2 A.2d 826 | Pa. | 1938
This is an appeal from the final decree of the Common Pleas of Blair County sitting in equity. The case was heard upon bill, answer and replication, preliminary objections having been overruled. When a case is submitted to the court on the pleadings, all the averments of the bill not denied in the answer must be taken as true. All the averments of the bill denied in the answer must be considered as nonexisting; all allegations in the answer not denied or explained in the replication must be accepted. See Brooks et al. v. Coyle etal.,
It is difficult to follow all of appellant's contentions as they relate to equitable jurisdiction, but from the questions involved it appears appellant seeks to cancel the deed to appellee, and in effect confirm appellant's title obtained through foreclosure. *549
The proceeding was started after the acknowledgment of the sheriff's deed in open court, and delivery to appellee. The proper procedure to set aside a sheriff's sale for inadequacy of price or irregularity is by petition and rule to show cause before acknowledgment of the deed: Knox v. Noggle,
The court below concluded that appellee's mortgage fully described and identified the property involved, and held that the "two descriptions are for the same property," reciting the above quoted provision. If the omission of the "block" letter was misleading, as appellant contends, appellant used the identical language in describing the property. As to the fact that a brick house supplanted the frame house, the premises were minutely described by metes and bounds with a fixed monument as a starting point, and streets and adjoiners were given. Appellant, in searching the record, could not have been mistaken as to the existence of appellee's mortgage. A mistake based on neglect cannot nullify the effect of the recording statutes, in equity or at law. The purpose of the recording statutes, inter alia, is to notify future encumbrancers, and one intending to be such is bound to search the record. The person recording an instrument is protected by these acts.
Appellant's contention that appellee is unjustly enriched is answered by the pleadings; they not only refute any possibility of a mistake, but show no enrichment of appellee as a result of appellant's advances to Grannas. Under these circumstances, appellant cannot complain of any benefit to appellee in the new building. Since this was erected prior to appellant's loan, appellant *550 is in no position to deprive appellee of any part of that benefit.
Contrary to appellant's contention as to the amounts due, the court below found that appellee's mortgage for future advances covered indebtedness within its scope created prior to appellant's mortgage. This was a correct view. Appellant urges that the extension of the time of payment of appellee's mortgage, made after appellant's mortgage was given, gave the junior mortgage a prior lien. The lien of a mortgage continues until the mortgage debt is paid: Tryon v. Munson,
Decree affirmed at appellant's cost.