Yarnall Estate

103 A.2d 753, 376 Pa. 582, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 1954
DocketAppeal, 40
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 753 (Yarnall Estate) 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
Yarnall Estate, 103 A.2d 753, 376 Pa. 582, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 482 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearne,

In this orphans’ court partition proceeding the question presented by the appeal is whether or not appellant has sufficiently proved a valid parol gift of a life estate in the real estate which ousts the jurisdiction of that court until the alleged disputed title is determined in an ejectment proceeding in the court of common pleas. The court below decided that appellant’s testimony failed to establish the existence of such a dispute of title which would warrant the submission of the case to a jury in an ejectment proceeding and directed the inquest in partition to be made. The appeal followed.

I. Newton Yarnall died April 13, 1928, intestate, leaving to survive him a widow, Lillie I. Yarnall (appellant), and two children, Ethel Y. McMullin and I. Newton Yarnall, Jr. (appellees), his sole heirs and next of kin. At the time of his death decedent was seized of premises 1722 Bethlehem Pike, Flourtown, which was *585 the only real estate owned by him. Under the Intestate Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 429, 20 PS 1.1 et seq., the widow and each child inherited an equal one third interest in his real and personal estate. At the time of the death of intestate the widow resided in the premises and still resides therein. Appellees, the two children of intestate, petitioned the orphans’ court for partition of the real estate. Appellant, the widow, by her answer to the petition, contests the petition and claims: “. . . a life estate in the whole of said land by oral gift of [appellees], or, in the alternative, by an adverse possession continued for more than twenty-one years.” The ansAver further alleges: “The present interest of each of [appellees] in said real estate is no more than a one-third remainder after the death of [appellant}.” (Italics supplied)

A hearing was had upon petition and answer. Appellees and appellant testified. A niece of appellant also testified, in corroboration of appellant, concerning admissions alleged to have been made by appellees.

The alleged parol gift by appellees to appellant, according to appellant’s testimony, was made: “. . . either ... in [the lawyer’s] office the day of the final settlement, [of the personal estate] or, at my home before the final settlement.” The only persons present at the conversation were the appellees and the appellant. The alleged conversation, according to appellant, was: “A. My daughter said: ‘We will give you your life right here, as long as you live, free of charge. And, we will also pay one-third of the taxes to help you.’ One third of the taxes, I would say, in the neighborhood of up to four or fixe years ... Q. Did your son say anything? A. Yes, he said he Avas perfectly satisfied for me to have my life right there. Q. Do you remember whether or not you said anything? A. I said it Avas o. k. with me. Q. After this conversation did you consider that the matter of the house was settled? A. For *586 me to live in as long as I lived? Q. Yes? A. Yes, I did.” She also testified: “Q. But, [appellees] gave you a right to live in a house in which each of you had a third interest? A. That’s right. Q. And, that when you died, your one-third interest would he divided between him and her? A. It naturally would.”

Miss Gilbert, appellant’s niece, testified that the daughter-appellee stated to her: “. . . Well, we gave mom a life right, we had no idea she would live all these years. We thought she would live a couple of years.”

Appellant testified that the daughter-appellee and her husband resided with her in the premises for two or three years after the decease of appellant’s husband (April 13, 1928). Appellant also testified that her children, the appellees, “granted [permission] to me” to use the house. She also testified that she made all repairs to the premises during her occupancy. Appellees denied that they had given appellant a life estate, but did authorize a permissive use by appellant for a limited time.

The court below should not pass upon the credibility of the testimony and decide whether or not the alleged parol gift of a life estate had, in fact, been made. The extent of the present inquiry is to determine whether or not appellant’s testimony and that of her witness, accepted as true, constitute a valid parol gift of a life estate in the real estate. If it does, then the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court in partition is ousted and the determination of a disputed title must he relegated to the common pleas in ejectment.

The Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 337, sec. 1, as amended, 20 PS 1181, confers concurrent jurisdiction upon the orphans’ court and the court of common pleas to partition real estate of one who died intestate leaving heirs. Under the terms of the Act, however, it is “. . . Provided, That such court shall not have such juris *587 diction during the continuance of any life estate in the whole of such real estate.” (Italics supplied)

It is a well established principle that a partition proceeding is not a proper remedy in which to settle a disputed title. Ejectment is the appropriate form of action: Leahey v. O’Connor, 281 Pa. 488, 495, 127 A. 65. But in order to obstruct a partition proceeding the disputed title must be one in fact and not one which is merely asserted. In Becker Estate, 352 Pa. 452, 43 A. 2d 4, we quoted with approval the language of Judge Gearhart who said (p. 455) : “ . in proceeding in the orphans’ court for partition of real estate, a mere assertion of title by a claimant does not ipso facto divest the orphans’ court of jurisdiction. Thus it has been held that the court may take testimony to determine whether questions raised by the petition and answer warrant the submission of the case to a jury. If they do not, the court may proceed with partition. (Welch Appeal, 126 Pa. 297, 302, 303; McMahon’s Est., 211 Pa. 292, 296; Est. of Wm. McCorkle, Deceased, 184 Pa. 626, 628; Sanders’s Est., 41 Pa. Superior Ct. 77; Donohoe’s Est., 5 D. & C. 165, affirmed 282 Pa. 254; Flannery’s Est., 315 Pa. 576).

“ ‘In Sanders’s Estate in a partition proceeding arising in the orphans’ court, President Judge Rice of the Superior Court writing the opinion of the court stated, “Upon the same principle it was the province and duty of the court in the present case to go beyond the denial of the petitioner’s title and possession set up in their answer, and, if these were refuted by the undisputed facts, to award the inquest.’” See also: Lloyd’s Estate, 281 Pa. 379, 384, et seq., 126 A. 806.”

We are therefore required to examine the testimony adduced by appellant and determine whether or not, if believed, it supports the claim of appellant that she possesses by parol gift a life estate in the real estate sought to be partitioned. If it does, then the juris *588 diction of the orphans’ court is unquestionably ousted and the dispute of title must be remitted to the court of common pleas for determination in an action of ejectment.

Appellant unequivocally bases her claim upon an alleged inter vivos

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 753, 376 Pa. 582, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarnall-estate-pa-1954.