Appellant, Garden State Standardbred Sales Company, Inc., obtained an arbitration award against Appellee, Clarence Seese. Judgment was entered in the Superior Court of New Jersey and thereafter filed in Pennsylvania pursuant to the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 4306. Subsequently, Appellant took the deрosition of Clarence Seese in the offices of Appellant’s counsel, and garnishment proceedings were commenced by filing interrogatories on Clarence I. Seese and Leah M. Seese, his wife, as tenants by the entireties, and garnishees. Mr. and Mrs. Seese filed preliminary objections claiming that as tenants by the entireties they were immune from garnishment, and that under Rules 3144 and 3253, Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S., Appellant’s interrogatories were improper. The Honorable Judith Friedman, Court of Common Pleas, Allegheny County, granted the Appellees’ preliminary objections, finding that a tenancy by the entireties can not be garnished, that garnishment proceedings were imрroperly used to invalidate the conveyance of individually owned property into an entireties account, and that an action in equity under Section 4 of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act was the proper procedure to follow to invalidate the allegedly fraudulent conveyance. This appeal followed.
First, Appellant claims that the Seeses were proper garnishees under Rule 3101(b), Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S. which states:
Rule 3101. Definitions. Garnishee
(b) Any person may be a garnishee and shall be deemed to have possession of property of the defendant if he
(1) owes a debt to the defendant;
(2) has property of the defendant in his custody, possession or control;
However, the defendant, Clarence Seese, is one of the owners of the tenancy, and he cannot owe a debt to himself, nor can he be garnishee of his own property which he possesses and controls. Garnishment is a “proceeding through which a creditor collects his debt out of property of the debtor in the hands of a third party,”
Triffin v. Interstate Printing Co., Inc.,
Lastly, a tenancy by the entireties is not a person as defined by Rule 76, Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S., and only persons may be garnishees according to Rule 3101. Persons are defined to include a corporation, partnership and association, as well as a natural persоn, and a tenancy by the entireties is none of these. Therefore, for all these reasons, the garnishment of Clarence Seese and his wife Leah Seese, as tenants by the entireties, was improper, and preliminary objections were correctly granted.
If Appellant is seeking to identify entireties property held by a third party, then the proper procedure is to take testimony pursuant to Rule 3117, Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S., Discovery in Aid of Execution. This procedure may be used to subpoena the defendant or a garnishee in order to ascertain the assets of the defendant and their location. Then, in the case of a joint bank account held by the defendant as tenant in the entireties, the bank in which the account is located is the proper garnishee.
In Patterson, the judgment creditor executed on property held by the debtor and his wife as tenants in the entireties. The debtor and his wife objected to the execution and levy, claiming the property was immune from execution because it was held by the entireties. A hearing was held to determine the true state of ownership of the entireties properties, and although there had been no garnishment of the checking accounts at the time of the hearing, the checking account was discussed and testimony was adduced concerning the origins of the funds in the checking account. The triаl court held that the conveyances were fraudulent and the assets held as tenancies by the entireties were not immune to execution. In affirming in part and reversing in part, we held that the hearing held by the trial court, in which it was determined that certain conveyances into the checking accounts were fraudulent, was procedurally proper. However, where there was no evidence adduced at the hearing concerning the ownership of the savings account and the origin of the funds in that account, and the debtor did not realize that the savings account was subject to execution and therefore did not raise any defense to that execution, the trial court erred in including the savings account in its adjudication.
The trial court, relying on
Corbett v. Hunter,
Greater Valley
concerned the question of whether an alleged fraudulent transfer of property may be set aside in supplementary proceedings in aid of execution, Rule 3118, Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S. The court held that although each state which has adopted the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance is free to devise its own enforcement procedures within constitutional limits,
Schline v. Kine,
The
Greater Valley
court went on to hold that the issue of rights to property in the hands of third persons sought to be executеd against is properly adjudicated in proceedings in which a defendant’s rights are fully protected. The procedures recommended were those in place at the time in the Sheriff’s Interpleader Act, in the trial courts sitting as a courts in equity, in garnishment proceedings in which there was a right to trial by jury or in an action in ejeсtment. In general, the
Greater Valley
court held that the defendant’s rights must be protected by a “full plenary proceeding and the attendant safeguards thereof,”
Id.,
We are persuaded by the reasoning of
Gulf Mortgage and Realty Investments v. Alten,
Given this reasoning and the supreme court’s holding in Greater Valley, which was evidently designed to afford defendants cleаr procedural safeguards in claims in which a fraudulent conveyance is alleged, we must conclude that the trial court was correct in ruling that the use of the garnishment proceeding was improper. This proceeding, then, can not be used as a substitute for the institution of an equitable action in which the conflicting rights of the рarties in the contested property may be adjudicated prior to the institution of execution proceedings and the service of the writ upon the garnishee which automatically results in the attachment of the property. Rule 3111(b), Pa.R.C.P., 42 Pa.C.S.
We are also constrained to agree with the trial court that in the instant cаse, because of precedent in our supreme court and in this court, a conveyance to an entireties account may be set aside by Section 4 of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act, 39 Pa.S. § 354.
First National Bank of Marietta v. Hoffines,
This section provides:
§ 354. Conveyances by insolvent
Every conveyance made and every obligation incurred by a person who is or will be thereby rendered insolvent, is fraudulent as to creditors, without regard to his actual intent, if the conveyance is made or the obligation is incurred without a fair consideration, (emphasis added)
Under this section, if a creditor establishes that the grantor was in debt at the time of a conveyance, and the conveyance was made for inadequate or nominál consideration, then the сonveyance is presumptively fraudulent as to the debtor’s creditors. The burden then shifts to the defendant to establish by clear and convincing evidence, either that the debtor was solvent at the time of the conveyance and was not rendered insolvent by the conveyance, or that the debtor received fair consideration for the conveyance.
Speiser v. Schmidt,
However, under § 7 of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act, 39 Pa.S. § 357, the plaintiff must adequately establish the fraudulent intent of the conveying debtor.
Leopold v. Tuttle,
§ 357. Conveyance made with intent to defraud
Every conveyance made and every obligation incurred with actual intent, as distinguished from intent presumed in law, to hinder, delay, or defraud either present or future creditors, is fraudulent as to both present and future creditors.
This section of the Act does not require that the debtor make himself insolvent or execution proof, only that the debtor convеy with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors. “Since fraud is usually denied, it must be inferred from all facts and circumstances surrounding the conveyance, including subsequent conduct.”
Godina v. Oswald,
While we agree that any property conveyed into entireties property in fraud of creditors is not immune frоm execution, we invite the General Assembly to adopt the view that the presumption of a fraudulent conveyance which results from a conveyance when the debtor is insolvent or rendered insolvent (§ 354) should be inapplicable when the conveyance results in the creation of entireties property, and that in such cases the plaintiff should be required to prove fraudulent intent under section 357. We ask the General Assembly to do so because the application of section 4 of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act has resulted in holdings which are contrary to public policy and to the intent of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act, that is to invalidate conveyances made in fraud of creditors. For example, in
Stinner, supra,
it was held that the regular and routine deposit of a debtor/husband’s salary and bonuses into an account held by husband and wife as tenants by the entireties was a fraudulent conveyance, and proof that the funds in a joint checking account were dеposits of debtor/husband’s salary meant that the deposits were in defraud of creditors because there was no fair consideration for the conveyance, and therefore, the checking account, held by the entireties, was available to satisfy the judgment against the debt- or/husband.
Patterson v. Hopkins,
As Judge McEwen noted, in
Stinner, supra,
300 Pa.Superior Ct. at 358,
When a conveyance occurs, satisfying the statutory requirements of § 4, but otherwise showing that there was no intent to defraud one of the tenant’s creditors, then property held in the entireties should not be available for execution to creditors of one of the tenants. Otherwise, every indebted spouse who is part of a household, who is the sole income-earner, and who regularly and routinely deposits income into a joint account used to pay household expenses is potentially making a fraudulent conveyance. If we also hold that such deposits lack fair consideration, as we did in
Stinner, supra,
300 Pa.Superior Ct. 351,
In furtherance of that goal of extreme care, we believe that when a conveyance is challenged, evidence should be adduced showing that the conveyance was made in fraud of creditors, and that there was an intent to defraud as required under Section 357 of the Fraudulence Conveyance
The change we propose today in this case need not cause concern for the future ability of creditors to invalidate conveyances which are fraudulent. Such instances will be marked by signs of fraudulent intent such as the timely conveyance of property long held in the debtor’s name only,
First National Bank of Marietta v. Hoffines, supra,
the conveyance of a considerable portion of the debtor’s estate, or of such substantial property as a home, shares of stock, or a partnership interest, (property which is not regularly and frequently transferred),
Baker v. Geist,
Therefore, we hold that an estate by the entireties is not a proper garnishee, and that a garnishment action may not be used to invalidate a fraudulent conveyance. Furthermore, because of prior authority, we are сonstrained to hold that an equitable action under section 4 of the Fraudulent Conveyance Act is proper, although the better course would be to require that the creditor seeking to invalidate a conveyance prove fraudulent intent when property is conveyed to an estate by the entireties as required by section
Order affirmed.
