Perrine v. Kohr
Perrine v. Kohr
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an action of ejectment in which a verdict has been found for the plaintiff. The facts upon which the verdict has been rendered are unusual. Their statement will serve to shorten the discussion of the questions of law involved.
The jury has found from the evidence, as the case was submitted to them by the trial court, that W. S. Allen, whose real estate in Williamsport was thus sold, was in fact Stephen Pang-born, formerly of Plainfield, N. J., and that Louisa L. Perrine, the present plaintiff, is the legitimate offspring of the mariiage in New Jersey. It follows that the marriage in Williamsport was bigamous; that the Williamsport children are illegitimate, and that the sole legitimate heir is the present plaintiff. The facts, therefore, upon which the plaintiff’s-case was founded have all been determined in her favor. The duty of this court is to determine whether, as alleged by the appellants, error was committed in the trial of the cause. There are numerous assignments of error, which raise, however, but five subjects of contention.
The appellants claim (1) that their title is protected by the record of the orphans’ court in partition, showing purchase at a judicial sale, and that, the proceedings being regular on their face, they may not be attacked collaterally. Phis legal proposition is earnestly pressed. Its inapplicability to a case such as that before us has been determined by the Supreme Court in the case of Richards v. Rote, 68 Pa. 248. Mr. Justice Sharsvvood passed upon the effect to be given to a judicial sale in partition proceedings in the orphans’ court, in an ejectment case, in these words: “We hold then that when the name of a party in interest does not appear in the petition, decree and notices, unless it appears by affidavit that his name was unknown and publication made accordingly, his share of the es-state will remain undivided or undivested, if there is a sale ordered, unless by some subsequent act or conduct of such party, or those claiming under him, it has been ratified.” This language is quoted with approval by Chief Justice Agnew, in Vensel’s Appeal, 77 Pa. 76. See also Duke v. Hague, 107 Pa. 57, Young v. Young, 88 Pa. 422, Stewart v. Miller, 4 W. N. C. 552. McKee v. McKee, 14 Pa. 231, and Thompson v. Stitt, 56 Pa. 156. It is unnecessary to elaborate the reasons
This leads up to the next proposition presented by the appellants. It is argued (2) that the plaintiff’s right to recover is barred because she delayed in asserting her title for eleven years “ after knowledge of the facts.” But what knowledge had the plaintiff and of what facts ? A witness called in her behalf, who knew, and long concealed the knowledge, of the double life of Allen (or Pangborn) and who had returned from his funeral, said, on cross-examination, that he was interrogated by the plaintiff in regard to her father. He refused to give her information. He does say that she asked him whether his mother had received a telegram “from the man shot out west;” and wanted to know if her father was dead; and whether the man shot was her father. The witness admits that she might have asked the question whether he had been at “ her father’s funeral at Williamsport.” These questions to the witness (which he does not positively admit were put to him) are the only intimation of knowledge on the part of the plaintiff of the death of her father. Conceding that the questions were asked, they do not indicate that she knew the name under which her father was living in Williamsport; that she knew her father was dead; or that she knew that he had left any property in which she had an interest. The questions were asked (if asked at all) two years before the proceedings in partition were taken. Of these proceedings, as has been seen, she had.no knowledge. Her assertion of her title Avas made within a reasonable time after the discovery of the existence of her right. The testimony referred to is not positive proof of any knowledge on the part of the plaintiff, and if it be said that knowledge might be inferred, reply may be made that that which she knew, Avas not sufficient to Avarrant the court in saying, as matter of law, that the plaintiff had lost her right to her inheritance by laches. She could not have appealed from a decree of the orphans’ court
The appellants assert (B) that a part of the money paid by the purchasers of the land at the orphans’ court sale was applied by'the administrator to the payment of the decedent’s debts; and that the plaintiff cannot now recover the land in dispute without offering to refund the portion of the purchase money applied to the payment of the decedent’s debts. The plaintiff’s claim is based upon a title which gives her the land cleansed of any cloud from the partition proceedings to which she was not a party. The real estate was not sold by the administrator to pay the decedent’s debts. The intervention by the administrator for this purpose was not permitted. The land was not sold as the decedent’s land, but as that of his alleged heirs. The purchasers took only the title of the alleged heirs. This was, on the facts now ascertained, no title. In any aspect in which the sale may be viewed, it did not divest the plaintiff’s title, nor can her interest in the land be diminished by now imposing upon it, as a charge, the payment of a portion of the debts of the decedent, already discharged out of moneys paid for a title ' which has proved worthless.
It must be conceded that the ruling as here made upon the effect of the record in the orphans’ court, works a very apparent hardship upon innocent purchasers, who have paid money upon the faith of the record, and who beyond doubt would have been assured by counsel that the title purchased was good, — the facts subsequently proven being then unknown. On the other hand, to permit a sale by a decree of court made on partition proceedings brought by one having no interest and without notice to the real owner’, to strip the latter of her property, would be no less a hardship. It may safely be asserted that there is no precedent in this commonwealth, for depriving a citizen of his property by judicial action without giving him his day in court.
The next assertion of error by the appellants is (4) that the court below erred in its ruling upon a point of charge. The court was requested to say: “ That the admission of Stephen Pangborn of the fact of his marriage to Sarah Giles, and the admission of Sarah Giles of her marriage to Stephen Pangborn, are in the nature of direct proof of the marriage.” This the
The appellants further contend (5) that error was committed in the answer of the court to this point of charge: “ That the testimony of Sarah Wykoff was evidence of a ceremonial marriage.” To this the court replied: “I affirm this. But you will not understand that the evidence of this one witness establishes the fact of marriage. It is in the nature of direct
No reversible error is found in this record. It exhibits a case peculiar in its facts, presented on both sides with earnestness and skill by counsel, and well and carefully tried by the court below.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Partition — Omission of parly — Undivested interest — Sale. When in partition proceedings the name of a party in interest does not appear in the petition, decree and notices, unless it appears by affidavit that his name was unknown and publication made accordingly, his share of the estate will remain undivided or undivested, if there is a sale ordered, unless by some subsequent act or conduct of such party or those claiming under him, it has been ratified. Where a man deserts his wife and child, and goes to another part of the country, where he marries again under an assumed name, while his first wife is living, and has children by his second wife, and many years after he dies, leaving real estate, and such real estate is sold in partition proceedings instituted by the illegitimate children, and it appears that the legitimate child had no notice of the proceedings, and that her name did not appear in the petition, decree and notices, her estate is undivested by the judicial sale. Ratification of the sale cannot be inferred from the fact that about the time of her father’s death, the daughter asked a witness certain questions about her father, when the questions did not indicate that she knew the name under which her father had been living, or that she knew that her father was dead, or that he had any property in which she had an interest. Where real estate of a decedent has been sold in partition proceedings in the orphans’ court in proceedings instituted by the decedent’s illegitimate children on the assumption that they were his heirs, the purchasers at the sale cannot, in an action of ejectment against them by the decedent’s legitimate child, who had not been made a party to the partition proceedings, be heard to allege that a part of the proceeds of the land had been applied to the payment of decedent’s debts, and that the plaintiff could not recover the land in dispute without offering to refund the portion of the purchase money applied to the payment of decedent’s debts. Marriage — Evidence—Admissions by parties. Tim joint admissions by the parties of their marriage is in the nature of direct proof and is competent evidence of the fact of marriage. In an action of ejectment where the plaintiff in order to prove the marriage of her father, produces a witness who testifies that, site was present at a marriage ceremony solemnized by her brother-in-law, clergyman, that the name of one of the contracting parties was that of plaintiff's father, that no marriage certificate liad been given because of lacle of blanks at the time and because of the death of the clergyman shortly thereafter, the court commits no error in telling the jury that they were not to understand that tlie evidence of this one witness established the fact of marriage, but that it was in the nature of direct evidence, and tended to prove a ceremonial marriage.