Lindh v. Surman

702 A.2d 560, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3241, 1997 WL 612727
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 1997
DocketNo. 524
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 702 A.2d 560 (Lindh v. Surman) 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
Lindh v. Surman, 702 A.2d 560, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3241, 1997 WL 612727 (Pa. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

FORD ELLIOTT, Judge.

This appeal requires resolution of the novel question whether the law of Pennsylvania should permit retention of an engagement ring or its value by the donee, after the donor of the ring breaks their engagement. The facts follow.

Appellee Rodger Lindh (Rodger) asked appellant Janis Surman (Janis) to marry him on August 24,1993. Janis accepted his proposal and Rodger gave Janis a diamond engage-mént ring worth approximately $21,000. Unfortunately, Rodger experienced misgivings about the impending marriage and requested the ring’s return in October of 1993. Janis returned the ring. However, Janis and Rodger subsequently reconciled, and once again planned to marry. Rodger again gave the diamond ring to Janis and Janis wore it. Janis began to make wedding plans.

Ón March 20, 1994, Rodger unexpectedly informed Janis that he no longer loved her and broke their engagement. Janis questioned Rodger, but he was unable or unwilling to explain or to seek counseling regarding his decision. Rodger requested that Janis return the ring, but Janis refused. Litigation ensued. Rodger filed a civil action to recover the ring or its value, which was submitted to arbitration. On September 16, 1994, a panel of arbitrators entered an award in Janis’ favor.

Upon Rodger’s appeal, the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County reversed the decision of the arbitrators.1 The trial court found no case directly on point and concluded that the issue was one of first impression in Pennsylvania.

The court discovered, however, that other states had addressed the issue, and although the majority of states followed the so-called fault rule, an increasing number of jurisdictions were adopting a no-fault rule. The no-fault jurisdictions hold that absent an agreement to the contrary, the ring is returned to the donor regardless of the circumstances surrounding the engagement’s termination. The trial court ruled that the no-fault engagement rule should be followed in Pennsylvania as well.

The trial court’s opinion cites with approval a New Jersey ease which rejected the majority “fault” rule based upon public policy concerns for the status of women in modern society. Aronow v. Silver, 223 N.J.Super. [561]*561344, 348, 538 A.2d 851, 853 (1987). The trial court excerpted the following:

[t]he fault rme is sexist and archaic, a too-long enduring reminder of the times when even the law discriminated against women.... In ancient Rome the rule was fault. When the woman broke the engagement, however, she was required not only to return the ring, but also its value, as a penalty. No penalty attached when the breach was the man’s. In England, women were oppressed by the rigidly stratified social order of the day. They worked as servants or, if not of the servant class, were dependent on their relatives. The fact that men were in short supply, marriage above one’s station rare[,] and travel difficult abbreviated betrothal prospects for women. Marriages were arranged. Women’s lifetime choices were limited to a marriage or a nunnery. Spinsterhood was a centuries-long personal tragedy. Men, because it was a man’s world, were much more likely than women to break engagements. When one did, he left behind a woman of tainted reputation and ruined prospects. The law, in a de minimus gesture, gave her the engagement ring, as a consolation prize. When the man was jilted, a seldom thing, justice required the ring’s return to him. Thus, the rule of life was the rule of law—both saw women as inferiors.

Aronow, supra, 223 N.J.Super. at 348, 538 A.2d at 853 (1987); trial court opinion, 7/12/96 at 3-4.

Adhering to the public policy rationale of Aronow, the trial court entered judgment in Rodger’s favor in the amount of $21,200. Janis filed post-trial motions seeking reversal of the judgment which were denied on March 11,1996. This appeal followed.

Although we acknowledge the analysis set forth by the New Jersey court regarding the historical and social history of women, we do not believe that such analysis is useful in an engagement ring case governed by Pennsylvania law. Unlike some jurisdictions, Pennsylvania cases have long observed the law of conditional gifts regarding engagement ring disputes. Therefore, resort to public policy concerns based on archaic notions of the status of men and women in society is not necessary.

Both Janis and Rodger agree that Pennsylvania follows the law of conditional gifts in engagement ring matters. They disagree over what condition renders the gift complete. Janis’ position is that the conditional gift of an engagement ring is incident to the engagement itself. The condition attached to the gift is her agreement to marry Rodger. The condition of the gift thus satisfied, she should be entitled to retain the ring.

For his part, Rodger contends that his gift of the engagement ring to Janis was conditioned upon the marriage rather than her agreement to marry him. Because the condition, marriage, never took place, Rodger contends the trial court’s award of the ring to him should be affirmed. We agree.

The law of conditional gifts is set forth in the Restatement of Restitution. With particular interest we note that engagement rings are treated differently from other wedding and/or engagement gifts:

Gifts Made in Reliance on a Relation.
A person who has conferred a benefit upon another, manifesting that he does not expect compensation therefor, is not entitled to restitution merely because his expectation that an existing relation will continue or that a future relation will come into existence is not realized, unless the conferring of the benefit is conditioned thereon.
Comment:
(b) Conditional gifts. The gift may be conditional upon the continuance or creation of a relation, and if conditional the donor is entitled to its return if the relation terminates or is not entered into. The condition may be stated in specific words or it may be inferred from the circumstances. Likewise, as in the ease of engagement and wedding gifts, justice may require the creation of a condition although the donor had no such condition in mind.
[562]*562(c) Wedding and engagement gifts. Gifts made in the hope that a marriage or contract of marriage will result are not recoverable, in the absence of fraud. Gifts made in anticipation of marriage are not ordinarily expressed to be conditional and, although there is an engagement to marry, if the marriage fails to occur without the fault of the donee, normally the gift cannot be recovered. If, however, the donee obtained the gift fraudulently or if the gift was made for a purpose which could be achieved only by the marriage, a donor who is not himself at fault is entitled to restitution if the marriage does not take place, even if the gift was of money. If there is an engagement to marry and the donee, having received, the gift without fraud, later wrongfully breaks the promise of marriage, the donor is entitled to restitution if the gift is an engagement ring, a family heirloom or other similar thing intimately connected with the marriage, but not if the gift is one of money.intended to be used by the donee before the marriage.

Restatement of Restitution, § 58 (emphasis supplied).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
702 A.2d 560, 1997 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3241, 1997 WL 612727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindh-v-surman-pasuperct-1997.