Leiser v. Hartel

174 A. 106, 315 Pa. 537, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 658
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 24, 1934
DocketAppeal, 227
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 A. 106 (Leiser v. Hartel) 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
Leiser v. Hartel, 174 A. 106, 315 Pa. 537, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 658 (Pa. 1934).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

The facts in connection with this appeal present a rather startling situation. Jane C. Harrison, a niece of the late Senator Simon Cameron, for many years a senator from Pennsylvania and secretary of war under President Lincoln, lived in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. She was possessed of considerable property which included land formerly used as a brickyard and three other pieces of real estate, known respectively as “The Harrison Block,” “The Mansion,” and “The Cameron House.” She died in 1932, well advanced in age, and by her will disposed of her property, including this real estate, to the Presbyterian Hospital of Philadelphia as residuary legatee.

Three days after her death, Oscar R. Hartel, a former son-in-law, whose wife had died in 1907, filed with the recorder of deeds two deeds from Mrs. Harrison to him *539 self. The first was dated 1909, and the second, 1924. They conveyed to him in fee this real estate mentioned above. The executors and residuary legatee, evidently feeling that there was something irregular about the deeds, brought a bill to remove a cloud on the title, apparently transferred by the will to them, by cancelling the deeds, and also praying for other appropriate relief. The court below dismissed the bill; the hospital and executors appeal.

The validity of these transfers hinges upon the delivery and possession of these deeds. There is no dispute as to their execution.

The court below was largely influenced by what we said in Cragin’s Est., 274 Pa. 1. It is undoubtedly correct that when a deed is acknowledged before a proper officer as being signed, sealed and delivered, and the manual possession of the grantee is established, a presumption arises that an absolute and unconditional delivery is intended, unless by act, expression or writing an indication is made of an intention to qualify the formal act. We said quite recently that there could be no delivery in escrow to a grantee: Eaton v. New York Life Ins. Co., 315 Pa. 68. If the facts contained in this record were controlled by the principles laid down in Cragin’s Est., supra, we would not depart therefrom in the slightest particular, but they are not.

We said in Cragin’s Estate that a proper acknowledgment, with the physical possession of the deed by the-grantee, did not conclusively establish an intention to deliver; that the prima facie case, or the presumption arising from recording, or signing, sealing and acknowledging a deed as delivered, accompanied by manual possession by the grantee, is not irrebutable. Such presumption can be overcome by evidence that no delivery was in fact intended and none was made. That conclusion was based on our prior authorities: Devall v. Glover, 250 Pa. 417. In Cable v. Cable, 146 Pa. 451, we said that while manual possession of a properly executed *540 and acknowledged deed, “in the absence of suspicions circumstances” constitutes “prima facie evidence of delivery,” it is, when unaccompanied by direct testimony of a delivery and when surrounded by circumstances raising impressive inferences contrary to every attribute of a conveyance of the property, insufficient to establish an effective delivery: Stewart v. Stewart, 50 Wis. 445, 7 N. W. 369. See Greenleaf on Evidence, volume 2, section 297. Long possession by the grantor, and acts evidencing ownership meanwhile, without recognition of another’s rights or of a claim of ownership by a grantee, are sufficient to repel the presumption of delivery arising from a deed alone: Knolls v. Barnhart, 71 N. Y. 474, 478.

Before discussing the testimony of the sole and only witness to the act of delivery, we will state some facts in connection with all this land that occurred in testator’s lifetime which were utterly inconsistent with any conveyances of the property. The first deed was executed and left unrecorded for 23 years and the second for 8 years before Mrs. Harrison’s death. It was proved that the first deed was in the possession of Mrs. Harrison and in her vault 15 years after its execution. While no mention is made of the whereabouts of the second deed, Hartel was supposed to have taken it with him to Boston. During all these years, so far as the record is concerned, this property was in the name of Mrs. Harrison, as owner. Throughout all this time and until her death she exercised sole and absolute control over all the properties. She rented them and collected the rents; she made repairs to the properties and deducted the cost of these repairs in preparing her income tax returns. She also deducted depreciation on account of the properties, an inconceivable act if she did not own them. She paid the taxes until the time of her death. When the State of Pennsylvania constructed a highway through one of the properties, she claimed the damages from the county and settled therefor with the commissioners, executing a release, in effect a transfer, dated March 13, 1931, where *541 in she stated that she was the owner of the property. This release was recorded in the proper office. Hartel owned property close by, which this same highway traversed. He made no claim for any damages to the Harrison land, but did claim damages for his own and executed a similar release which was recorded in the same place where Mrs. Harrison’s release was recorded. Mrs. Harrison accounted to the federal government in her tax return for the rents and revenues from these properties. Long after the execution of the first deed, she directed that all the buildings of the brickyard property be torn down, sold and removed from the premises at a price determined by herself. No part of this money was ever turned over to or claimed by Hartel. Mrs. Harrison placed signs on the brickyard property advertising it for sale, and had, up to a short time before her death, a similar sign on the Cameron House property in the town. She took out insurance thereon in her own name. In her will she treated these properties as though she owned them. By her fourth codicil, dated in 1930, 6 years after the second deed, she directed that two old, family servants be permitted to occupy a house, located on the Cameron property, “so long as both or either of them may live.” Her will, executed in 1928, provided: “It is my will that he [Oscar R. Hartel] shall have and take no interest whatsoever in my estate or any part thereof, and that he shall receive nothing from me or my estate.” *

*542 We are confronted with this situation: The two deeds in the manual possession of Hartel. The 1909 deed was still in the possession of Mrs. Harrison in 1924. The usual presumption attendant on the words “signed, sealed, acknowledged and delivered” loses much, if not all, of its force where the grantor holds possession of the deeds for a long period of time. Following the language of Justice Mitchell in Cable v. Cable, supra, the circumstances related above attendant upon the acts and conduct of the parties since the execution and delivery of both deeds, were sufficient in and of themselves to overcome any presumption arising from manual possession.

No witness saw the 1909 deed delivered. We are relegated then to the testimony of a single witness to sustain the fact of delivery of the 1924 deed and the manual possession of both deeds. This witness is a brother-in-law of appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 106, 315 Pa. 537, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leiser-v-hartel-pa-1934.