14 Pa. Super. 392 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The defendant was the owner of two pieces of real estate. One was deeded to him in the name of Adam Baker and the other in the name of George A. Becker. Subsequently judgments on confessions were entered against him and docketed and indexed as follows: (1) George A. Baker; (2) George A. Becker; (3) George A. Becker; (4) George A. Baker; (5) George A. Baker; (6) George A. Baker, subsequently changed by amendment to George A. Becker. His true name is George A. Becker, but he was known in the community in which he lived by both names, Baker and Becker. It does not affirmatively appear that the appellant knew this latter fact. An execution was issued on the third judgment, by virtue of which both pieces of land were levied on and both were sold; but the bid for the first mentioned piece not having been complied with, the fund for distribution was raised, exclusively, by the sale of the land, the title to which was taken in the name, George A. Becker.
The question presented for our decision is not complicated by any doubt as to the identity of the defendant. Both judgments were entered against the same person, and, as against him, each was a valid judgment: York Bank’s Appeal, 36 Pa. 458; Crouse v. Murphy, 140 Pa. 335.
The evidence adduced on the hearing before the auditor is not printed; therefore, in the absence of a specific finding by him or by the court below that the second judgment creditor had notice in some other way, we must assume that he had no notice of the first judgment except the constructive notice the record of that judgment gave. As a general rule a searcher is not bound to go to the files to ascertain from the confession signed by the defendant whether it is properly docketed: Ridgway’s Appeal, 15 Pa. 177; and even if he had taken that precaution in the present instance it does not appear that he could have ascertained that the name George A. Becker, and not the name George A. Baker as indicated by the docket, was signed to the confession. The witnesses differed in opinion as to whether the signature is Baker or Becker, and neither the auditor nor the court undertook to decide the question. In so doubtful a case it was the duty of the plaintiff in the judgment to furnish the proper information to enable the prothonotary to perform his duty: Act of April 22, 1856, P. L. 532, sec. 3. Presumably the judgment was docketed and indexed as the plaintiff intended it to be.
It is suggested further, and this was practically conceded in the argument, that the defendant is a German, and that amongst native born Germans or persons of German extraction the name Becker has the sound of Baker. This latter fact may be known to Germans and to persons familiar with that language, but it is not a matter of common knowledge except, perhaps, in what are known as the German counties. Baker is an English name and is pronounced by the generality of people as it is spelt. Many of those Avho began with it in learning to spell words of two syllables would find it difficult to believe, after this lapse of time, that there are two ways of spelling Baker. Certainly it cannot be, that, if the defendant in a judgment is a German or a person of German extraction, a different rule applies, than applies to the case of a judgment against a defendant of English or American parentage or extraction. This is not the doctrine of the case of Myer v. Fegaly, 39 Pa. 429, nor, as we shall presently attempt to show, of Bergman’s Appeal, 88 Pa. 120. In the first cited case the defendant’s name as he spelt it Avas Bubb, but in the judgment docket it was written Bobb. The principle of idem sonans was held to apply, because, according to the German mode of pronunciation prevailing in Lancaster county, the two names although slightly variant in spelling were precisely the same in sound. The underlying principle of that decision is found in this excerpt from the opinion of Chief Justice Lowbie : “ Even the language of a people, usually the most universal of its customs, is subject to local differences, which must be respected in the ascertainment of rights. The language spoken in some of the old German parts of this state, is a special custom of this sort.” Whether or not this is a principle of general application, it certainly does not apply here; for it is not a proven fact, nor a matter of which the courts have judicial knowledge, that, in the common speech of the people of Allegheny county, the names Baker and Becker have the same pronunciation. For a further discussion of
We have sought by these preliminary observations to show that the case is simple in the sense that it is free of complications. It is a pure question of law and must be decided on general principles. Baker is an English name. In the vernacular the names Baker and Becker are not the same in sound. Are they so nearly so, that it is a matter of indifference whether a judgment against a person of either name is docketed and indexed in the name of Baker or the name of Becker? If this be the law, then, although the recorded title to the land was in the name of George A. Becker, the owner’s true name, purchasers and creditors of George A. Becker were bound, if they wished to protect themselves before buying or giving credit, to search the judgment dockets for liens against George A. Baker as well as against George A. Becker. The principle invoked would apply in innumerable cases, as for example, to the names Hakes and Hicks, Cole and Cull, Daley and Dilley, Gates and Getz, Barr and Burr, Barry and Berry, Hall and Hale, Lewis and Luce, Bates and Betts, Taylor and Teller, and so on indefinitely.
The general rule of idem sonans has been accurately and clearly stated to be “ that absolute accuracy in spelling names is not required in legal documents or proceedings, either civil or criminal; that if the name as spelled in the document though different from the correct spelling thereof, conveys to the ear when pronounced according to commonly accepted methods, a sound practically identical with the sound of the correct name as commonly pronounced, the name as thus given is a sufficient designation of the individual referred to, and no advantage can be taken of the clerical error: ” 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 122. In the practical application of the rule, greater strictness ought to be observed where the question of constructive notice to purchasers and creditors is involved, than where the question is as to identity of a person named in pleadings. • It is certainly not too strict a construction to hold that one test is whether or not the attentive ear finds difficulty in distinguishing the two names when pronounced. If not, and the similarity in the forms of the names when written, the appearance to the eye, is not such that an ordinary person looking for one, would
The decree is reversed at the costs of the appellee, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to make' distribution in accordance with the first report of the auditor.