DocketNumber: Appeal, 123
Citation Numbers: 135 A. 210, 287 Pa. 461, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 381
Judges: Frazer, Kephart, Moschzisker, Sadler, Schaefer, Simpson, Walling
Filed Date: 10/6/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
While heavily indebted to the American Trust Company (plaintiff below and appellee here) Gustave Kaufman, through an intermediary, conveyed to his wife (defendant and appellant) $30,000 worth of real estate, located in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, for the expressed consideration of "$1.00 and other good and *Page 464
valuable considerations." Kaufman lived in New York; plaintiff sued him there and recovered a judgment for a portion of the indebtedness, and thereupon issued, in Allegheny County, a writ of foreign attachment against that property. We sustained the attachment (American Trust Co. v. Kaufman,
Defendant appeared de bene esse, and challenged the right of the court below to authorize service upon her under the Act of 1859; and also denied its jurisdiction, as a court of equity, of the cause of action alleged in the bill. These objections being overruled, she appealed to this court, but the appeal was quashed, because the order objected to was interlocutory: American Trust Co. v. Kaufman,
The Act of 1859 was properly utilized for the purpose of serving defendant. The land being located within the jurisdiction of the court below, but defendant, who claimed to own it, being a nonresident, the statute says she may be served with process, in the way specified, in order that she may defend the action, if she sees fit so to *Page 465
do. The bill did not seek to have her held individually liable to pay the amount due plaintiff, but only that the land should be decreed to be liable for it. The claim being thus limited, the service upon defendant could properly be made in the way it was done: Coleman's App.,
If the husband was alive, much could be said in support of the contention that equity has no jurisdiction because plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, by the recovery of a judgment against Kaufman, a sale of the property as his, and an action of ejectment against her. But it has long been held that the death of the alleged fraudulent grantor, opens the door to equity, under its general jurisdictional head in cases of fraud: Appeal of Fowler,
Equally unavailing is appellant's claim that plaintiff cannot succeed because it did not proceed under the Act of June 7, 1919, P. L. 412, 413, to sue Gustave Kaufman's personal representatives within a year after his death, and then or later bring his "surviving spouse and heirs and the devisee, alienee or owner of the land" on the record, after which, if judgment was duly obtained, the land could be sold at sheriff's sale. Perhaps it would be sufficient to say that that statute has no relation to cases where real estate has been fraudulently conveyed by a debtor, since it was not "real estate of such decedent" when he died, and his "surviving spouse" not being among those who were intended to be defrauded by the conveyance, has no standing to object to the action of the creditor who was. Beyond that, however, this suit was indexed as a lis pendens in the manner provided by the Act of June 15, 1871, P. L. 387; and so, also, within a year after Kaufman's death, a sci. fa. was issued, in a suit brought by plaintiff against him in his lifetime, warning his administrator to become a party defendant, or to show cause why he should not be so made. This sci. fa. was also duly entered in the judgment index, and operated to retain the lien of plaintiff's claim.
Nor is appellant any happier in her contention that plaintiff cannot recover because of article IV, section 2, of the Constitution of the United States, and the 14th amendment thereto. Her claim upon this point is that "the court below has attempted to impose personal obligations upon appellant, and has ordered her property seized and sold to pay an obligation she never owed . . . . . . and it is a deprivation of her property without *Page 467 due process of law." But, as we have already shown, no personal obligation has been imposed on defendant, except for the costs for which she was rightfully held liable; the service upon her was properly made; and, as between her and plaintiff, the property never was hers.
A few of the assignments of error relate to the evidence, and they may be considered in two groups. In the first it is alleged that a fatal defect appears, since there was no proof of fraud on the part of defendant personally. Where an adequate consideration has been paid for a conveyance, of course it cannot be set aside, in the absence of proof that the grantee was a party to the fraudulent attempt to hinder, delay or defraud creditors: Reehling v. Byers,
The other objections regarding the evidence relate principally to the proofs touching Gustave Kaufman's indebtedness. Without going into them in detail, and showing that the evidence was properly admitted, it is sufficient to say that that indebtedness was clearly shown by the New York judgment, and is not disputed. Hence, even if the admission of the other evidence was error, — which we do not say it was, — it was harmless, and therefore furnishes no ground for reversal: Roberts v. Cauffiel,
Before taking up the numerous remaining assignments of error which relate to the findings and conclusions of the court below, it is necessary to consider whether or not a part of the evidence which was admitted by the trial judge, was properly stricken out by the court in its adjudication. It consisted of the testimony of three witnesses, taken on the hearing of the rule to quash the foreign attachment. The parties to that proceeding were plaintiff and Gustave Kaufman, who was then living. Defendant had no connection with it. To the present litigation she is a party and he is not; hence the testimony was inadmissible, unless something else appeared to show the ordinary rule did not apply. Appellant asserts this appears in the order made by the court below in the foreign attachment case, that "all the evidence taken . . . . . . [in that proceeding] be duly certified and filed so as to become part of the record." Her contention is that thereby the testimony referred to became part of the record to the same extent as the pleadings themselves; and, hence, when that record was offered in evidence in the present case, those depositions could be used with the same effect as if they were taken in this case. At common law the testimony, though filed in the prothonotary's office, was not part of the record, and could not be used, even on appeal in the case in which the evidence was taken, unless forming part of a duly sealed bill of exceptions. When thus sealed and filed, that was the limit of their use. Our acts relating to stenographers, only provide a substitute for the bill of exceptions, and have not given to the evidence, when certified and filed, any additional dignity: Edwards v. Gimbel,
We have several times read all the evidence in the case except that properly excluded, as above set forth, and *Page 469
find no reason for reversal. Starting with the principle that the deed to appellant was presumptively fraudulent as to plaintiff (American Trust Co. v. Kaufman,
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellant.
Roberts v. Cauffiel , 283 Pa. 64 ( 1925 )
Brackin v. Welton Engineering Co. , 283 Pa. 91 ( 1925 )
Reehling v. Byers , 94 Pa. 316 ( 1880 )
Arndt v. Griggs , 10 S. Ct. 557 ( 1890 )
Sauber v. Nouskajian Et Ux. , 286 Pa. 449 ( 1926 )
Edwards v. Gimbel , 202 Pa. 30 ( 1902 )
Chisolm v. Moore , 1912 Pa. Super. LEXIS 296 ( 1912 )
Coleman's Appeal , 1874 Pa. LEXIS 103 ( 1874 )
Fowler v. Kingsley , 1878 Pa. LEXIS 194 ( 1878 )
Kichline v. Lobach , 125 Pa. 295 ( 1889 )
Byers v. Byers , 208 Pa. 23 ( 1904 )
Handel & Hayden Building & Loan Ass'n v. Elleford , 258 Pa. 143 ( 1917 )
American Trust Co. v. Kaufman , 276 Pa. 35 ( 1923 )
American Trust Co. v. Kaufman , 279 Pa. 230 ( 1924 )
Roller v. Holly , 20 S. Ct. 410 ( 1900 )
Houseman v. Grossman , 1896 Pa. LEXIS 1006 ( 1896 )
Fidelity Trust Co. v. Union National Bank , 313 Pa. 467 ( 1933 )
Central-Penn National Bank v. Culp , 320 Pa. 358 ( 1935 )
Commonwealth v. Smith , 344 Pa. 381 ( 1942 )
Peoples Savings & Dime Bank & Trust Co. v. Scott , 303 Pa. 294 ( 1931 )
Butterworth v. Wells Et Ux. , 303 Pa. 302 ( 1931 )
Ryan v. Kirk , 407 Pa. 197 ( 1962 )
Malis v. ZINMAN , 436 Pa. 592 ( 1970 )
Stalwart Building & Loan Ass'n v. Monahan , 104 Pa. Super. 498 ( 1931 )
Cole-Knox Mortgage Co. v. McGaffin , 182 Pa. Super. 610 ( 1956 )
FIDELITY BOND AND MORTG. CO. v. Brand , 371 B.R. 708 ( 2007 )
Bennett v. Erwin , 325 Pa. 330 ( 1936 )
Alpern v. Coe , 352 Pa. 208 ( 1945 )
Estate of Rasmussen , 238 Wis. 334 ( 1941 )
So. Cent. B. L. Assn. v. Milani , 300 Pa. 250 ( 1930 )
State Ex Rel. Truitt v. District Court of Ninth Judicial ... , 44 N.M. 16 ( 1939 )
Queen-Favorite B. & L. Ass'n v. Burstein , 310 Pa. 219 ( 1932 )
Miami National Bank v. Willens , 410 Pa. 505 ( 1963 )
Provident Trust Co. v. Rothman , 321 Pa. 177 ( 1935 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Truscott v. Binenstock , 358 Pa. 644 ( 1948 )