Mogavero v. Mogavero

52 Pa. D. & C.2d 161, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 36
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 26, 1970
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 161 (Mogavero v. Mogavero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mogavero v. Mogavero, 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 161, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 36 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

LOWE, J.,

— This is an equity proceeding in which plaintiff, Frank B. Mogavero, seeks to set aside and render null and void a deed conveying premises 1404 Remington Road, Lower Merion Township, this county, and likewise the title transfer to the family Oldsmobile automobile. The transferee in each instance was defendant, Genevieve F. Mogavero, now by marriage Genevieve F. Mogavero Hennessey, formerly the wife of plaintiff.

FACTS

1. Plaintiff and defendant married April 29, 1954, and shortly thereafter plaintiff began an engineering career with the General Electric Company.

2. In January 1968, plaintiff was notified by his employer at its Valley Forge facility that he was to be discharged.

3. In accordance with established policy of the General Electric Company, plaintiff’s professional qualifications were circulated among other of the employer’s plants to determine if any one or more could profit by plaintiff’s skills. Three offered plaintiff employment; one in Syracuse, N. Y., one in Schenectady, N. Y., and one in Lynchburg, Va. Additionally, plaintiff was offered employment by the Berilco Company of Reading, Pa.

4. After extended discussions with his wife, defendant herein, and motivated exclusively by his family’s best interests, plaintiff elected to accept an offered [163]*163position in the Gas Turbine Division of the General Electric Company’s Schenectady, N. Y., plant.

5. Plaintiff and defendant mutually decided that plaintiff would commute between the plant at Schenectady and the family home at 603 Brookside Road, St. Davids, on weekends until the end of June 1968, in order that the parties’ three young children could finish the school term where then enrolled.

6. Plaintiff’s employment at Schenectady began March 11, 1968, and upon his return to St. Davids the following weekend was deliberately misinformed by defendant they could avoid substantial New York State income taxes by transferring title to premises 1404 Remington Road, Lower Merion Township, this county, to her name alone. At that time, the said premises were titled in the names of plaintiff and defendant as tenants by the entireties, and were tenanted by defendant’s parents.

7. Plaintiff was skeptical of the legitimacy and the propriety of the proposal, but had no cause to doubt his wife’s integrity or sagacity, because his frequent and extended travels had necessitated her management of the family’s finances.

8. Previous to March 1968, defendant had managed the family’s financial affairs with remarkable competence. When advancing the proposal concerning transfer of title to the Remington Road property, defendant represented to plaintiff that the suggested arrangement was recommended to her by an employe of the bank where they maintained an account. This was a deliberate and intentional falsehood.

9. When plaintiff returned to St. Davids the following weekend, a prepared deed ostensibly designed to accomplish the intended purpose was presented to him for execution.

10. Reluctantly, plaintiff executed the proffered [164]*164deed on March 23, 1968, for the nominal consideration of one dollar. Plaintiff, at this time, likewise executed a transfer of the family Oldsmobile automobile to defendant upon the representation that insurance rates and license fees would be more favorable were the same titled in the name of a Pennsylvania resident.

11. Subsequently, reservations were made for plaintiff and defendant at the Holiday Inn, Schenectady, for the week following Independence Day that the couple might seek out a new home in the area.

12. Plaintiff again returned to St. Davids on July 3, 1968. He observed that rugs, carpeting and framed pictures were missing. Upon inquiry, defendant explained that these items had been sent out for cleaning and packing in preparation for their shipment to Schenectady.

13. At the breakfast table on Independence Day, Thursday, July 4, 1968, defendant, without advance notice informed plaintiff that she no longer loved him and that she was separating herself from him.

14. This announcement so unnerved plaintiff that he required immediate medical attention for nervous shock. The Holiday Inn reservations were cancelled.

15. Plaintiff pleaded with defendant to reconsider her decision, and then returned to his employment in Schenectady.

16. Plaintiff’s mental and emotional state precluded meaningful employment. Consequently, plaintiff returned to St. Davids the following Tuesday at which time the impact of the previous week’s events prompted him to point a gun at defendant and to threaten her life. Unable to carry out his threat, plaintiff then handed the weapon to his wife and asked her to shoot him.

[165]*16517. Thereafter, having regained his composure, plaintiff demanded a reconveyance of the Remington Road property and of the Oldsmobile to him. Defendant refused.

18. In May 1968, the St. Davids property was sold, and plaintiff and defendant each received one-half the net proceeds of the settlement concluded August 5, 1968.

19. Plaintiff and defendant were divorced on June 6, 1969, and defendant married one Sullivan W. Hennessey on July 8, 1969.

20. On July 9, 1969, defendant, Genevieve F. Mogavero Hennessey conveyed title to the Remington Road property from herself to herself and Sullivan W. Hennessey as tenants by the entireties. Defendant likewise transferred title to the Oldsmobile to Sullivan W. Hennessey.

DISCUSSION

The sequence of deceitful events which marked the defeasance of this once happy marriage occurred in such close and patterned proximity as to render the conclusion inescapable that defendant deliberately and intentionally defrauded plaintiff. Regarding the critical events of the spring and summer of 1968, plaintiff, Frank B. Mogavero, placed understandable and justifiable reliance in his wife of nearly a decade and a half, who had theretofore well and honestly managed the family’s financial affairs, claimed reliance upon the advices of the family’s banker, and evidenced the usual domestic solicitudes. That defendant was engaged upon a diabolical scheme, and working meanwhile at cross-purposes to those of her husband, is apparent upon the most cursory examination. The fraud inherent in this infamous conduct renders the transfers null and void.

Transactions between husband and wife are watched [166]*166with extreme jealousy. If there is the slightest suggestion of undue influence or unfair advantage, redress will be given the injured spouse: Shapiro v. Shapiro, 424 Pa. 120 (1966). One who fraudulently makes a misrepresentation of fact by positive assertions, acts or artifices calculated to deceive, and the purpose of which is to induce another to act or refrain from acting in reliance thereon in a business transaction, is liable to the other for the harm caused him by his justifiable reliance upon the misrepresentation: Borelli et ux. v. Barthel, 205 Pa. Superior Ct. 442 (1965). Restatement, Torts, §525.

“As a general rule, fraud consists in anything calculated to deceive, whether by single act or combination, or by suppression of truth, or suggestion of what is false, whether by direct falsehood or innuendo, by speech or silence, word of mouth or look or gesture. It is any artifice by which a person is deceived to his disadvantage”: Wiley v. Wirebelauer, 116 N.J. Eq. 391, 174 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Pa. D. & C.2d 161, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mogavero-v-mogavero-pactcompl-1970.