3 Watts 188 | Pa. | 1834
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Several errors have been assigned in this case; but it appears to me that the only point in which the district court erred, that this court can review and correct, is in the charge to the jury; in which his honour the judge advised them that the deed of conveyance made by Lindell to Woods, and the bond given at the same time by Woods to Lindell, conditioned for a reconveyance of the property upon Lind ell’s reimbursing the purchase money with interest thereon, beside costs and charges which had been paid by Woods in consequence of the purchase, were upon their face per se a conditional sale, and not a mortgage.
The deed of conveyance and the bond, as was very properly stated by the judge in the court below, are to be considered as only one instrument ; for they are constituent parts of the execution of the same agreement, executed both at the same time as appears by a declaration to this effect contained in the bond. They also appear to have been both acknowledged at the same time before the same officer, and to have been recorded within twenty days afterwards.' If the bond, or deed of defeasance as it may be called, instead of having been put into the form of a distinct and separate instrument from the deed of conveyance, had been introduced into the latter in the form of a clause of defeasance, as is usually done in drawing mortgages, I apprehend that no one would have hesitated a moment to pronounce it a mortgage. Indeed it ssems to me, from the whole current of authorities on this subject, it could not have been considered otherwise either in law or equity. The conveyance and the bond then being deemed but constituent parts of one and the same
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.