. Nye and Carrie Heckman never were tenants by entireties of property No. 1657 North Ninth Street, Reading, Pennsylvania.

15. By deed dated December 12, 1928, duly recorded, Clayton P. Nye conveyed to the defendants, Luther E. Roat and Mamie E. Roat, his wife, the property in question. The deed states a consideration of $3000. The real consideration was $2500. The deed recites the death of Carrie A. Nye, wife of the grantor.

16. By indenture dated December 12, 1928, duly recorded, defendants Luther E. Roat and Mamie E. Roat, his wife, mortgaged the said premises to defendant William Murray Brumbach for $1900.

[496]*49617. The vendee, Roat, had actual notice that Nye’s marriage had not been ceremonially solemnized by any officer or minister authorized to marry, and that it existed, if at all, at common law.

18. The vendees, Roat and wife, had no actual notice, at or prior to their consummating the purchase from Nye, that any one disputed the validity of his marriage at common law to Mrs. Nye, or his power to make good and effectual deed of the fee.

19.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Pa. D. & C. 493, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heckman-v-nye-pactcomplberks-1930.