Brown v. Downing

137 Pa. 569 | Pa. | 1890

Opinion,

Mr. Justice Sterrett:

This action of ejectment, brought in the name of Della Ann Elizabeth Brown by her next friend, etc., resulted in a verdict in her favor for the lot in controversy. ■ She afterwards died, leaving to survive her, as her next of kin and only heirs at law, her father and mother, William Brown and Ann Maria Brown, who were duly substituted on the record as plaintiffs, and thereupon judgment was entered on the verdict.

It was conceded that, on and prior to July 5,1870, the legal title to the lot in controversy was vested in the United Petroleum Farms Association, which both parties recognized as a *572common source of title. On that day, the association, by its deed duly recorded, etc., conveyed the lot in controversy to the beneficial plaintiff, Della Ann E. Brown, then an infant about one year old. Basing her right of possession on that deed alone, the plaintiff had a clear prima facie title. On the other hand, the defendant, admitting title in the United Petroleum Farms Association prior to its conveyance to the beneficial plaintiff, claimed that under proceedings on a mechanics’ lien, filed in 1874 by Lay & Moore against William Brown and Della Ann E. Brown, the property in controversy was sold and conveyed by the sheriff to Charles H. Lay, who, by deed dated August 16, 1884, conveyed the same to the defendant; and, to maintain the issue on his part, he offered to prove the several matters and things recited in the first specification of error, to wit:

“ That before the birth of the plaintiff, Della Ann E. Brown, her father, WilliamBrown, bargained with the United Petroleum Farms Association for the purchase of the lot in controversy, and paid the purchase money therefor, and, after the birth of his said daughter, the plaintiff, when she was not more than a year old, directed the deed to be made to her; that he thereafter claimed the lot as his own, and, without disclosing the fact that the deed was made to his infant daughter, he contracted with Mr. Moore for the erection of a building on the said lot; and that, at the date of the execution of said deed, and also of the contract for the erection of said building, he had no other property than the said lot; this to be followed by the record of a mechanics’ lien for the erection of said house, and sale of the premises under the said lien, to Charles H. Lay, of the firm of Lay & Moore, and conveyance by him to the defendant, and also by evidence that the said Lay & Moore relied on the representation of William Brown that he owned the lot and were ignorant of the existence of the deed of the plaintiff until after the house had been erected, and after they placed the claim in the hands of their attorney for the purpose of having a lien entered; which attorney, discovering the deed on record, and, supposing that his clients had made a mistake in furnishing him the names of the party against whom the lien was to be entered, without any instructions from him to that effect, added the name of the grantee in the deed as a party to the lien, and were not even *573then aware of the fact that that party was an infant; that an appearance was entered for both the defendants in the lien, and judgment was thereafter entered in favor of the plaintiffs against both defendants, and no suggestion was made that said Della Ann E. Brown was a minor until long after the sale of the premises.”

This offer was objected to as incompetent and irrelevant, and the objections were sustained. The ruling of the court on the offer constitutes the first specification of error.

It appears by the record of the mechanics’ lien, and the scire facias thereon, that the lien was filed against William Brown and Della Ann E. Brown, and that the writ of scire facias was returned “served” on the defendant William Brown, and, as to the other defendant, “ not served, as said person was found to be a minor child of defendant.” Without having a guardian ad litem appointed for the infant defendant thus returned “ not served,” or taking any further notice of her, judgment in default of an affidavit of defence was entered in April, 1883, and liquidated at 1311.15. That judgment against the infant defendant was wholly unwarranted by anything that appears either in the record or aliunde. The scire facias was not even served on her, because, as the sheriff states in his return, she “ was found to be a minor.” She was incapable of employing an attorney, and was therefore unaffected by the general appearance, by attorney, for both defendants. It follows that, as to her, the judgment was inoperative and void. It is unnecessary to inquire what would have been the effect, if she had been made a party to the proceeding by the appointment and appearance of a guardian ad litem. That was not done; and, of course, any right she had in the property remained unaffected by the proceedings on the scire facias.

In the absence of fraud, actual or constructive, the plaintiff’s father, William Brown, had a right to purchase the lot in controversy, and have it conveyed to her. There is nothing in the record, nor in the evidence that was offered and excluded by the court, tending to show that the transaction was fraudulent, or that the conveyance to her was either void or voidable. It would have availed the defendant nothing to have proved that, after the conveyance to plaintiff, her father claimed the lot as his own, and contracted with Lay & Moore for the erec*574tion of a building thereon. The deed to her, then on record, was notice to everybody that she, and not her father, was the owner of the lot in controversy. There "was no offer to prove that at the time he purchased the lot, or when he procured it to be conveyed to her, he was indebted to any one, or that he contemplated any fraud on future creditors. In short, the offer rejected by the court contains nothing that would have tended to rebut the prima facie case presented by plaintiff’s evidence, and hence there was no error in excluding it. It also follows, that there was no error in charging the jury as complained of in the second and last specification.

Judgment affirmed.