Payne v. Winters

77 A.2d 407, 366 Pa. 299, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 2, 1951
DocketAppeal, 149
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 77 A.2d 407 (Payne v. Winters) 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
Payne v. Winters, 77 A.2d 407, 366 Pa. 299, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 287 (Pa. 1951).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Chidsey,

Annie M. Payne, appellant, filed her bill in equity against her son by a former marriage and daughter-in-law, Edward and Agnes E. Winters, to compel a re-conveyance of real estate which she had transferred to Mrs. Winters. The gravamen of the bill was failure of *301 consideration and breach of a contemporaneous oral agreement providing that appellees should maintain, support and provide a home for appellant for the balance of her life. The chancellor, after hearing, held that a breach of the agreement had not been shown and dismissed the bill. This appeal is from the order of the court en bane dismissing exceptions to the adjudication and entering judgment in favor of appellees.

Appellant contends that the findings of fact are contrary to the testimony given by Edward and Agnes Winters and, therefore, arbitrary and without support in the record. Findings of a chancellor affirmed by the court en bane will be disturbed on appeal only where not supported by the evidence or where arbitrarily or capriciously made. Conclusions of law deduced from findings of fact are always a subject of judicial review. Where the decision rests upon ultimate inferences and conclusions to be drawn, the appellate court is under a duty to make such determination : Noonan Estate, 361 Pa. 26, 30, 63 A. 2d 80.

Annie M. Payne, plaintiff appellant, on January 24, 1942 conveyed to Agnes R. Winters the real estate of which she was then seized and where she, Edward and Agnes Winters and her son John Payne had together resided since the purchase of the property by Mrs. Payne in 1933 with proceeds from policies of insurance upon the life of her second husband. The home was a five room house with three rooms on the first floor and two on the second. She lived with her son John on the second floor. The Winterses, appellees, occupied the first floor. Edward paid no rent during the entire period. Taxes became in default and repairs became necessary.

Edward and his wife orally agreed with appellant who was then 60 years of age that if the property were transferred to him he would pay all taxes, past and *302 future, and give her a home as long as she lived; that the property would not be sold until after her death; that she should live together with them in the house for the rest of her natural life, and that they would look after, take care of, support and give her a home in the property. This is the chancellor’s 7th finding of fact. Title was taken in the name of Agnes B. Winters because of difficulties in which Edward was involved at the time.

Mrs. Payne, at the time of the conveyance, was still living with her son, John, and his wife in the two rooms on the second floor. John was furnishing the food and clothing for and maintaining his mother, and had done so since 1938. John and his wife moved from the premises in August, 1942, taking with them all of their furnishings except a studio couch and a rug. Edward purchased a bedroom suite, including twin beds, which were placed in the front bedroom of the second floor for the use of appellant and appellees’ daughter, then age 13. Appellant, beginning in August, 1942, ate her meals with appellees’ family, had use of the entire house and was maintained by them.

Mrs. Payne testified that thereafter the bedroom suite was taken from her room and moved downstairs, and another and much older bed secured for her. A living room suite was brought from the first floor and placed in her bedroom. No dresser was provided for her. However, several weeks later a neighbor, Mrs. Eoy Snyder, gave her a dresser so that she would have a place in which to put her clothes and effects. She was no longer permitted to eat with them at the table; there were times when she could not find food and would go hungry. The mattress and spring given her were from one of the twin beds and placed upon the much larger bed. She was told that she was filthy and smelled bad, and that her use of Vicks salve and other ointments *303 resulted in disagreeable odors about the bouse. She was not permitted to associate with any friends of the Winterses. Her presence and any conversation with her were studiously avoided. When she entered a room, ap-pellees would leave and the door would be closed. Her granddaughters treated her with contempt and no endeavor was made by either Edward or Agnes Winters to change that attitude.

Edward Winters, called as on cross-examination, admitted that he agreed to give his mother a home as long as she lived; that she ate her meals in the kitchen and not with the family in the dining room, stating that they would not permit her to eat with them because she was too dirty; that he told his mother that he wanted her to remain away from anyone downstairs and suggested that he supply a hotplate and stove for her in a room on the second floor so that she could do her own cooking. “I want to leave her have a room upstairs and let her stay by herself so that she don’t bother my family, don’t come down at the table picking her nose, or something like that. I would rather have her up, be by herself upstairs. She can come and go any time she wants then.” He admitted that his wife was not happy with his mother; that his children were not happy; that he did not want her to eat at the same table; and that he wanted her to remain apart from the family.

Agnes R. Winters denied that she threatened to put her mother-in-laAV in the Woodville Sanatorium, but admitted that on one occasion she suggested to her maybe she ought to be in Woodville. She denied having ever prevented her from eating, but stated that because of unclean habits and the use of salve, she did tell Mrs. Payne on one occasion when she was in the kitchen: “I told you once before to stay out of the kitchen.” She stated that her doctor told her that “Either you have *304 to get rid of ber [Mrs. Payne] or sbe bas to get rid of yon.” Sbe stated further that there was not much love between ber family and Mrs. Payne, and that everybody would be much happier if they were apart from each other.

Patricia Ebner, a cousin of appellant, testified that sbe bad lived directly across the street from the Payne home for a number of years; that Mrs. Payne came to ber bouse almost every day; that sbe was not dirty or filthy about ber habits; that sbe ate with the Ebner family; that on one occasion Mrs. Payne did have bead lice, but that sbe, Patricia Ebner, and ber children also bad them; that everybody in the neighborhood bad them; that Mrs. Payne complained to ber about not having sufficient food to eat; that sbe bad been in Mrs. Payne’s room and observed the uncleanliness; that bedclothes were not washed; that the room was not dusted; that the bed which Mrs. Payne used was not a good one; that there was no place in ber room for clothing which was allowed to remain on the floor or draped over a chair; and, that Agnes Winters’ attitude toward Mrs. Payne was that of a complete stranger.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A.2d 407, 366 Pa. 299, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-winters-pa-1951.