Keen v. Keen

461 A.2d 846, 315 Pa. Super. 161, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3282
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 17, 1983
DocketNo. 3049
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 461 A.2d 846 (Keen v. Keen) 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
Keen v. Keen, 461 A.2d 846, 315 Pa. Super. 161, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3282 (Pa. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

Mildred R. Keen (hereinafter “decedent”) and appellant, Edward B. Keen, were married on June 19, 1937 in Bel Air, Maryland. On October 30, 1948, they purchased real estate, as tenants by entireties, situate in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and comprising some twenty-four (24) acres. From 1949 through 1961, decedent and appellant conveyed portions of the above real estate in five (5) separate transactions so that, at the commencement of this action below, approximately twenty-three (23) acres remained.

Decedent and appellant divorced on October 7, 1977. One month thereafter, decedent filed a Complaint in Equity in the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County asking for partition of the aforementioned real estate and the appointment of a trustee for sale of the property and equitable distribution of the net proceeds. On January 17, 1978, before appellant filed any responsive pleading to the Complaint, decedent died. Shortly thereafter, appellee, as administrator of decedent’s estate, was substituted as plaintiff in the lower court proceeding.

On August 10, 1978, appellant filed preliminary objections, including a demurrer, seeking dismissal of the Complaint on grounds that full title to the real estate passed exclusively to him on the decedent’s date of death as the surviving tenant of a tenancy by entireties. The lower court denied the demurrer on September 27, 1978. The lower court held that the tenancy by entireties was actually severed upon the mere filing of the partition action; consequently, full and exclusive title to the twenty-three (23) [163]*163acres did not pass to appellant as the surviving spouse. Instead, the property was partitioned into two equal shares.

Following protracted proceedings involving the filing of amended complaints, preliminary objections, briefs, answers and amended counterclaims, the lower court entered a stipulation and order, dated May 28, 1981, permitting either party to appeal from the order and affirming the earlier partitioning of the real estate into a one-half fee simple interest for decedent’s estate and the same one-half interest for appellant.

Appellant’s exceptions to the May 28th order were denied by an Order of Court, dated November 6, 1981, which reaffirmed the lower court’s original order of partition. Appellant appeals from this latest order of November 6, 1981.

We must decide whether the mere filing of a partition action after divorce under an Act of 1927 operates as the termination of a tenancy by entireties and a conversion of the entireties estate into a tenancy in common. As is quite often the case, we address an issue not yet settled by our appellate courts; therefore, we consider the history of estates in land, statutory construction, related decisional law, and the opinion of our trial courts.

Until 1925, Pennsylvania adhered to the common law position. A tenancy by entireties was a single entity, composed of two married persons holding title to the entire estate. 1 Grover Cleveland Ladner, Ladner on Conveyancing in Pennsylvania, § 1.08 (4th ed. 1979). As a result, this entirety of title could not be severed by partition, Sterrett v. Sterrett, 401 Pa. 583, 166 A.2d 1 (1960), conveyance, Gasner v. Pierce, 286 Pa. 529, 134 A. 494 (1926), or divorce, O’Malley v. O’Malley, 272 Pa. 528, 116 A. 500 (1922). It was not until the enactment of successive statutes in 1925 and 1927, Act of May 13, 1925, P.L. 649; Act of May 10, 1927, P.L. 884, 68 P.S. § 501, when either tenant by entireties could compel partition of the estate after divorce.

[164]*164With the exception of a minor change in statutory language, having no significance to the instant matter, the Act of 1927 re-enacted the pertinent provisions of the Act of 1925. Section 501 of the Act of 1927 provided:

“That whenever any husband and wife hereafter holding property as tenants by entireties have been divorced either of such tenants by entireties may bring suit in the court of common pleas sitting in equity of the county where the property is situate against the other to have the property sold and the proceeds divided between them.” Id.

Subsequently, in 1949, the Act of 1927 was repealed by the Act of May 17, 1949, P.L. 1394, 68 P.S. § 501. This latter act expressly provided for the automatic conversion upon divorce of a tenancy by entireties to a tenancy in common of equal one-half shares in value. See Lykiardopoulos v. Lykiardopoulos, 453 Pa. 290, 309 A.2d 548 (1973); Huns-berger v. Bender, 407 Pa. 185, 180 A.2d 4 (1962). This Act of 1949 was further amended by the Act of 1978, P.L. 202, No. 53, 68 P.S. § 501, but the automatic severance of the estate upon divorce was unaffected.

Insofar as the property at issue was acquired prior to 1949, the parties stipulate that the Act of 1949 and amendments thereto are not applicable; therefore, there was no automatic conversion of the estate upon divorce. Barlet v. Barlet, 88 Pa.D. & C. 550 (1954). The property here was purchased in 1948; consequently, the Act of 1927 governs. See Johns v. Johns, 52 Pa.D. & C.2d 99 (1971); McAuly’s Estate, 49 Pa.D. & C.2d 407 (1970).

The lower court interpreted the Act of 1927 in accordance with the opinion issued in Harrier v. Harrier, 59 Pa.D. & C. 682 (1947). The parties in Harrier acquired property in 1926 as tenants by entireties. They were divorced in 1939 and plaintiff/ex-wife filed a partition action in 1946 for the sale and division of net proceeds of the house. Plaintiff died within one month of filing the complaint and defendant argued that the proceeding was barred since he acquired exclusive title to the real estate as the surviving tenant. [165]*165The Harrier court noted the statutory mandate that either tenant by entireties must “bring suit” to commence partition proceedings. Plaintiffs commencement of the partition suit was an act equated by the court to a surviving spouse’s formal election to refuse the provisions of her deceased husband’s will; the election alone precludes distribution of assets according to the will, despite the need to finalize probate proceedings. Accordingly, the Harrier court found plaintiff to have fully complied with the Act’s requirements; hence, the action survived and defendant’s rights to survivorship were defeated.

Appellant would have us apply the rationale of Lazare v. Lazare, 365 Pa. 591, 76 A.2d 190 (1950) and Sheridan v. Lucey, 395 Pa. 306, 149 A.2d 444 (1959), to overrule Harrier. In Lazare, decedent’s ex-wife filed an action in ejectment to gain possession of real estate occupied by decedent’s second and surviving spouse. The residence was purchased by plaintiff and decedent as tenants by entireties in 1940. Thereafter, the parties divorced, the residence was not partitioned, and decedent remarried and maintained the residence as his home with his second wife until his death. Similarly, the Act of 1927 applied. The court concluded that the legislature, in promulgating the Act,

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Bluebook (online)
461 A.2d 846, 315 Pa. Super. 161, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keen-v-keen-pasuperct-1983.