DocketNumber: 564
Judges: Spaeth, Brosky, Rowley, Wieand, McEwen, Cirillo, Olszewski, Montemuro, Tamilia
Filed Date: 6/9/1986
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an appeal from an order dismissing appellant’s exceptions to a decree of equitable distribution subsequent to divorce.
On January 1, 1980, appellant/husband filed a complaint in divorce in Allegheny County alleging indignities. Appel-lee’s answer of February 1st sought dismissal. In October appellant commenced an action for partition of entireties property by filing his complaint in Westmoreland County. Three weeks later appellee filed a petition with the Allegheny County court to proceed under the new Divorce Code, and was allowed to amend her answer to the complaint to include a request for equitable distribution. Two years later, appellant petitioned the Allegheny County Court to amend his complaint to conform to the Divorce Code. Ap-pellee’s answer again requested equitable distribution. In October of 1982, a hearing was held by a Westmoreland County Master on the partition action which is still unresolved as of this writing. In February 1983, after a hearing in the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, a divorce was granted and the distribution Order underlying this appeal issued.
The parties had been married on July 17, 1976. For the nine years prior to that time appellee had leased at nominal rental a house owned by her grandmother. The parties resided there together before the marriage, and for approximately one year afterward. Three months after the wedding appellee’s grandmother deeded the property to her daughter, appellee’s mother, who then, with her husband, transferred it to the parties. One year after the transfer
Appellant has presented us with three issues. The first challenges the jurisdiction of the Allegheny County court over the subject matter of the distribution Order; the second and third claim error in the court’s treatment of marital property for the purposes of equitable distribution, and the formula under which the property was apportioned between the parties.
The real question posed by the train of events in this case, however, is the procedural connection between partition of entireties property independent of the divorce proceeding, and equitable distribution under the Divorce Code of 1980: does the former segue into the latter, and if so how? To ask the question another way, is partition of entireties property superceded by a request for equitable distribution under the new Divorce Code?
The pivotal point from which various interpretations radiate is 23 Pa.S.A. § 301(a)(1), which provides that, “in conjunction with any decree granting a divorce,” the court shall “determin[e] and disposfe] of property rights and interests between spouses ... including the partition of property held as tenants by the entireties or otherwise ...” Equitable distribution becomes a factor when either party requests it,
There are three major approaches which have been taken to define the problem, each of which presents its own peculiar defects. The first, espoused by the Allegheny County judge hearing appellant’s divorce and appellee’s claim for equitable distribution, proceeds from the presumption that the Allegheny County divorce court retained jurisdiction to equitably distribute the property involved after and however Westmoreland County disposed of the partition action. In other words it was concluded that entireties property, although halved between the parties, remained marital possessions subject to (re)distribution according to the precepts of the Divorce Code. The obvious problem with this schema, redundancy apart, is that no trial court has the authority to reexamine the issues of a case disposed of by another court at the same level. Also we are faced with the 401(e)(4) exception to marital property in that any property acquired as separate property during separation (an order of partition creates separate property) until the date of divorce, is not construed to be marital property subject to equitable distribution.
The second proposed solution protects the status quo ante, rejecting any attempt to reconcile the conflicts engendered by the “hither and yon” school of paper filing in domestic relations cases. This solution is in fact none at all as it ignores the policy behind passage of the Divorce Code,, that is, “to effectuate economic justice between the parties.” 23 Pa.S.A. § 102(a)(6). In so doing this combination filing race/hands off approach allows, under the guise of jurisdictional purity, the sort of retrograde treatment of marital disputes which prompted passage of the Divorce Code to begin with. See Butler v. Butler, 464 Pa. 522, 347 A.2d 477 (1975), where the Pennsylvania Supreme Court refused to remedy unequal consideration in the creation of entireties estates. See also Gordon v. Gordon, 293 Pa.Super. 491, 439 A.2d 683 (1981).
Case law has in fact made provision for unilateral dissipation of assets, viz, the classic Vento partition. Vento v. Vento, 256 Pa.Super. 91, 389 A.2d 615 (1978). However, planned deliquescence is by no means the only obstacle in the way of achieving real economic parity between divorcing spouses. Although partition is theoretically implicit in equitable distribution, given the facts which would dictate its adoption as a means to accomplish equity, (and we offer this as an apologia for the retention of partition as an always available option, despite its apparent inconsistency with the avowed objectives of the Code), the reverse, that equality encompasses equity, is not always true. As this Court held in Platek v. Platek, 309 Pa.Super. 16, 24, 454 A.2d 1059, 1063 (1982),
It is apparent ... that the court’s power to direct partition of property is qualified by its duty to divide marital property in an equitable way ... For partition is an even division ... But an equitable division often will not be*478 even; the essence of the concept of an equitable division is that “after considering all relevant factors,” the court may “deem[] just” a division that awards one of the parties more than half, perhaps the lion’s share, of the property.
Indeed equitable distribution is a misleading concept, as equity has yet to be achieved in practice. While courts have paid lip service to the notion that the nurturing partner’s contribution to marriage is equivalent in value to that of the wage earner, “equitable distribution”, as thus far applied, has resulted in an immediate 73 per cent drop in the standard of living enjoyed by divorced wives and their children, while the ex-husbands experience a corresponding 42 per cent increase. L. Weitzman, The Divorce Revolution (1985).
It is, therefore, our task to devise a means of accommodating partition as an “equitable” practice in order to achieve substantial justice, and in instances such as the one herein to avoid duplication of judicial procedures. That objective is best accomplished, we believe, by active retention of both methods of allocating property as options available to the court. Preservation, in turn, can be achieved procedurally by the following: complaints in partition will require, at the outset, factual averments, consonant with a set of criteria to be established beforehand, e.g. Vento situation; such allegations must then be proven. In post-divorce partition, pursuant to 68 P.S. § 501, a statement that the parties were husband and wife, acquired certain property by the entireties and were subsequently divorced, will suffice to activate equal division.
We believe this result to be dictated by a number of considerations the most important of which is the need to realize the intent of the legislature in enacting the Divorce Code, again, “to effectuate economic justice between the parties,” (supra) in cases where divorce is inevitable. The instant case offers an instructive, if ironic, example. Appellant requested partition of the property, although equitable distribution was available due to passage of the Act, largely we find because he felt that his award would be considerably larger. While this is not precisely a case of forum shopping, since the filing of partition actions involving real estate is governed by a specific venue provision, Pa.R.C.P. 1552,
This Court held in Gantz, v. Gantz, 338 Pa.Super. 528, 488 A.2d 17 (1985) that the joinder and counterclaim provisions of section 301(a)(1)
To reconcile the various governing rules, and clarify the question of where to consolidate the various procedural members in environmentally schizophrenic cases such as the one before us, we must decide the question raised by section 301 of proper jurisdiction (see footnote 6), and incidentally address appellant’s first challenge to the Allegheny County Order. Appellant claims that the Allegheny County court had no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the equitable distribution Order, that is, the realty and personalty situated in Westmoreland County. We agree, but not for the reasons or with the effect appellant advances. His grounds for objection are limited to the argument that appellee’s preliminary objections to the partition action filed in Westmoreland County were tantamount to a request there for proceedings under the new Divorce Code. Having delivered himself of this premise, appellant proceeds to deduce as follows: The court’s denial of the objections is equivalent to a removal of the cause from the ambit of the Code, which makes equitable distribution unavailable anywhere, since Gordon, supra, makes such Orders final, and no appeal therefrom was lodged. We decline to make the quantum leap this theory requires, and add that Gordon is extraordinarily liberal in its view on when applications to proceed under the Code should be granted, finding few if any reasons to deny such petitions. We note in this regard, that appellant made no objection to appellee’s request before the Allegheny County court to proceed under the Code, nor to her prayer for equitable distribution until three years later at the hearing thereon, after a second, similar request had been made.
The Westmoreland County court denied appellee’s preliminary objections to venue on the grounds that the partition action was properly placed there under Rule 1552, because there had been no prior request for equitable distribution in Allegheny County. Implicit in the Opinion is the theory
We must now decide where jurisdiction obtained under section 301. In this context it is important “ ... to distinguish ‘venue’ from ‘jurisdiction’; the terms may not be used synonymously. While jurisdiction is the power and authority of the court to act, venue is the place where the power to adjudicate is to be exercised, that is, the place where the suit may be or should be heard.” 77 Am.Jur.2d Venue § 1.
We would now turn to the views expressed by Judge Wieand in his Concurring and Dissenting Opinion. We cannot agree with his conclusion that the result of any partition remains marital property, which is subject to the power of the divorce court to decree equitable distribution. Partition creates separate property whether it be prior to the divorce or subsequent to it. Once it is separate property, it is subject to the provisions of 401(d)(8) “The value of property set apart to each party," as one of the considerations in equitable distribution. This is so because pre-di-vorce partition is identical in effect to an agreement of the spouses during coverture to dissolve the entireties and to take the divided shares as separate property of each. In Berhalter v. Berhalter, 315 Pa. 225, 229, 173 A. 172, 173 (1934), the earliest case in our Supreme Court, on Partition during coverture, that court said:
(When) defendant appropriated to her own use, the funds which plaintiff and defendant agreed to hold in an estate by entireties and this constituted in law an election on her part to divide the fund. In this case, when appellee in a request for a conclusion of law asked for a division of the fund, this constituted an acquiescence in appellant’s offer or election to divide the fund. In other words, by act of the parties they agreed to divide the property subject to the estate by entirety, (emphasis added)
Since partition during marriage is a legal determination of an agreed division by the parties of their entireties proper
Section 401(e)(2) provides:
(e) For purposes of this chapter only “marital property” means all property acquired by either party during the marriage except:
2.) Property excluded by valid agreement of the parties entered into before, during or after marriage.
Partition then, by operation of law, creates the valid agreement to hold the partitioned property separately and not as marital property and brings into operation its exclusion from consideration of equitable distribution under sections 401(d)(8) and 401(e)(2). For this Court to hold, as Judge Wieand suggests, that partitioned property becomes matrimonial property, ignores the clear intent of the law and the reasonable and logical effect of partition, not to mention that the entire exercise of proceeding in partition would be rendered redundant and absolutely in conflict with the allowance of a proceeding in partition as opposed to relying on equitable distribution to determine the division of the marital property. Judge Wieand’s analogy of the divided pole misses the point. It is not what the pole was or is after division, it is the nature of its possession by the parties.
The evolution of division of entireties property has been a difficult if not painful one in Pennsylvania law. The genesis of partition of entireties property is derived from the Act of May 10, 1927, P.L. 884, 68 P.S. 501, which permitted partition of entireties property after divorce. Prior to this Act, entireties property retained its character even after divorce. Alles v. Lyon, 216 Pa. 604, 66 A. 81 (1907). After the Act of May 10, 1927, partition could be compelled, but if such action was not instituted, the entireties estate continued. Lazare v. Lazare, 365 Pa. 591, 76 A.2d 190 (1956).
Section 3 of the Act of 1927 provided, inter alia, “In any case where a husband and wife shall hereafter acquire property as tenants by entireties, and shall be divorced,*484 the interest of each of the respective tenants by entire-ties, subsequent to said divorce, shall be conclusively deemed to be one-half of the value of the property, and, to accomplish the provisions of this act, the common-law rule relating to entireties is hereby modified.
The Lazare court, interpreting the act strictly in derogation of the common law, held that it did not permit a destruction of the entireties property, but simply apportioned one-half the value of the property. In that case, the second wife’s claim, for one-half share after the decease of the husband, failed as against the first wife since the property vested in the first wife before partition occurred. By the Amendment Act of May 17, 1949, P.L. 1394, it was provided that upon divorce, parties holding by the entireties “shall thereafter hold such property as tenants in common of equal one-half shares in value and either of them may bring suit in the court of common pleas ... to have the property sold and the proceeds divided between them (reinacted 1978, April 28, P.L. 202, No. 53, § 2(a) (1692), effective June 27, 1980, P.P. 68 P.S. § 501. Under this Amendment, the effect of a partition action is to divide the property into separate estates and vest one-half share in each as separate property-
Even if one of the spouses dies before or during the partition action, the surviving spouse is not entitled to the entire property as a surviving tenant, but only one-half share. Keen by Van Kleef v. Keen, 315 Pa.Super. 161, 461 A.2d 846 (1983). As to married partners, an offer to partition (misappropriated property) is accepted by the nonappropriating spouse when he or she files suit to partition. Simon v. Simon, 286 Pa.Super. 403, 429 A.2d 1 (1981). Entireties relationship could always be ended by agreement of the parties. Berhalter, supra.
Thus it can be seen that within the past sixty (60) years in Pennsylvania, entireties property has evolved from virtually an indestructible entity that could only be abrogated by agreement of the parties, before or after divorce, Lazare, supra, modified by legislation to permit partition after
In summation, we would hold that where as here, a proper partition was filed in a different division of the same court or in a different county, and that action has not proceeded to judgment prior to action of divorce coupled with a claim for equitable distribution pursuant to section 401(c), such partition action will be stayed by the Divorce Court sua sponte or on motion of either party, enjoining the parties from continuing the partition and directing them to effect a motion for transfer, thereby obtaining jurisdiction over the partition action, which the court of primary jurisdiction (Divorce Court) will hear and determine, in consolidation and conjunction with the equitable distribution, according to the equities of the matter. Gantz, supra. In all pre-divorce partitions under a Vento claim, when no divorce action is filed prior to judgment, or in a post-divorce partition action pursuant to 68 P.S. § 501, when there has been
Jurisdiction over the divorce in this case is properly in Allegheny County, according to the statute, and appellant’s choice.
We now address appellant’s claims that the property was improperly treated by the lower court as having been acquired by appellee prior to marriage, and that the property was inequitably divided. We find that we must agree with the former proposition, but not with the latter.
Of the property in question, the real estate although in all probability intended by appellee’s grandmother to be hers, was placed, at appellee’s direction, in the name of both parties during the term of the marriage. This occurence makes it per se marital property (along with much of the personalty). See section 401(f) and see DiFlorido v. DiFlorido, 459 Pa. 641, 331 A.2d 174 (1975). It does not however, invest in appellant an equal share in or right to the property itself. The trial court awarded to appellant a distributive share equivalent to his financial participation in the property and the marriage. As this court has stated,
We note that there is no simple formula by which to divide marital property. The method of distribution derives from the facts of the individual case. The list of factors of 401(d) serves as a guideline for consideration, although the list is neither exhaustive nor specific as to the weight to be given the various factors. Thus, the court has flexibility of method and concomitantly assumes responsibility in rendering its decisions. The con*488 cept of equitable distribution is not an equal division of marital property.
Semasek v. Semasek, 331 Pa.Super. 1, 11, 479 A.2d 1047, 1052 (1984) (emphasis added). Also see our discussion on distribution of solely owned property as to increased value in Anthony v. Anthony, Pa.Super. (3430 Philadelphia, 1983). (Filed —/—/—).
With this share, appellant must rest content.
Order affirmed.
. We note that another case similar in implications, if not in circumstances, to the one at bar, is also pending before this Court en banc. Goldstein v. Goldstein, 354 Pa.Super. 490, 512 A.2d 644 (1986).
. Perlberger, in the 1985 Supplement to Pennsylvania Divorce Code, relies on Platek, infra, for the proposition that “a request for equitable distribution precludes a trial court from exercising its partition prerogatives in section 301(a)(1).” We obviously do not reach a similar conclusion since we believe it to be an impermissibly broad extrapolation of Judge Spaeth’s holding in Platek, and further, in contravention of the Code section cited which specifically preserves the partition option.
. Although it is clear that, “intentional dissipation of marital assets by one party does not preclude its status as marital property in equitable distribution,” Semasek v. Semasek, 331 Pa.Super. 1, 8-9, 479 A.2d 1047, 1051 (1984), it should be equally obvious that one cannot get blood out of a turnip.
. 68 P.S. § 501. Divorced tenants by entireties hold as tenants in common; suit for sale and division of proceeds.
. Rule 1552. Venue
An action for the partition of real property, including an action in which the Commonwealth is a party, may be brought in and only in a county in which all or any part of any property which is the subject matter of the action is located.
. 23 P.S. § 301. Jurisdiction
(a) The courts of this Commonwealth as defined in § 104 shall have original jurisdiction in cases of divorce and for the annulment of void or voidable marriages and where they have jurisdiction, shall determine in conjunction with any decree granting a divorce ... the following matters where raised in the complaint or the answer, an issue appropriate decrees or orders with reference thereto and may retain continuing jurisdiction thereof:
(1) the determination and disposition of property rights and interests between spouses ...
. While the issue is not present in this case, in Goldstein v. Goldstein, 354 Pa.Super. 490, 512 A.2d 644 (1986) we would note that we establish some limitations on partition arising from a Vento scenario; that is instead of construing the total partition of the marital property, we will require partition of only that property which would thereby work an equitable result.
. Pa.R.C.P. 1920.2 The action [in divorce], except a claim for custody, may be brought only in the county in which the plaintiff or the defendant resides.
. The divorce filed by husband on January 1, 1980, was pursuant to the Divorce Code of 1927, as the 1980 Divorce Code did not become effective until July 1980.