13 A.2d 916 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1940
Argued March 5, 1940. The question involved upon this appeal is largely one *486 of procedure. It arose out of a scire facias proceeding to revive and continue the lien of a judgment for $2,500 entered, on November 17, 1936, at No. 1120 December Term, 1936, by the plaintiff, appellant herein, against the defendants, upon an alleged copy of a lost bond and warrant to confess judgment (verified by affidavit) the payment of which was secured by a mortgage for that amount upon certain properties owned by appellees in Kingston Borough.
Several historical facts are not controverted. In 1927 appellees were the owners of three lots — two on Colonial Avenue and the other on Third Avenue. In August of that year they mortgaged one of the Colonial Avenue lots and the Third Avenue lot to appellant for $2,500. As the result of an execution issued upon the judgment in January, 1937, these two lots were bid in by appellant at a sheriff's sale for the amount of the taxes and costs.
The controversy began with the issuing by appellant on December 16, 1939, of a scire facias, to No. 262 January Term, 1939, to revive the judgment originally entered at No. 1120 December Term, 1936. Appellees filed an affidavit of defense to the scire facias; appellant took a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense; the court below held the affidavit sufficient and discharged his rule; this appeal followed.
Reduced to its final analysis, the substance of the defense sought to be interposed by appellees was that the paper upon which the judgment was originally entered is not a true copy of the only bond they signed in connection with the giving of the mortgage.
They admitted the execution of the mortgage but averred it was given "with the full understanding and upon the specific agreement between the plaintiff and the defendants, that the said two lots would be solely responsible for the payment of the said sum of money."
In the third paragraph of their affidavit appellees alleged: "That at the time of the execution of the said *487 mortgage in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants did not sign and execute a mortgage bond in favor of the plaintiff, but, pursuant to an agreement the defendants signed a paper containing the said agreement and confessing judgment for the said Twenty-Five Hundred Dollars ($2,500) and restricting the lien of such judgment if confessed, to the two lots described in the mortgage."
The seventh paragraph of the affidavit denied knowledge of the entry of a judgment on a purported copy of a mortgage bond, averring appellees' belief that the judgment entered contained the agreement restricting the lien to the two lots mortgaged. The other paragraphs of the affidavit seem to set up a theory of payment and satisfaction of the debt for which the bond was given, by assuming the making of the alleged mutual agreement restricting the lien of any judgment entered thereon to the two lots described in the mortgage and averring their acquisition at sheriff's sale by appellant.
Appellant based his motion for judgment upon the proposition that the appellees were attacking the validity of the original judgment and had not pleaded any matters of defense occurring since its entry.
The defenses which may be interposed to a scire facias to revive a judgment are limited, in general, to those arising since the original entry. Thus, in First National Bank Trust Co. v.Laubach,
In Miller Bros. v. Jas. Keenan,
We are not impressed with the contention of appellees that they have, in effect, pleaded payment of the original judgment by averring acquisition by appellant of the two lots described in the mortgage. Their position assumes that a true copy of the only bond they gave would have contained the alleged clause restricting the lien of any judgment entered thereon to those two lots. The copy of the bond upon which the judgment was confessed contains no such clause; the judgment is valid and regular upon its face and binds all real estate owned by appellees at the date of its entry. As already indicated, the meat of their defense is that the copy upon which judgment was entered was not a true copy of the instrument they signed. This, we think, is a direct attack upon the validity of the original judgment.
Appellees have a right to make such attack, but they can do so only by a petition to open the judgment upon which the scire facias issued. In our opinion their affidavit of defense to the scire facias is insufficient.
It is stated in the opinion of the court below that such a petition has been presented since the filing of the affidavit of defense and a rule granted thereon. In a memorandum refusing a reargument of the present rule it was erroneously stated the court had "opened the judgment." The record shows this was an inadvertent remark; the only matter before us is the discharge of appellant's rule for judgment.
The case of Sankey v. Reed,
While the result may not be different in a given case, the distinction between defenses which may be raised on a scire facias to revive a judgment, and those available only on a petition to open, is founded on a logical basis and firmly established in our law.
The order discharging appellant's rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense is reversed and the rule reinstated, without prejudice to the right of appellees to proceed on their petition to open the original judgment and to apply to the court below for a stay of the scire facias.