Stewart v. HOOKS

94 A.2d 756, 372 Pa. 542, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 13, 1953
DocketAppeal, 251
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 94 A.2d 756 (Stewart v. HOOKS) 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
Stewart v. HOOKS, 94 A.2d 756, 372 Pa. 542, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 541 (Pa. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearns,

Does a wife occupy such a confidential relation to her husband that equity will declare her a constructive trustee of land which she receives from him upon her oral promise to reconvey it upon request? The appeal raises for the first time in Pennsylvania this question which may have grave effect on the certainty of recorded titles to real property. The learned chancellor in the court below held the relation to be confidential and imposed a constructive trust in favor of the husband. This appeal questions that ruling.

Reuben Hillyard Stewart filed a complaint in equity against the executrix of the estate of his deceased wife, Daisy Stewart, and her grandson, Charles N. Johnson, alleging that he was the beneficial owner of land which his wife had devised to the grandson. At the trial Mrs. Rebecca McFadden Benson, a conveyancer, testified that the deceased Mrs. Stewart had acquired title under the following circumstances: in March of 1932, the plaintiff and his wife consulted Mrs. Benson’s employer, Herbert E. Millen, Esquire, (now Judge of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia) and plaintiff explained that he wanted to transfer certain properties of which he was owner to his wife so that he would no longer be bothered by friends asking him to pledge the properties as bail. Mrs. Benson testified that this explanation was made in the presence of Mrs. Stewart, and that the latter agreed that she would reconvey the property to her husband whenever he desired it. She further testified that Stewart said he was conveying to his wife “because he *545 said he had confidence in her and he knew everything would be done as he wanted it.”

Plaintiff claims, inter alia, that the oral agreement alleged in his bill of complaint was admitted by defendants in their answer. It is clear that any admission contained in the original answer was repudiated by present counsel soon after his representation of defendants began. He filed an amendment to which plaintiff’s counsel agreed by stipulation. Plaintiff contends that even though the statements in the original answer lose their force as pleadings in the case by virtue of the amendment, they nevertheless remain in evidence as admissions. This is undoubtedly the law: Easton School District v. Continental Casualty Co., 304 Pa. 67, 72, 155 A. 93. But, as we there said, such admissions are “capable of explanation . . .” and “sufficient to make the question . . . one for the jury.” Considered in this light, it is clear that little weight can be given to the admission of an oral agreement which was made in the original answer. In the first place, neither of the defendants has ever claimed any personal knowledge of the circumstances which led up to the conveyance of the property by plaintiff to his wife. On the contrary, they have maintained throughout that, since the death of Daisy Stewart, plaintiff is the only one living who knows what actually happened between plaintiff and his wife in 1932. Defense counsel has repeatedly stated that “the strength of the defense is in the inherent weakness of the plaintiff’s case.” In view of their avowed ignorance of the facts, defendants’ admission carries scant power of persuasion. Furthermore, any common sense appraisal of the defendants’ position as revealed by all the pleadings leaves no doubt that it was nothing more than an oversight of counsel which occasioned the admission in the original answer. It would be legal sophistry, reminiscent of an age long past, to *546 determine the rights of litigants on such technicalities of pleading. The same may be said of plaintiff’s argument that defendants may not rely on the Statute of Frauds because they did not plead it in their original answer although it was properly set forth under the heading of New Matter in the amendment.

We likewise find little merit in plaintiff’s argument that a confidential relation is here established as matter of fact by Mrs. Benson’s testimony, already quoted, that plaintiff “said he had confidence in her and he knew everything would be done as he wanted it.” This is the only testimony in the entire case to indicate plaintiff’s confidence in or reliance upon his wife. Confidence of this character is obviously present in every case where title is transferred upon an oral promise to reconvey. The Statute of Frauds would wholly fail to render unenforceable such an oral promise if it could be circumvented merely by having the transferor say to the transferee in the presence of a third party: “I have confidence that you will reconvey this property when I ask you to do so.”

The contention that a constructive trust should be created by the court whenever one person reposes such confidence in another as to transfer property upon an oral promise to reconvey (which is the rule suggested by comment c, Restatement, Trusts, §44) was explicitly rejected in Brunier v. Stanert, 369 Pa. 178, 85 A. 2d 130. We there said through Mr. Justice Chidsey (p. 185) : “Acceptance of the quoted comment [c] as a correct enunciation of the law in Pennsylvania would necessitate judicial assumption of the legislative prerogative; for the salutary prohibition of the Statute of Frauds regarding parol trusts of real estate would be repealed just as surely as by a statutory repeal thereof by the Legislature itself. Further, this Court would be required to overrule, at least by necessary implication, the *547 well established principle that oral trusts are viewed with disfavor. This Court has never held that comment c. of §44 of the Restatement of Trusts was accepted in fofo as the law in Pennsylvania. The extent to which that portion of the Restatement has been accepted as a statement of the law is well illustrated in Drob et al., Admrs., v. Jaffe, supra, where Mr. Justice Horace Stern at page 300 recognized that a confidential relationship is not limited to any particular association of parties ‘. . . but exists wherever one occupies toward another such a position of advisor or counsellor as reasonably to inspire confidence that he will act in good faith for the other’s interest: . . .’. (Emphasis supplied)”

The rule thus stated is supported by the analysis made by leading text-writers of the reason for imposing a constructive trust when a confidential relation is abused. See 3 Bogert on Trusts and Trustees (1946) section 482, p. 82: “Equity will never bind itself by any hard and fast definition of the phrase ‘confidential relation.’ It will not list all the necessary elements of such a position. It desires to reserve liberty to apply the doctrine whenever it believes that a suitable occasion has arisen. . .

“In declaring a relation technically ‘confidential,’ the courts lay stress on various factors. There is always, of course, the actual placing of trust and confidence on at least one occasion, and often such reliance has been exhibited through a series of months or years. In some cases this imposition of confidence seems to be the sole foundation for the finding of a confidential relation. But generally there is great disparity of position, in addition to the actual instrument. The party who claims to be a cestui of the confidential relation is in a weak position because of advanced age, or youth, or lack of education, or ill health, or mental *548 weakness.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A.2d 756, 372 Pa. 542, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-hooks-pa-1953.