Smiles v. Daube

198 A. 457, 130 Pa. Super. 565, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 1937
DocketAppeal, 115
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 A. 457 (Smiles v. Daube) 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
Smiles v. Daube, 198 A. 457, 130 Pa. Super. 565, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The controversy out of which this appeal arises had its origin in the unusual circumstance that Wilhelmina Daube, widow of Henry Daube, on February 1, 1933, signed and acknowledged a deed purporting to convey to her son, Charles Daube, appellant herein, title in fee simple to the premises known as No. 2544 N. Jessup Street, Philadelphia, and at the same time executed her will in which she referred to the conveyance and directed that the grantee should hold the premises “in trust for the sole benefit, use and behoof,” of her daughter, Anna Smiles, during the lifetime of the latter and at her death convey the property, share and share alike, to Anna’s children. The deed was delivered by Wilhelmina Daube to her son early in March, 1934, and was recorded on the 15th of that month; Wilhelmina died November 21,1934, and her will was duly probated.

In March, 1935, Anna Smiles and her four children filed the present bill in equity praying for a decree restraining Challes Daube from conveying or encumbering the premises and directing him to execute a declaration of trust certifying that he held the property in accordance with the provisions of his mother’s will. During the course of the proceedings Anna Smiles died and the litigation was continued in behalf of her four children, named as appellees herein. It resulted in a final decree by the court below, dated March 8, 1937, directing Charles Daube to convey the premises to the children of Anna Smiles and to account to them for the rents received by him subsequent to December 10, 1935, the date of the death of their mother.

*567 Contending that the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the evidence is that the delivery of the deed to him amounted to a valid gift, inter vivos, and that such delivery revoked the provision of the will relied upon by appellees, Charles Daube appealed from the decree.

The sixth paragraph of the bill reads: “6. Complainants aver that at and before the time of the execution of the will and the deed, said Charles Daube undertook and agreed to hold title to the said premises in trust for the complainants, as provided in the will of the decedent, and so accepted the deed and the trust, and paid no consideration to Wilhelmina Daube, grant- or, upon execution of the deed, a recited consideration of $1.00 being merely formal.” This averment was flatly denied by appellant in his answer and the seventh finding of fact of the chancellor reads: “There is no evidence that defendant ever knew of the contents of the will of Wilhelmina Daube until after her decease.”

William C. Lynch, Esq., was the scrivener of both instruments. One of the grounds upon which appellees sought equitable relief was thus pleaded in the seventh paragraph of their bill. After referring to the preparation of the will by Mr. Lynch, the paragraph describes the drafting of the deed as follows: “And on the same date [he] prepared the deed in fee simple from Wilhelmina Daube to Charles Daube, and the same was done as the result of an agreement of Charles Daube agreeing to hold said property in trust as provided in the will; and the provisions of the trust, as set forth in the will and as understood and agreed to by Charles Daube, were inadvertently, by mistake or accident, omitted from the deed.”

In essence, the bill was one to reform the deed upon the ground that the scrivener had accidentally omitted therefrom a provision which the grantor intended should be included therein, namely, that the grantee *568 should hold the property therein described, not in fee simple but in trust for Anna Smiles and her children. Ho effort was made at the trial to introduce evidence which would tend to bring the case within the principle that “the mistake of a scrivener in preparing a deed, or other writing, may be shown by parol evidence, and the instrument reformed accordingly.” See Preis & Preis v. Mulholland & Gotwals, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 104, and cases there cited. On the contrary, the testimony of the scrivener, as will appear later, was to the effect that nothing had been omitted from the deed by accident or mistake.

Counsel for appellees undertook to make out a prima facie case by offering such averments of the bill as were admitted in the answer, and by placing the will in evidence. These averments included the relationship of the parties, the execution of both instruments upon the same date, the date of the death of the mother, the recording of the deed, and the probating of the will. All the other evidence upon this record was introduced by, and on behalf of, appellant and is uncontroverted.

The controlling findings below were that “the contemporaneous execution of the will and deed make it plain that it was then the intention of Wilhelmina Daube that title should be held by defendant in accordance with the terms of the will”; that “there is no evidence that this intention on her part ever changed”; and that as appellant had not paid any consideration or “done anything to his detriment on faith of the conveyance” he could not be harmed “by giving effect to the very evident intent of the testator.”

It was assumed by counsel upon both sides in their printed and oral arguments in this court that the only questions involved upon this appeal related to the inferences fairly and reasonably arising out of the uncontroverted facts, Which may be thus summarized.

In January, 1933, Wilhelmina Daube was living with *569 her daughter, Anna Smiles, but had a feeling of hostility toward her daughter’s husband. About January 20th, appellant and his wife took her to the office of William C. Lynch, Esq., a practitioner at the Philadelphia bar for thirty-five years, for consultation with him. Upon their arrival at his office, Mrs. Daube said she wanted to see him privately. Mr. Lynch’s testimony continues: “So I took her into my room. She told me she wanted to have a deed drawn from herself to her son, Charles Daube, and gave me the particulars, that is, handing me the papers which she had. I laid them aside, and she said she wanted to make a will. So she gave me the data for the preparation of her will. So I told her then I would have these ready for her the next time she came. Then she left. About a week or ten days later, as it appears here, February 1, 1933, she came again. I might state here that my stenographer prepared the deed herself with the papers I handed to her and laid them aside, and a few days later I had drafted up a will and gave her the draft and she transcribed it and put the both papers together. I never looked at them until Mrs. Daube came to see me. She was an elderly woman. I read the deed to her. Then I read the will to her. It was then I discovered that there was an inconsistency, that the will was not compatible with the deed. So I explained that to her. I told her that it was not necessary for her to have a deed to carry the intentions of her will to her daughter. Well, she says, ‘Never mind that.’ I said, ‘I want to make it clear to you.’ So I told her that this deed I had prepared was a fee simple deed which conveyed the title in fee simple to her son, and if she gave that to her son at any time without reference to the will, that that ivould carry the fee simple and would defeat the purpose of the will. Well, she says, ‘Never mind that. That is fust what I want/

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Related

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50 A.2d 710 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
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Bluebook (online)
198 A. 457, 130 Pa. Super. 565, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smiles-v-daube-pasuperct-1937.