OPINION OF THE COURT
Greater New Castle Development Corporation (GNCDC) appeals from an order of the Superior Court,
The facts agreed to by the parties and submitted to the trial court upon stipulation established the following: The appellee conducted business as a sole proprietor in Lawrence County under the registered fictitious name of Bethel Steel Co. In 1970, appellee was seeking to obtain low interest loan funds for infusion into his business. He
Shortly after the appellee conveyed the property to GNCDC, appellee and GNCDC executed a lease whereby appellant GNCDC leased the premises back to the appellee for a term of fifteen (15) years. The appellee agreed to pay a total rental of $231,283.30, payable at the rate of $1,284.91 a month, and to pay all annual taxes, insurance premiums and all other annual charges and assessments.
At the time of the conveyance and lease arrangement, appellant executed a first mortgage and mortgage note in favor of six financial institutions in the amount of $80,-000. 00.at an interest rate of nine (9%) percent per annum.
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In 1977, the appellee began to experience financial difficulties in his business and he defaulted on his lease. He made no rental payment after December 1, 1977, and he failed to pay the real estate taxes due on the premises for the year 1978. In February, 1979, appellant notified the appellee in writing that because of appellee’s default in rental payments, and his failure to pay the taxes and keep the premises in repair, the lease between the parties was terminated. The appellant, using self-help, had taken possession of the property prior to February, 1979 and, after delivering the written notice of termination, re-let the premises to another tenant. Following the dispossession of appellee and the termination of his lease, appellee filed a complaint in equity against GNCDC seeking, inter alia, an order declaring that appellant held the subject property as trustee of a resulting trust for the benefit of appellee. The lower court granted appellee the relief he requested and the Superior Court affirmed. Upon the petition of GNCDC, we granted allocatur.
A resulting trust arises where a person makes or causes to be made a disposition of property under circumstances which raise an inference that he does not intendthat the person taking or holding the property should have the beneficial interest therein, unless the inference is rebutted or the beneficial interest is otherwise effectively disposed of.
Policarpo v. Policarpo,
The appellant argues that the trial court erred, as a matter of law, in finding that the parties intended that appellee retain the right to the beneficial interest in the subject property. Appellant contends that no circumstance exists in this case which raises an inference that GNCDC should not have the beneficial interest in the property conveyed to it. We agree. The parties stipulated that the
One who seeks to establish the existence of a resulting trust bears a heavy burden of proof; the evidence must be “clear, direct, precise, and convincing.” Policarpo v. Policarpo,410 Pa. 543 ,189 A.2d 171 (1963); see also Wosche v. Kraning,353 Pa. 481 ,46 A.2d 220 (1946); cf. Sayre Estate,443 Pa. 548 ,279 A.2d 51 (1971); Brose Estate,416 Pa. 386 ,206 A.2d 301 (1965). This Court had held that “unless the evidence of the existence of an oral trust is of the highest probative value, equity should not act to convert an absolute ownership into an estate of lesser quantity.” Sechler v. Sechler,403 Pa. 1 , 7,169 A.2d 78 , 81 (1961). The facts and circumstances from which a court may find a resulting trust should be of no lesser probative value.
The appellee argues unconvincingly that the facts arising in this case establish the creation of a resulting trust. In support of his argument, appellee points to: (1) the agreed purpose of the conveyance to appellant, namely, to enable appellee to obtain financing with PIDA, and (2) the fact that the parties anticipated a reconveyance of the property to appellee after full compliance with all of the terms of the lease. Neither of these circumstances suggest that the parties intended that appellant have no beneficial interest.
In order for appellee to obtain the desired benefits of low interest business financing through a PIDA loan, the subject property had to be owned by the appellant. This fact alone does not raise the inference necessary for a resulting trust to emerge. Considering the conveyance to appellant and the lease that was executed, the parties intended that appellant be vested with absolute title. There is nothing in the Act or in the agreement between the parties that suggests otherwise. The Act does not provide for a reconveyance of the real estate by an industrial development agency to the transferor who benefits from the loan between the agency and the authority. Such a reconveyance could be provided for by appropriate provisions in the agreement between the agency and the transferor. In this case, the evidence fails to establish the parties agreed to such provisions. But, even if such agreement was found to exist in the instant case, this would not automatically confirm circumstances creating a resulting trust. It would merely establish a contractual right on the part of the appellee to have the property reconveyed to him upon his compliance with the terms of the agreement, which, in this case, is the lease. The parties stipulated, and the lower court by adopting the stipulation found, that the parties
The order of the Superior Court is reversed. 4
Notes
. Under the provisions of the Industrial Development Authority Act, only an Industrial Development Agency, as defined by the Act, may apply for a loan in connection with an industrial development project. 73 P.S. § 306.
. The mortgage document recorded in the Recorder’s Office of Lawrence County identified the mortgagor as the appellant Greater New
. The appellee raises an additional argument that his due process rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution were violated by the manner in which appellant took possession of the subject premises. The Superior Court refused to decide this question because it was not set forth in the statement of questions involved as required by Pa.R.A.P. 2116; and therefore, it was not properly before that court. For this reason we will not consider the question.
