Leahey v. Leahey

163 A. 677, 309 Pa. 347, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketAppeal, 120
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 163 A. 677 (Leahey v. Leahey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leahey v. Leahey, 163 A. 677, 309 Pa. 347, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 724 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

Mary M. Leahey died intestate January 12,1928. She left surviving twelve children. This bill in equity was brought by nine of them against the other three to procure the cancellation of a deed to the three as joint tenants, executed and acknowledged by the mother, but it is alleged never delivered. Following her death the unrecorded deed was found in the mother’s house in a safe, said by plaintiffs to be her private safe. Sometime following her decease the deed was surreptitiously taken from the safe by the defendánts and recorded. Thereupon plaintiffs began this proceeding. The court, after hearing, granted the relief prayed for, decreeing that the deed be cancelled and stricken from the record and that defendants account for the rents and profits they had received. From this decree defendants appeal.

Counsel for appellees summarizes the controversy, from his point of view, in a counterstatement of the questions involved substantially thus: Where a mother of twelve children signs, seals and acknowledges a deed, for a large farm underlaid with coal, as well as two other-valuable tracts, including her home, wherein a consideration of one dollar is named, in which only three of her twelve children are named grantees, and places the deed, unrecorded, in her safe, and continues to collect the rents, make repairs, pay taxes and fire insurance premiums, and thereafter makes five deeds for part of the land described in the unrecorded conveyance to five of her children, who take possession thereof, which deeds the mother herself places of record, and after her death *351 the unrecorded deed is found in her safe and placed on record by the grantees named therein, without the knowledge and consent of the other nine children, and with the intention of cheating and defrauding them of their inheritance, was there a delivery of the deed to the three children during the mother’s lifetime? The chancellor found there was not.

It is conceded on both sides that the question of delivery is the controlling one in the case. The deed is dated January 20, 1926. There was no evidence of any delivery except that given by one of the defendants, Francis Leahey. His testimony the chancellor did not credit. He said the deed was delivered to him by his mother on April 13, 1926, when he paid to her the consideration of one dollar named in it. He had no previous knowledge of such a paper. They were in the dining room of his mother’s home, he testified, and she said she had something for him; she said, “Here’s a paper for yqu”; and he took the paper and read the endorsement on the outside of it, and replied, “This is not for me, this is for Alma,” to which the mother answered, “You are in it, I have to deliver it to you.” He further testified that he did not open the deed or read it, but handed his mother a dollar bill and then started to open the paper, whereupon she said, “If you are curious, read it,” and he answered, “I am not curious at anything you do.” He immediately handed the deed back to her without reading it and she told him that she had to deliver it to Alma. The deed was endorsed “Mary M. Leahey to Alma Leahey et al.” He admitted he did not know what property he was paying for, or what property was described in the deed, and that he never afterwards gave any thought to it or made any inquiry about it or did anything until the deed was produced after his mother’s death.

Defendants make no claim to having had the deed in their possession during their mother’s lifetime or even to knowing anything of its contents. The testimony *352 shows that none of the parties, plaintiff or defendant, knew of its contents until after their mother’s death and that only one of them claims he knew of its existence. There is testimony that Alma said, after the deed was found, that it had been delivered to her, but there is also evidence that she said it had not been delivered and that she must so advise her lawyer. She, herself, when called by defendants, did not testify on this point. Some of the plaintiffs testified that statements were made by Alma and Agnes Leahey after the death of their mother that they knew nothing about the delivery of the deed in controversy. The door was therefore opened to both to deny this testimony and to give affirmative evidence as to the manner in which their mother delivered the deed to them, but the record can be searched in vain for such testimony. Another circumstance of moment bearing on the question of delivery is that when the mother made the deeds to the five children more than a year after the execution of that in question, she herself recorded them. Her failure to record the deed in controversy, and placing on record those which conveyed part of the same property, speaks very convincingly in aid of the conclusion that she had not intended the unrecorded deed to be an effective grant.

The court found as a fact that the safe in which the deed was found was the private safe of the mother. The court found also that after the death of the mother the three defendants secured possession of the deed without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs and on February 26, 1928, had it recorded. The court found further that the premises described in the deed remained in the mother’s possession and control until the time of her death, except as to the lots conveyed by her to five of the children.

We agree with the conclusion of the chancellor that there was no satisfying evidence of the delivery of the deed. Undoubtedly the safe belonged to the mother. It was in her home and contained her private papers. That *353 other members of the household, including at least two of the defendants, at times may have had access to it and that apparently there were a few other papers in it belonging to some of the children does not establish that the safe was not the private safe of the mother.

While we are not prepared to go to the full length the chancellor went in holding that the retention of the deed in Mary M. Leakey’s private safe among her other private papers raised a presumption that the deed had never been delivered, we do hold that its being found there cast the burden on defendants to show that it had been delivered. This burden was not met. See the cases of Turner v. Warren, 160 Pa. 336; Cummings v. Glass, 162 Pa. 241; Kern v. Howell, 180 Pa. 315; Clymer v. Groff, 220 Pa. 580. Proof of the deed to the defendants, duly acknowledged and recorded, placed the title and right of possession prima facie in the defendants, but the burden of proof shifted to the defendants to show a delivery in grantor’s lifetime when it appeared that the deed was found in decedent’s safe, unrecorded, after grantor’s depth: Kanawell v. Miller, 262 Pa. 9. In the opinion of Mr. Justice von Moschzisker in that case are enumerated our decisions dealing with the question of the delivery of executed deeds found in the possession of the grantor at the time of his death.

The conclusion on the controlling question in the case leaves open for consideration minor questions with which appellants confront us. They say the suit should have been brought at law; that the bill is a mere ejectment bill, no fraud being averred as to the execution of the deed. This position ignores the true situation. Plaintiffs’ contention is that defendants fraudulently took possession of and i*eeorded the deed which had never become effective by delivery.

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

Related

In Re: Estate of Plance Appeal of: Plance, J.
175 A.3d 249 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2017)
In Re Estate of Darlington
527 A.2d 159 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1987)
Elkay Steel Co. v. Collins
15 Pa. D. & C.2d 72 (Alleghany County Court of Common Pleas, 1957)
Weissman v. Weissman
121 A.2d 100 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Stebbins v. New York State Natural Gas Corp.
79 Pa. D. & C. 1 (Tioga County Court of Common Pleas, 1951)
Overmiller v. Town & Village Insurance Service
21 A.2d 411 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Chambley v. Rumbaugh
5 A.2d 171 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
Chambley v. Rumbaugh
200 A. 913 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)
Weaver v. Welsh
191 A. 3 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Coxe v. Kriebel
185 A. 770 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Henderson v. Hughes
182 A. 392 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Leiser v. Hartel
174 A. 106 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Brandwene Et Ux.
172 A. 669 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
Myers v. Marquette
166 A. 361 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 A. 677, 309 Pa. 347, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leahey-v-leahey-pa-1932.