62 A.2d 46 | Pa. | 1948
In this action, which involves rival claims to the ownership of a house, there is no dispute between the parties as to the applicable principles of law. The only question is whether defendants have produced evidence sufficient in quantity and quality to support their alleged title.
The suit is in ejectment. Arthur C. Riffle, prior to his death in 1947, was the owner of a farm in Monongahela Township, Greene County, and a small tract of *317 2 1/2 acres immediately adjoining it in Cumberland Township. In 1925 Robert Shimek, defendant, then a lad ten years of age, entered the employ of Riffle and his wife and continued to work for them on their farm until 1946. In 1938 Riffle had a house built, at a cost of $900, on the Cumberland Township tract, and it is that house which is the subject of the present controversy. Riffle and his wife deeded it in 1947 to plaintiffs, Clarence Rarry, who was Riffle's nephew, and his wife Rebecca Rarry, in consideration of a $6,000 purchase-money mortgage executed by the vendees. Plaintiffs claim under that deed. While they admit that Riffle built the house for free occupancy by the Shimeks they contend that this tenancy was to exist only as long as Shimek remained in the Riffle's employ, and that it was never intended that he be given, nor was he given, any title or muniment of title. On the other hand, Shimek asserts that Riffle made him a parol gift of the house in return for the faithful service that he had rendered for many years at extremely low wages. The Shimeks moved in immediately upon completion, have remained therein until the present time, and during that period have made improvements to the property on the supposition that the house was theirs even though Riffle had not given them a formal instrument of title.
The case was submitted to a jury, which, after a somewhat lengthy but well conducted trial, disagreed. Plaintiffs thereupon filed a motion for judgment on the whole record under the Act of April 20, 1911, P. L. 70. The court sustained the motion and entered judgment in their favor, from which judgment defendants now appeal.
The requisites for the creation of a valid parol gift of land notwithstanding the Statute of Frauds of March 21, 1772, 1 Sm. L. 389, sec. 1, have been clearly defined in a multitude of cases. Those requisites are (1) that the evidence of the gift be direct, positive, express and *318 unambiguous;1 (2) that possession be taken in pursuance of the alleged gift at the time or immediately after it is made, and that such possession be exclusive, open, notorious, adverse and continuous;2 (3) that the donee make valuable improvements on the property for which compensation in damages would be inadequate.3 In our opinion, defendants met these several requirements in a degree sufficient to entitle them to have their claim now presented to another jury.
(1) As to the prescribed quality of the evidence. Most of the reported cases deal with parol gifts between parent and child and stronger evidence is required of the donor's intention to part with his ownership in such transactions than in those between persons who are not blood relatives: Ackerman v.Fisher,
(2) As to the possession taken in pursuance of the gift. Shimek and his family moved into the house immediately after it was completed and have maintained open, notorious and exclusive possession ever since. The testimony is clear to the effect that the entire community knows of their occupancy. Mrs. Shimek testified that she and her husband always publicly claimed it as theirs, — that "everyone knows we claimed it as ours." When asked whether she had ever told Riffle that it was their property she answered by saying, "He always told me it was ours"; and to the question "Did you ever tell him it was your property?" she replied: "I always talked to him in that way." If, therefore, Riffle was constantly declaring that the property belonged to the Shimeks, and they occupied it in pursuance of that understanding, *320 their claim of title was sufficiently adverse; it was not necessary for them to deny physical access of the Riffles to the house or to disturb the friendly relationship which existed with them up to 1946. While Riffle paid the taxes on the property this was explained by the fact that a tax-saving resulted from treating the small tract as a part of his farm in the adjoining township. We think that the possession taken by defendants was sufficient to bring them within the exception to the application to parol gifts of the Statute of Frauds.
(3) As to the improvements made by defendants. The testimony was that, after taking possession, Shimek cemented the basement, put up partitions there for a laundry room, fruit cellar, coal bin and furnace room, installed a sink and a lavatory, built a linen closet in the bathroom, dug a water-well, dug driveways and laid cement sidewalks around the house, graded the lawn, sowed grass seed on it, and planted trees and shrubbery. It is true that he obtained the material for these improvements either as gifts or at small expense, but he himself performed the necessary labor, working nights and at odd hours when not on duty for the Riffles. Plaintiffs deprecate the importance of the improvements on the ground that they were neither valuable nor incapable of being adequately compensated in damages; they were, however, of a permanent nature and of such an extent as to render any attempted revocation of the gift unjust and inequitable. Improvements that might be deemed inconsequential in connection with a property which was itself extremely valuable might properly be regarded as of comparatively large value when made upon a $900 house, and, since Shimek made them by his own labor performed at various odd times, his contention would seem reasonable that compensation therefor in damages must necessarily be inadequate; the requirement of the law that the improvements be such that compensation would be inadequate does not mean, of course, that no amount of compensation, *321
however large, would be sufficient, but that it would be impracticable, if not impossible, to determine such amount with any fair degree of accuracy by ordinary and available standards. There is peculiarly apposite to the present case what was said in Greenwich Coal Coke Co. v. Learn,
Finally, the element of time is an important factor. The Shimeks have been in possession of this house for upwards of ten years and, as was said in Sower's Administrator v. Weaver,
Because of the reasons thus expressed we are of opinion that the action of the court in entering judgment for plaintiffs was erroneous.
Judgment reversed with a procedendo.