Ponevyezh Building & Loan Ass'n v. Shandelman

170 A. 340, 111 Pa. Super. 423, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 342
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1933
DocketAppeal 136
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 A. 340 (Ponevyezh Building & Loan Ass'n v. Shandelman) 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
Ponevyezh Building & Loan Ass'n v. Shandelman, 170 A. 340, 111 Pa. Super. 423, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 342 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This is an appeal from an order of the court below making absolute a rule to show cause why a judgment by confession against the defendant should not be opened. As the appellant contends that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant the opening of the judgment, it is necessary for us to state the substance of the testimony.

The defendant having admitted the exéeution of the bond, the judgment is presumably valid, although she was a married woman at the time (Abell v. Chaffee, 154 Pa. 254, 26 A. 364; Nuding v. Urich, 169 Pa. 289, 32 A. 409); and she must show affirmatively not only *425 the fact of her marriage, but also the presence of those circumstances which would relieve her from liability: Kolf v. Lieberman, 282 Pa. 479, 128 A. 122. The circumstances alleged by the defendant are that she had no: knowledge that a deed' to her for the premises had ever been made, delivered, or recorded; that she had no knowledge of the details of the business of her husband; that whenever her husband desired to use her name in any transaction, she gave it willingly upon his mere requests and that she was surety for her husband.

Isadore Shandelman and Jennie Shandelman were married in 1911 and lived as husband and wife until his, death on October 22, 1931. Just prior to July 21, 1927, the plaintiff building and loan association had purchased at sheriff’s sale three properties in the City of Philadelphia, but a deed had not yet been made by the sheriff. At a regular meeting of the building and loan association the husband, a director and officer therein, stated that he had a buyer for the properties who would pay to the association the sum of $6,275.85, and all taxes, water rent, and interest on existing first mortgages, provided the association would grant a loan of $2,000 on each of the properties, subject to existing mortgages of $3,000 on each. The directors authorized the conveyance of the properties and the grant of the loans thereon. Pursuant thereto the premises were conveyed by the sheriff to a straw man and that person in turn, on July 21,1927, conveyed the three properties to the defendant. Coincident with the delivery of the deed, three bonds and mortgages were given to the plaintiff association signed by Jennie Shandelman and Isadore Shandelman. The difference between the amount of the building and loan mortgages on the three properties and the price to be paid was settled by the payment of $810.87 by a check of Isadore Shandelman. It was on one of these bonds that the judgment in controversy was entered. Each *426 of the mortgages, after describing the premises, contained the following recital: “Being the same premises which Frieda P. Gneiting by deed dated the 21st day of July A. D. 1927, and now lodged for record in the office for recording of deeds in and for the County of Philadelphia, granted and conveyed unto the said Jennie Shandelman, in fee.”

On January 18, 1928, a letter was written to Harry E. Thompson, agent for the first mortgage holder, signed “Mrs. Jennie Shandelman” on a typewriter. This letter acknowledged receipt of a card requesting her to call at the office, advisedj Mr. Thompson it was inconvenient, and requested him to send a paper extending the mortgage to her house for her signature. He replied on January 20th by letter addressed to her that it would be necessary for her to come to the office to execute the papers. She denied any knowledge of this correspondence, but she did go to Mr. Thompson’s office on January 26th and entered .into agreements with the mortgagees in the first mortgages for extensions. In these agreements she recited- that she was the owner of the premises mortgaged and requested the mortgagees to extend the loan. Prior to the conveyance to her of title to the three properties, these had been owned by one Frankel who had failed to pay the taxes for 1926. In 1928 she brought suit in the municipal court of Philadelphia to recover from Frankel the amount of delinquent taxes paid by her and which she claimed should have been paid by him. In a statement of claim sworn to before a notary public, she averred that she had purchased the properties at sheriff’s sale and was the then registered owner thereof. Prior to the death of . the husband in 1931, he collected the rentsi through a real estate agent and paid taxes, insurance, interest on the first mortgages, and payments into the building and loan association. It further developed on the taking of the testimony that the shares of stock in the building and loan asso *427 ciation assigned as collateral security for the loan were placed in, the name of the husband through error and that he had been requested prior to his death, when the error was discovered, to make a transfer thereof to his wife. Mrs. Shandelman testified that she could read and write her name but could not do any other writing and that she did not have any bank account in her own name.

“If a party who can read, as Mrs. Greenfield [Mrs. Shandelman] could, will not read a deed put before him for execution; or if, being unable to read, will not demand to have it read or explained to him, he is guilty of supine negligence, which, I take it, is not the subject of protection, either in equity or at law. At law, it certainly is not”: Greenfield’s Est., 14 Pa. 489, 496. In the face of the evidence, much of it in writing and for the most part undisputed, it is idle for the petitioning defendant to claim that she did not kno-w the title to these premises had been placed in her name. She not only signed a mortgage which in writing declared she was the owner, but she executed three writings providing for the extension of the first mortgages in which she likewise alleged she was the owner of the premises and then instituted proceedings in court in which she solemnly swore that she was the owner of the premises and made such statement the basis of her suit to recover taxes from a former owner. Not only so, but the credibility of the defendant was seriously affected by her statements that she did not know she held title to this real estate. She also admitted her signature to the mortgage, the extension, and the statement of claim in the suit, hut denied that the notaries who had attested her signature in each case had in fact done so.

The remaining items of evidence offered by the defendant to support her petition were the contributions apparently made by the husband and the fact that the *428 building and loan stock was in Ms name. There was not only no evidence that the husband was insolvent, but he was apparently in business as a manufacturer of dresses. Being solvent, he. had a right to make a gift to his wife and permit her to take title to the property, and she was under no disability that prevented her from accepting the title. As she did not have a bank account, it was not unusual that he should have collected the rents and paid the expenses therefrom. The wife admitted that she assisted her husband in his business, visiting the store constantly. While it is true that the law will brush aside disguises for the purpose of discovering evidence of suretyship, there must be substantial evidence pointing to such relation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 A. 340, 111 Pa. Super. 423, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ponevyezh-building-loan-assn-v-shandelman-pasuperct-1933.