Stiegelmann v. Ackman

41 A.2d 679, 351 Pa. 592, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 8, 1945
DocketAppeal, 265
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 679 (Stiegelmann v. Ackman) 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
Stiegelmann v. Ackman, 41 A.2d 679, 351 Pa. 592, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 370 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This is an appeal from a decree directing the defendants to reeonvey to the plaintiffs certain real estate which Jacques Stiegelmann, the plaintiffs’ testator, had granted and conveyed to Carrie M. Aekman. Stiegelmann instituted the suit after the grantee’s death, and the defendants are Mrs. Ackman’s heirs at law and their respective spouses. The plaintiff died subsequent to the entry of the decree below and his executors were thereupon substituted of record for him. The plaintiff based his right to a reconveyance of the property upon the allegation that his deed to Mrs. Aekman was delivered without his authority or consent. The question involved is whether the proofs sustained the allegation.

After a trial on the merits, the court below filed an adjudication, holding that the plaintiff had failed to meet his burden. A decree nisi dismissing the bill of complaint was entered accordingly. On petition of the plaintiff, a rehearing was granted at which additional evidence was received. Thereafter, the learned chancellor reversed his original conclusion and held that Stiegelmann had not legally conveyed the property to Mrs. Aekman “because there is no proof of the deed ever having been delivered to the grantee”. While this conclusion is contained in what the trial court denominated a' finding of fact, the evidence from which it was drawn appears in the discussion contained in the adjudication filed after the rehearing.

The pertinent inquiry, as we have indicated, is whether there is any competent proof to justify a con *594 elusion that the deed was not legally delivered to the grantee. Originally, the learned chancellor had found that “Jacques Stiegelmann conveyed the real estate * * * [in controversy] to Carrie M. Ackman for a good and valuable consideration” and that “Said deed of conveyance, dated April 19, 1937, was duly recorded by counsel for plaintiff [Stiegelmann] and at his direction.” These findings were logical deductions from the evidence which the trial court accredited and which shows the following:

The plaintiff, a widower about seventy-six years old, persuaded Mrs. Ackman, a distant relative, to act as housekeeper in his home.near Cornwells, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. At that time Mrs. Ackman was residing in her home in Roxborough, Philadelphia, some miles distant from Cornwells. Having, consented to attend to Stiegelmann’s housekeeping and after having made the trip (daily for some time) between Roxborough and Cornwells by automobile for the purpose indicated, Mrs. Ackman moved to the vicinity of Stiegelmann’s home and there resided in the house on the property which is the subject matter of this litigation. Extensive repairs and alterations were made to the house immediately prior .to Mrs. Ackman’s occupancy of it, all of which wei’e paid for by Stiegelmann. Latex*, with members of her family, she moved into Stiegelmann’s home. He paid all of the living expenses, Mrs. Ackman’s children performing some work about the place in return for their maintenance.

The evidence as to the drawing of the deed and its recording appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness, Edward H. Buckley. The learned chancellor, 'in his discussion of the evidence after the rehearing, summarized Buckley’s testimony in material part as follows: “the plaintiff [Stiegelmann] directed his then attorney and real estate agent, Edward H. Buckley, Esq., to prepare a deed for the * * * property [now in controversy] with Carrie,M. Ackman as grantee. * *.•* The deed was executed in April, but * * * was never *595 recorded until the following August when, according to the testimony of Buckley, Mrs. Ackman, accompanied by the plaintiff, visited his office and inquired about her deed. Buckley looked at his client, the plaintiff in this matter, for instructions and interpreted a nod of his head as acquiescence in Mrs. Ackman’s demand. The deed was thereupon recorded and subsequently returned to Jacques Stiegelmann.”

That the deed to Mrs. Ackman was prepared by Buckley as attorney for and at the direction of Stiegelmann and that the latter voluntarily executed it on April 19, 1937, stand as unexceptionable facts. It is also a matter of admitted record-proof that the deed was recorded on August 10, 1937. In explanation of the delay in the recording of the deed, Buckley testified that,-of his own volition, he purposely withheld the deed from record in the belief that Stiegelmann might possibly change his mind about the matter. Thus, the unrecorded deed was still in Buckley’s office when Stiegelmann and Mrs. Ackman called there on or about August 10, 1937. At that time she asked Buckley in Stiegelmann’s presence, “Where is my deed?” Buckley looked at Stiegelmann who “nodded his head” in assent. Whereupon Buckley said, “You can have your deed in about three weeks”, that being the period of time which Buckley estimated would be required for the recording, to which he attended forthwith.

Delivery of the deed was, of course, necessary to render it legally operative: Rynier Estate, 347 Pa. 471, 474, 32 A. 2d 736; Cragin’s Estate, 274 Pa. 1, 4, 117 A. 445. It was the opinion of the court below, following the rehearing, that “The only possible interpretation of constructive delivery could be the fact that the deed [after the recording] was mailed [by Buckley] to the common domicile of both of them [Stiegelmann and Mrs. Ackman], but in the name of Jacques Stiegelmann.” If delivery of the deed rested upon that circumstance, then, obviously, there was no delivery. Actually, Buckley did not mail the deed to Stiegelmann until more than a *596 year after Mrs. Ackman’s death on April 4, 1938. Throughout the period from the time the deed was executed on April 19, 1937, until Buckley mailed it to Stiegelmann in July of 1939, it was in Buckley’s office except for the two or three weeks required for its recording consequent upon Stiegelmann’s and Mrs. Ackman’s visit to Buckley’s office as above stated.

However, delivery may be found, just as the learned chancellor originally found it, from Stiegelmann’s nodded assent to Mrs. Ackman’s request for the deed in Buckley’s office wherewith Buckley then complied, as he indicated he would do, by placing it on record. The circumstances so shown were legally sufficient to constitute a constructive delivery. Delivery is to be inferred from the words and acts of a grantor evidencing an intention on his part to surrender his title to the property (embraced by his conveyance) and to invest his grantee therewith. Such an intent, accompanied by actions or words sufficient to effectuate it, spells delivery: Rynier Estate, supra, at p. 475; see also Dayton v. Newman, 19 Pa. 194, 199; and Long v. McHenry, 45 Pa. Superior Ct. 530, 533, and cases there cited.

Moreover, the deed was in fact recorded. The recording, of itself, raised a presumption of delivery: Chambley v. Rumbaugh, 333 Pa. 319, 320, 5 A. 2d 171; Lewis v. Merryman, 271 Pa. 255, 258, 114 A. 655. In the Merry-man case, supra (p. 260), “The strongest evidence of delivery was the fact of recording”. In that case this Court said that “the burden of overcoming the presumption resulting * * * [from recording] was on * .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 679, 351 Pa. 592, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiegelmann-v-ackman-pa-1945.