Livingston v. Livingston

430 A.2d 1193, 288 Pa. Super. 22, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2928
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 12, 1981
Docket309
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 430 A.2d 1193 (Livingston v. Livingston) 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
Livingston v. Livingston, 430 A.2d 1193, 288 Pa. Super. 22, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2928 (Pa. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

BROSKY, Judge:

Henry C. Livingston, Jr. has appealed from the lower court’s decision that he is not entitled to partition of all entireties property. The central issue for our determination is whether appellee wrongfully appropriated jointly held assets to the detriment of appellant, constituting a revocation of the estate of tenancy by the entireties, thereby subjecting all entireties property to partition at this time. The court below decided that appellee had used entireties property to support herself and to pay certain of her husband’s debts and had not wrongfully appropriated jointly held assets. On this basis, it held that a partition was not appropriate and should not be granted. We reverse.

Appellant’s chief contention is that his wife wrongfully appropriated entireties property to his detriment. Such appropriation, he asserts, constitutes a revocation of the tenancy by the entireties and as such, is an offer to destroy the estate, which offer he has accepted by his bringing this action for partition.

The parties were married June 8, 1941 and lived together as husband and wife until the end of May, 1978 when appellant left the marital residence. At the time of his leaving, the parties owned the following property by the entireties: a $20,000 certificate of deposit; two savings accounts with Greensburg Savings & Loan having respective balances of $2,129.93 and $996.79; a building fund with Gallatin National Bank in the amount of $132.40; a checking account with Gallatin National Bank in the amount of $213.38; as well as various items of personal property including appliances, furniture and insurance policies. In addition, there was a $40,000 certificate of deposit titled in Mr. Livingston’s name.

*25 During the entire course of the marriage, appellee had been supported by appellant and at no time was appellee employed or self-supporting. At the time of their separation, Mr. and Mrs. Livingston had been using for their support the proceeds from a personal injury settlement received by Mr. Livingston in 1970, as well as Mr. Livingston’s pension in the amount of $115,000. At the time of his leaving, appellant did not indicate to his wife whether he would continue to support her, although appellee testified that he told her when he left that she could live on the monies contained in the joint bank accounts.

After the appellant left the marital residence, he did not send appellee any funds for her support. In October of 1978, an order of support was entered which called for him to pay the sum of $385 monthly for appellee’s support. 1 Appellee testified that her husband did not make a payment on the support order until February, 1979, which allegation was not refuted by appellant. 2

Beginning in June, 1978, appellee began using the parties’ jointly held assets. Without informing her husband, she obtained a safe deposit box in her own name with her daughter’s name as deputy, into which she put the passbooks pertaining to the Gallatin Bank building fund and the Galla-tin Bank checking account and the two certificates of deposit. She had both the Greensburg Savings & Loan savings account in the amount of $2,129.93 and the checking account with Gallatin National Bank in the amount of $213.38 changed over to her name. Appellee also removed from the marital residence several insurance policies and placed them at her daughter’s residence.

*26 At the time of the first hearing held in the court below before the Honorable Conrad Capuzzi on August 30, 1978, Mrs. Livingston testified that for the months of June and July, 1978, she had supported herself from the funds contained in the Greensburg Savings & Loan savings account which at the time of appellant’s leaving contained the sum of $996.79. She testified that she had used over $600 of that account by August, 1978. When asked whether she had made any withdrawals from the account containing $2,129.93, she stated that she had not; however, at the September 6, 1979 hearing before Judge Cicchetti, she testified that she had since spent all of the $2,129.93 for living expenses. Mrs. Livingston also testified at the first hearing that she had used some of the funds contained in the Gallatin National Bank checking account for living expenses. Therefore, as of August, 1978, appellee had done the following with respect to the parties jointly held assets: put two accounts totaling $2,343.31 into her own name; used the proceeds of three of the joint accounts for living expenses; and obtained a safe deposit box into which she placed the checking and savings account and building fund passbooks and the two certificates of deposit.

In 1978, our court decided, 275 Pa.Super. 285, 418 A.2d 724, with respect to a prior action filed by appellant demanding an accounting and return of the certificates of deposit, that the $40,000 certificate titled in appellant’s name should be returned to him. The lower court had previously ordered appellee to account for the appropriate bank accounts and to divide the jointly owned $20,000 certificate. As a result of its order, appellant received a one-half interest in that certificate, and the sum of $1,600 from appellee representing his share of the jointly held funds appropriated by appellee.

As of the September, 1979 hearing, therefore, appellee still had the use of one-half of the $20,000 certificate of deposit and the bank accounts of which she had depleted all of the Greensburg Savings & Loan savings account containing $2,129.93, all of the Greensburg Savings & Loan savings account containing $966.79, and some of the Gallatin Nation *27 al Bank checking account containing $213.38. Remaining was a portion of that checking account, a portion of the Gallatin National Bank building fund containing $132.40, and one-half of the $20,000 certificate of deposit and the interest accumulated thereon from the time of appellant’s leaving in June, 1978. At the hearing, Mrs. Livingston accounted for $3,295.05 3 of the assets she had appropriated which, excluding the $40,000 certificate of deposit, amounted to $23,472.50.

Generally, entireties property cannot be partitioned prior to divorce. Gray v. Gray, 275 Pa.Super. 131, 418 A.2d 646 (1980). There is an exception, however, where one spouse appropriates entireties property to his or her own use to the detriment of the other, since the only appropriation permitted is one made in good faith for the mutual benefit of the tenants. Gray v. Gray, supra, 275 Pa.Super. at 133, 418 A.2d at 648; Shapiro v. Shapiro, 424 Pa. 120, 224 A.2d 164 (1966). As we stated in Gray v. Gray, supra, 275 Pa.Super. at 133, 418 A.2d at 648:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 A.2d 1193, 288 Pa. Super. 22, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-livingston-pasuperct-1981.