366 Pa. 519 | Pa. | 1951
Opinion by
This appeal by the defendant is from a judgment awarding certain moneys in his hands to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by escheat. The money has been involved in several appeals to this court and much of the appellant’s present argument has been decided adversely to him. Prom the Tucker v. Binenstock litigation (310 Pa. 254, 165 A. 247 — a proceeding in equity for an accounting), “it was clear [as we later express
Subsequently to the decision in the Tucker ease, supra, the Commonwealth laid claim to the money in question by escheat under the Act of May 2,1889, P. L. 66, Sec. 3, as amended by the Act of May 11, 1911, P. L. 281, 27 PS §333, the money being at that time (in the eyes of the law) in the hands of Binenstoek. For the purpose of pursuing the Commonwealth’s claim, the present escheators were duly appointed on November 30, 1939. The first petition filed by them in the escheat proceeding which they instituted came before this court in Commonwealth et al. v. Binenstock, 348 Pa. 610, 614, 36 A. 2d 333, on their appeal from an order of the court below sustaining the defendant’s preliminary objections to the petition. Upon considering the question thus presented, “We all agree [d] that the petition states a prima facie case within Section 3 of the Act of May 2, 1889, P. L. 66, as amended, and requires an answer.” Accordingly, we reversed and remitted the record for further proceedings.
Thereafter, an answer was filed and the case came on for trial by jury. The trial judge entered judgment for the defendant on the ground that the petitioners had failed to prove their allegations. Again, this court was appealed to and again we reversed the judgment and awarded a new trial: see Commonwealth, by Truscott et al., v. Binenstock, supra. The ratio decidendi in that case was that the trial judge had erroneously sustained objections to the petitioners’ reading into evidence certain parts of the petition which were insufficiently denied and certain statements made by the
On this appeal, the appellant contends that the case does not come under the escheat statutes and, further, that the evidence does not support the judgment.
As to the first contention, the appellant is but again arguing that the petitioners failed to make out a prima facie case. In Anew of our decision in Commonwealth et al. v. Binenstock, supra, the argument plainly lacks efficacy. Apart from what the appellant may still think are the requirments of the Act of 1889 as amended, supra, he is now faced with the law of the case as heretofore laid down in this litigation. See Eaton v. New York Life Insurance Company of New York, 318 Pa. 532, 179 A. 67, where the appeal was disposed of in a per curiam opinion solely on the law-of-the-case doctrine. See also Allen v. Pennypacker, 302 Pa. 495, 497, 153 A. 734; McMahon’s Estate, 215 Pa. 10, 11, 64 A. 321; and Creachen v. Bromley Brothers Carpet Company, 214 Pa. 15, 18-19, 63 A. 195. It is true that the rule is not an inflexible one. In Reamer’s Estate, 331 Pa. 117, 122-123, 200 A. 35, expressly rec
The legal conclusion of the learned court below that the insufficient original and amended answers were in
Here, the contradiction in the answers was of sufficient weight, in the mind of the trial judge, to discredit the defendant’s denials, the defendant not having furnished a satisfactory explanation for his failure originally to deny material averments of the petition. Accordingly, the fact-finder, attaching no weight to the defendant’s later attempt at denials, expressly found “that the facts alleged in the petition of the plaintiffs are true.” Thus, the findings are supported by substantial evidence; confirmed by the court en banc; and, consequently, binding upon us on appeal.
Judgment affirmed.