Zahorsky v. Leschinsky

147 A.2d 362, 394 Pa. 368, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1959
DocketAppeal, 38
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 147 A.2d 362 (Zahorsky v. Leschinsky) 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
Zahorsky v. Leschinsky, 147 A.2d 362, 394 Pa. 368, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 351 (Pa. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion

Per Curiam,

John Zahorsky, decedent, in 1929 became separated from Vera Zahorsky, his wife, and remained separated until decedent’s death on November 9, 1951. Decedent died intestate, leaving to survive him his widow Vera Zahorsky, two daughters, — Elizabeth Zahorsky 1 and Irene Zahorsky Rodrigues, — and a son — George Zahorsky. Elizabeth Zahorsky, appellee, is decedent’s personal representative. • : -

While separated decedent formed an attachment for one Anna Leschinsky, a widow with three children. In 1938 Anna Leschinsky rented a property known as No. 115 Foley Street, Old Forge, Lackawanna County, and decedent moved into the property and became a member of the Leschinsky household. While decedent paid no stipulated amount either for board or rent he did contribute sums to Anna Leschinsky for the household support. In 1945 Anna Leschinsky discussed the purchase of this property with decedent, she having in her possession a sum of money consisting of savings from *370 contributions made to her by decedent and money contributed by her daughter. Up until November 1946 the latter made regular contributions to her mother.

In October 1945 decedent decided to purchase the Foley Street property. ' To that end he consulted an attorney whom he instructed that he did not want his wife to have any interest in the property. It was décided to take title in the names of Walter and Anna Lynchensky, decedent’s brother-in-law and sister, who would then execute a mortgage for the balance of the purchase price and thereafter convey the premises to Dorothy Leschinsky. In discussing the ultimate grantee of this property decedent rejected the idea of designating any of his children because of their mother’s influence upon them, stating he was satisfied with Dorothy Leschinsky as the grantee “because he knew that if at any time in the future I should ask Dorothy to deed the property to me she will do so.” Neither Anna Leschinsky nor Dorothy Leschinsky took any part in the negotiations leading up to or at the time of the conveyance.

On October 15, 1945 title to the property was transferred to Lynehenskys from the Russian Orthodox ■ Catholic Mutual Aid Society. The. Lynehenskys then executed a mortgage on the premises in favor of the Old Forge Bank. The following day Lynehenskys conveyed title to Dorothy Leschinsky subject to the mortgage who has been the title holder ever since that date. Of the purchase price of $4200, decedent paid $100 as earnest money and $2100 by a cashier’s check purchased ■from the Old Forge Bank; the balance of $2000 was financed by the mortgage. To provide the $2100 decedent withdrew $807.53 from his personal savings account and obtained $1300 from Anna Leschinsky which the court below found “came from a fund which Anna Leschinsky had been saving for the joint benefit of *371 John Zahorsky and herself, which at the time of the property purchase was over $1500. The fund was made, up in large part from the periodic contributions made to the household by John Zahorsky.” The court below, found no evidence that at any time after October 16, 1945 Dorothy Leschinsky, wife-appellant, acknowledged any beneficial interest in the property other than her own. Subsequent to the purchase date decedent continued to live in the property and to make contributions to the household expenses. Another tenant of part of the property continued his tenancy and to pay rent to Anna- Leschinsky. All taxes, utility service charges, repair and maintenance bills were billed to Dorothy Leschinsky, but paid by Anna Leschinsky from funds in her possession, including contributions by Dorothy Leschinsky and by decedent and rents received. Decedent personally paid three of the mortgage installments and Anna Leschinsky the rest. The mortgage was paid in full prior to decedent’s death.

Subsequent to decedent’s death Elizabeth Zahorsky, as decedent’s personal representative, instituted an equity action against Dorothy Leschinsky 2 and her hus-. band asking the court to declare that title to the property was held by the said Dorothy Leschinsky as trustee for decedent or his heirs-at-law, that an accounting be made and that the legal title be conveyed for the use of decedent’s estate. The court below found that as of October 16, 1945 a resulting trust in a one-half undivided interest in the property arose in decedent’s favor and directed (1) that the appellants execute and deliver to decedent’s personal representative a deed for such undivided one-half interest in the property for the use of the decedent’s heirs-at-law, (2) that appellants account for all rents derived from the property since decedent’s death and (3) that appellants pay one- *372 half the balance thereof to decedent’s administratrix. From this decree the present appeal was taken.

The decree of the court below is affirmed on the following excerpts from the opinion of President Judge T. Linus Hoban :

“The testimony . . . seems ... to meet the familiar riile that a resulting trust can be established only by clear, explicit and unequivocal evidence.

■ “The complaint in this case pleads an express trust established prior to the transfer of the property by an agreement between John Zahorsky, Anna Leschinsky and Dorothy Leschinsky. The evidence did not support such pleading, a fact which was inferentiálly conceded by counsel for plaintiff by brief and at the oral argument. The plaintiff rests her case entirely upon thé theory that the circumstances of the purchase gave rise tó a resulting trust in favor of John Zahorsky. It is obvious that an express trust could not be proved for there is no evidence in the record of such an alleged ■ agreement, and even if there were, the- title documents contain no words establishing a trust and the transfer to Dorothy Leschinsky was absolute in form. Furthermore, any effort to establish under the circumstances an express trust would be met by the bar of parol evidence rule, Restatement, Trusts, §38, and the bar of -the Pennsylvania Statute of- Frauds. Act of April 22, 1856, P. L. 532, §4, 33 P.S. §2.

' “The general rule with reference to the establishment of resulting trusts under similar situations is expressed in §440, Restatement, Trusts: ‘Where a transfer of property is made to one person and the purchase price is paid by another, a resulting trust arises in fávor of the person by whom the purchase price is paid’, unless the person by whom the purchase price is paid manifests an intention that no resulting trust should arise. See Restatement, Trusts, §441.

*373 “We are satisfied from the evidence and it is the logical conclusion from the findings of fact that John Zahorsky paid at least a substantial part of the purchase price of the property in dispute and that he manifested at the time of the purchase a clear intention .to reserve future disposition of the property to conform to his own desires. In other words, we think the evidence clearly establishes a resulting trust so far as John Zahorsky’s interest in the property is concerned running in his own favor, and that he did not at any time manifest an intention that no resulting trust should arise. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.2d 362, 394 Pa. 368, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zahorsky-v-leschinsky-pa-1959.