69 Pa. Super. 474 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1918
Opinion by
This is an appeal from an order of the court below discharging a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened and Alberta H. Lynn, the wife of the defendant, be allowed to intervene and make defense. The judgment was entered November 15, 1916, by confession upon warrant of attorney contained in a note dated October 16, 1914. Alberta H. Lynn, on January 22, 1917, presented her petition to the court below alleging that the judgment had been entered on November 15, 1916, upon a judgment note dated October 16, 1914, which had been assigned by James B. Cray to W. H. Wilkey on November 14, 1916; that J. H. Lynn, the defendant, was not indebted in any amount, either to the said James R. Cray or the said W. H. Wilkey upon the said note upon which the judgment had been entered by confession; that on November 20, 1916, an exemplification of the record of said judgment had been filed and judgment entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County, upon which judgment an execution had been issued and levied upon a farm upon which the defendant and his wife, the petitioner, had formerly resided, which property had been advertised for sale by the sheriff; that the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County had stayed the execution in order to give the petitioner an opportunity to apply to the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County to open the original judgment; that the said judgment note, upon which the judgment was entered, did not represent or constitute any bona fide indebtedness on the part of the defendant, J. H. Lynn, and that the judgment was entered and the proceedings to collect the same were had in pursuance of a collusive and fraudulent arrangement between said Lynn, the defendant, and said Cray and Wilkey, for the sole purpose of enabling the defendant to transfer the title of the real
It may be conceded that the testimony established that unfortunate differences had arisen between the appellant and her husband, J. H. Lynn, that she had left their common home and instituted an action for divorce, upon the ground of barbarous and cruel treatment; that the husband had threatened that he would cause the farm upon which they had lived to be sold, that he had had an offer for the farm which he was willing to accept and had asked the petitioner to join in the deed, which she had refused to do, and that if the farm is sold by the sheriff under proceedings upon this judgment the effect will be to divest the petitioner’s inchoate right of dower without her consent. The testimony might have warranted a finding that Wilkey, the use-plaintiff, knew that the purpose of the defendant, in not paying this judgment and agreeing that under proceedings thereon the
The judgment was entered, not for the full amount of the note, but for the balance due. The judgment being for a bona fide indebtedness, it is clear that Wilkey has a perfect right to collect the debt by the sale of Lynn’s real estate. If this should operate to destroy the marital rights of the appellant in that real estate, it is because a judicial sale upon a valid judgment passes the title of the defendant therein to the purchaser. Nothing short of the payment of the debt can prevent either the sale or its legal consequences. The plaintiff having a right to collect the judgment, we have nothing to do with his
The order of the court below is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at the cost of the appellant.