90 Pa. Super. 560 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
KELLER, J., dissents.
Argued April 13, 1927.
This is a feigned issue under the sheriff's interpleader act. The plaintiff held a mortgage against certain property of the Somerset Cambria Smokeless Coal Company, a Corporation, on which the latter had for a considerable time carried on a coal mining operation. A judgment bond accompanied the mortgage, and pursuant to the warrant of attorney contained therein, a judgment was confessed against the company for the amount of the mortgage debt of $10,000 and interest. The mining property and the personal property appurtenant thereto was sold as real estate by the sheriff after regular advertisement, and on May 12, 1924, a return of the writ was made showing a sale of the property to the plaintiff. Subsequently a deed was acknowledged by the sheriff in open court and delivered to the plaintiff who immediately thereafter took possession. On January 26, 1925, the Crown Coal Coke Company issued an execution on a judgment against the Somerset Cambria Smokeless Coal Company and a levy was made on the machinery and equipment theretofore sold to Colvin. Out of that levy grew the pending issue. At the trial, the plaintiff claimed a title to the property by virtue of the sheriff's sale above recited. The court held however that no title passed by that sale inasmuch as it did not appear from the record that the sheriff had levied on the property. Evidence was given to show that the sheriff proceeded to the premises and took possession soon after the plaintiff's writ was placed in his hands, but the court instructed the jury as a matter of law that the failure of the sheriff to endorse on his writ the levy of the real estate he undertook to sell rendered the sale illegal as the sheriff was without power to convey title. With respect *563
to the endorsement of a levy, it was decided in Weidensaul v. Reynolds,
If, however, the contention of the appellee is correct, the action of the court cannot be sustained for another reason. It appears from the record that the purchaser at the sheriff's sale is in possession of the property. He is there under the title acquired at that sale, or if that is invalid, he is in possession under a mortgage with respect to which the mortgagor has made default, and if the property levied on by the sheriff under the appellee's execution is part of the mortgaged premises, no argument is necessary to show that the mine cannot be despoiled of the machinery and appliances necessary to its operation by seizure on a writ of fieri facias against the mortgagor. The only real question in the case, therefore, is whether the property involved was part of the mining plant. It is established law that if the articles, whether fast or loose, are indispensable in carrying on the specific business, it becomes a part of the realty: Pyle v. Pennock, 2 W. S. 390; Ege v. Kille,
The judgment is reversed with a venire de novo.
KELLER, J., dissents.