Opinion by
This appeal raises the question whether a wife may recover from her husband, in an action of assumpsit, while the parties are separated but undivorced, one-half of the proceeds of the face value of a note which was executed to the parties in return for money lent to the maker by them during the period of their cohabitation as husband and wife.
The complaint alleges that $400, representing half of the face value of the note, was advanced by plaintiff out of her separate funds (the other half apparently having been supplied by defendant); that the promissory judgment note in question was executed by John Wallaesa to the parties for sufficient consideration on or about October 5, 1951 and was due one year after its date of execution; that the note by its terms authorized confession of judgment against the maker; that the note is now overdue, no payments having been made toward its satisfaction; that the maker is able to pay but refuses to do so; that on November 18, 1952 defendant “maliciously and without reasonable cause” deserted plaintiff and since that date has been living separate and apart from her; that defendant, despite repeated requests by plaintiff, has refused to enter confession of judgment on the note, or to deliver it to plaintiff to enable her to do so; and *195 that such conduct on his part is tantamount to a conversion thereof to his own use.
The court below sustained preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, dismissed the complaint and entered summary judgment for defendant on the ground that the relief sought was in substance a request for a partition of personalty owned by the parties as tenants by entireties, and that assumpsit would not lie to effect such partition. Plaintiff has appealed.
That the note is owned by the parties as tenants by entireties is abundantly clear from the allegation of the complaint itself. In Pennsylvania tenancy by entireties arises wherever there is a conveyance of either personalty or realty to a husband and wife, and its incidents obtain where the subject of ownership is a chose in action.
Madden v. Gosztonyi S. & T. Co.,
The Married Women’s Property Act of this Commonwealth (Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, sec. 3, as amended by the Act of March 27, 1913, P. L. 14, sec. 1, 48 PS sec. Ill, provides that “. . . a married woman may sue and be sued civilly, in all respects, and in any form of action, and with the same effect and results and consequences, as an unmarried person; but she may not sue her husband, except in a proceeding for divorce, or in a proceeding to protect and recover her separate property . . .” Undisputably the note here in question is not, as to her interest, the separate property of plaintiff within contemplation of the statute. As indicated supra, it is entireties property, and the
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fact that plaintiff furnished part of the consideration for it does not militate against its status as such.
Hunt v. Mestrezat,
Appellant urges vigorously that her right to maintain this action at law emanates from the Act of May 1, 1913, P. L. 146, sec. 1, 48 PS sec. 114, which provides that “. . . any wife, who has been deserted, abandoned, or driven from her home by her husband, may sue her husband civilly, in any court of this Commonwealth having the jurisdiction, upon any cause of action now existing or hereafter accruing, with like effect as if such wife were a feme sole . . . Provided, however, That nothing in this act contained shall be deemed to destroy the right of survivorship in any land heretofore or hereafter conveyed to such wife and husband jointly.” Desertion is alleged in the complaint but it is a legal conclusion of the pleader which, as distinguished from facts pleaded, is not admitted by the preliminary objection.
Narehood v. Pearson,
Appellant contends for an interpretation of the right conferred by the Act of May 1, 1913 upon a deserted wife to sue her husband as a feme sole “upon any cause of action” as a blanket power unrestrained by the nature of the property rights involved.
When the Married Women’s Property Acts were enacted by the legislatures of the several states during the latter part of the nineteenth century, varying views were entertained by the courts of those states as to the effect of this new legislation upon tenancy
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by entireties. Pennsylvania was among that group of states which held that the destroyed incidents of the husband’s dominance and the wife’s disabilities during coverture were incidents of the common-law marital status and not peculiarly incidents of tenancy by entireties and, therefore, that tenancy by entireties should continue to exist, although without such incidents. Under the modern Pennsylvania concept of such estate, neither party may exclude the other from occupancy; neither party alone may alienate or affect any part of the principal or income by separate action except that one spouse alone may execute a lease for the benefit of both
(O’Malley v. O’Malley,
In
Collins v. Wilkinson,
The Married Women’s Property Act of 1893, and likewise the Act of May 1, 1913, being in derogation of the common law and having been enacted prior to the Statutory Construction Act, are to be strictly construed.
2
No right is expressly conferred on a deserted
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wife to sue her husband for a division of entireties property. The legislature in enacting a statute is presumed to have been familiar with the law as it then existed and the construction which the courts had placed upon it.
Board of Christian Ed. of Presbyterian Church v. Philadelphia School District,
Although we have been cited to, and our independent research has revealed, decisions permitting one spouse an accounting of moneys in joint bank accounts held by husband and wife as entireties personalty, we do not consider them conclusive of the present issue for two reasons. First, deposits in bank accounts, by the agreement contained in the signature card, are easily available to either tenant and the bank is bound to honor the request for withdrawal by one of the parties. Second, in practically every one of these bank account withdrawal cases relief was sought in equity by a bill for an accounting.
Berhalter v. Berhalter,
Nor does the construction of the Act of May 1, 1913 in the three cases which have been adjudicated by our appellate courts in the 40 years during which it has been in effect strengthen appellant’s position. In
Ertel v. McCloskey,
Appellant argues that her husband’s retention of exclusive possession of the note was tantamount to an offer to destroy the tenancy, which offer she accepted by instituting this action. True, tenancy by entireties may be terminated by agreement of the parties.
Kauffman v. Stenger,
We agree with the learned court below that “Upon the facts averred the complaint shows with certainty that the law will not permit a recovery by plaintiff-wife.” Consequently, summary judgment was properly entered.
Sun Ray Drug Co. v. Lawler,
Judgment affirmed.
