Shechter v. SHECHTER

76 A.2d 753, 366 Pa. 30, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 20, 1950
DocketAppeal, 143
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 76 A.2d 753 (Shechter v. SHECHTER) 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
Shechter v. SHECHTER, 76 A.2d 753, 366 Pa. 30, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 520 (Pa. 1950).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Ladner,

Ruth Shechter filed a bill in equity against her husband, Oscar Shechter, his sister, Sarah Shechter and John Doe, seeking to collect arrearages due for support and reduced to a judgment of $1,983.00 with interest as of September 7, 1945, and also for accumulated arrearages of a support order for the period from September 7, 1945, to August 29, 1946, making the total due as of August 29, 1946, $3,296.00.

The bill was filed September 19, 1946, and its purpose was to reach the assets of a business conducted under the name of Pittsburgh Paper Stock Company which it was charged was established by Shechter and was still owned by him in spite of a colorable attempt to transfer the same to his sister Sarah. Shechter, although claiming to be now a nonresident, and his sister, both appeared and filed answers. The cause proceeded to a hearing and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony counsel for the defendants moved the court to dismiss the bill for failure of plaintiff to establish a cause of action, which motion the chancellor granted. Later, after argument of exceptions filed the court en banc upheld the dismissal in a brief general opinion, without any discussion or analysis of the testimony, on the ground that the plaintiff failed to prove Oscar Shechter’s ownership of the assets. From that final decree we have this appeal.

The action of the court below was pursuant to Equity Rule 66 under which a dismissal of the bill without hearing defendants’ evidence is stated to have the effect of a nonsuit at law. Like a nonsuit at law, therefore, such a decree should only be entered in a clear case where the plaintiff cannot recover under any view *33 of tbe evidence with every doubt resolved against its entry and all inferences drawn most favorably to tbe plaintiff: Gordon v. Gordon, 277 Pa. 53, 120 A. 709 (1923); Stinson v. Smith, 329 Pa. 177, 181, 196 A. 843 (1938). As a general rule unless there are no conflicting inferences to be drawn it is far better to bear tbe defense so that tbe appellate court may have the benefit of findings of fact and conclusions of law by tbe chancellor confirmed by the court en banc.

What tbe plaintiff here sought to show was a fraudulent transfer by Oscar Shecbter of bis assets with tbe design to “binder, delay and defraud” a creditor. Tbe fact that bis wife was that creditor in our opinion is a matter of no consequence. In fact the bitterness engendered by matrimonial differences if anything was more apt to induce a husband to go even farther to defeat his estranged family’s claim for support, than in tbe case of an ordinary creditor. In any event tbe Statute of 13 Elizabeth Ch. 5, Rob. Dig. 295, 39 P.S. page 262, is undoubtedly applicable here since she is a judgment creditor under the County Court’s decree.

Before analyzing tbe evidence adduced to support tbe charge it should be remembered that fraud of this nature is never proclaimed from the housetops nor is it done otherwise than surreptitiously with every effort usually made to conceal the truth of what is being done. So fraud can rarely if ever be shown by direct proof. It must necessarily be largely inferred from the surrounding circumstances. As was written by one of the great Chief Justices of this Commonwealth (Black) in Kaine v. Weigley, 22 Pa. 179, at p. 183-184 (1853), “It is said that fraud must be proved, and is never to be presumed. This proposition can be admitted only in a qualified and very limited sense .... It amounts but to this: that a contract, honest and lawful on its face, must be treated as such until it is shown to be otherwise by evidence of some hind, either *34 positive or circumstantial. It is not true that fraud can never be presumed. Presumptions- are of two kinds, legal and natural. Allegations of fraud are sometimes supported by one and sometimes by tbe other, and are seldom, almost ■ never, sustained by that direct and plenary proof- which excludes all presumption. A sale of chattels without delivery, or a conveyance of land without consideration, is conclusively presumed to be fraudulent as against creditors, not only without proof of any dishonest intent, but in opposition to the most convincing evidence that the motives and objects of the parties were fair. This is an example of fraud established by a mere presumption of law. A natural presumption is the deduction of one fact from another. For instance: a person deeply indebted, and on the eve of bankruptcy, makes over his property to a near relative, who is known not to have the means of paying for it. From these facts a jury may infer the fact of a fraudulent intent to hinder and delay creditors. A presumption of fraud is thus created, which the party who denies it must repel by clear evidence, or else stand convicted. When creditors are about to be cheated, it is very uncommon for the perpetrators to proclaim their purpose, and call in witnesses to see it done. A resort to presumptive evidence, therefore, becomes absolutely necessary to protect the rights of honest men from this, as from other invasions .... It is no hardship upon an honest man to require a reasonable explanation of every suspicious circumstance, and rogues are not entitled to a veto upon the means employed for their detection.”

Examining now the facts as gleaned from uncon-tradicted evidence and drawing the most favorable inference in favor of the plaintiff we find that Oscar Shechter began his waste paper business in 1930 while still in the grocery business and his wife (the plaintiff) assisted him in that business. On October 28, *35 1931, be filed a fictitious name certificate as sole proprietor of tbe business known as Pittsburgh Paper Stock Company. He also on December 17, 1934, filed another fictitious name certificate as sole proprietor of a paper shredding business transacted under the name of American Shredding Company. In the meanwhile matrimonial trouble developed. From the record it may fairly be inferred that trouble developed between the defendant Oscar and his wife sometime in 1932. When it actually started is not clear from the testimony. However, there is testimony that he absented himself from his family in October, 1932 (two months before his last child was born). He apparently returned for a while, but on January 3, 1933, he deserted his family permanently.

On June 12, 1933, plaintiff filed a support complaint in the Allegheny County Court, which on June 26, 1933, resulted in a support order. That defendant Shechter was apparently unwilling to discharge his support obligation appears from the record of the Docket Entries of that Court. Within three months attachment proceedings were commenced to enforce the order and from that time some seven or more attachment proceedings were instituted to collect arrearages until the defendant left the jurisdiction. In 1943, he went to California and sought a divorce, but his wife contested the action and the suit was dismissed. Undeterred he went to Nevada in January, 1946, and according to his Answer obtained a divorce decree in that State. From all of which it may be inferred that his bitterness against his wife was such that he sought to evade by every possible means his duty and obligation to support his family.

On March 1, 1932, Oscar Shechter applied for and obtained in this Commonwealth a charter for a corporation under the name of Pittsburgh Paper Stock Company.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.2d 753, 366 Pa. 30, 1950 Pa. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shechter-v-shechter-pa-1950.