161 A. 898 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1932
Argued May 5, 1932. Mary R. Vandergrift, a resident of this State, died January 12, 1929, intestate, leaving to survive her a husband, Louis F. Vandergrift, the appellant, a son, and two grandchildren, who are the children of a deceased son. By deed dated September 20, 1889, and duly recorded in Allegheny County, the decedent became the owner of a certain piece of real estate in the City of Pittsburgh. On May 11, 1928, the decedent *295 and her husband executed and delivered a deed for said land to herself and her husband. The deed was in statutory form, "Louis F. Vandergrift and Mary R. Vandergrift, his wife," being named as grantees. After Mrs. Vandergrift's death the Commonwealth assessed a transfer inheritance tax on this real estate as the property of the decedent. The husband appealed from the assessment on the ground that by the deed referred to he and his wife became seized of the real estate as tenants by entireties; that upon the death of his wife he became the sole owner thereof, and that, therefore, no transfer inheritance tax was due. The Commonwealth answered that the deed conveyed only an undivided one-half interest to the husband; that the other one-half interest remained in the wife and that the tenure of the parties after the delivery of the deed was as tenants in common and, at the death of the wife, her undivided one-half interest in the real estate became subject to the payment of transfer inheritance tax. The court below adopted the view of the Commonwealth and dismissed the petition. The husband brings this appeal.
The controlling question presented for our determination is, what estate did appellant and his wife acquire by virtue of the deed to which reference has been made. The answer seems to depend upon the answer to another question which counsel for both parties correctly state thus: "May a married woman, who is the sole owner of real property, convey it, with the joinder of her husband, to her husband and herself, without the intervention of a trustee, so as to create in the husband and wife an estate by entireties?" The question is new and not free from difficulty. There would seem to be no doubt that the decedent intended to convey to her husband and herself an estate by entireties. It is a cardinal rule in the interpretation of conveyances that every deed should be so construed *296
as to give effect to the intent of the parties, unless inconsistent with some rule of law or repugnant to the terms of the grant. The common law rule was that a conveyance to husband and wife is presumed to create an estate by entireties: Merritt v. Whitlock,
The court below held that she could not do so, because she could not convey directly to herself. It seems that this was the rule under the common law theory of grants or transfers of an interest in land, which required distinct and separate grantors and grantees. But our Act of May 13, 1927, P.L. 984, known as the Uniform Interparty Agreement Act, and entitled "An Act relating to transactions between a person acting on his own behalf and the same person acting jointly with others, and to make uniform the law relating thereto," provided as follows: "That a conveyance, release or sale may be made to, or by, two or more persons acting jointly, and one or more, but *297
less than all of these persons, acting either by himself or themselves or with other persons, and a contract may be made between such parties." The opinion of the court below makes no reference to this statute. To us it seems clear that one of the manifest purposes of the statute was to enable one person to make a conveyance of his land to another person jointly with himself and in that manner to divest himself of his entire estate therein. Husband and wife have long ceased to be one person in the contemplation of our statutory law. The wife has now full property rights independent of her husband. The Act of June 3, 1911, P.L. 631, declared "that it shall be lawful for a married woman to make conveyances of real estate to her husband as if she were a feme sole." In spite of the "legal notion of the unity of two persons, who are husband and wife, which gives occasion to the construction of an entirety of interest on their tenancy" (1 Preston on Estates, p. 132), in point of fact, a husband and wife are distinct and individual persons, and, as we have shown, land may be conveyed to them in severalty, they thereby being treated in such a case without any respect to their social union, as other distinct and individual persons. In our view the Act of 1927, when considered in the light of the statutes enlarging the powers of married women and securing them control of their individual property, real and personal, should be construed as making it possible for a married woman to convey her real estate directly to her husband and herself in the same manner that she could convey it to any other person jointly with her. We think that the words "other persons" in the Act of 1927 should be interpreted to include the husband or wife of a grantor in a deed of conveyance. This was the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island in Lawton v. Lawton,
The decree of the orphans' court is reversed and the petition is reinstated, with direction to enter an order not inconsistent with this opinion, costs of this appeal to be paid by the appellee.