10 Pa. 341 | Pa. | 1849
This was an amicable action of ejectment. Bellas, the plaintiff below, claims the land in question, under a warrant of the 6th of December, 1784, to William Grreen; surveyed the 22d of September, 1789, 306J acres, and patented to William Grreen, 23d of February, 1790, who, by deed of assignment, on the 15th of June, 1808, conveyed to William Witman. Judge Witman paid the taxes up to 1815.
The defendant below claims under a tax-sale. They gave in evidence, that the William Grreen tract was taxed from 1815 to 1824 inclusive, and that on the 16th of June, of the latter year, it was struck off to one Edward Staples, under whom the defendants claimed. It was in evidence, that Staples’ first, and indeed only appearance in Northumberland county, was at the sales in June, 1824, when he bid off this tract and some fourteen others. He paid some-money, part of which would seem to have been applied on the books of the treasurer, and gave a written memorandum to the treasurer Weiser, to pay on the acknowledgment of the deeds, at the next August court, the balance of $59.87. There was no money marked on the treasurer’s books paid on the William Grreen tract. It was struck off at $9.51. The taxes and costs amounted to $9.20J. At the August court, Weiser, the treasurer, acknow
Then came the act of the 4th of April, 1809 (Purd. 1137, 5 Sm. L. 73), which transferred the power vested in the sheriff, to the treasurer of the respective counties.
1 Next followed the act of the 13th of March, 1815 (Purd. 1138, and 6 Sm. L. 299); which, in the 1st section, fixes the sales by the treasurer, to commence on the second Monday in June, in the year 1816, and at the expiration of every two years thereafter, to make and execute deeds to the purchasers, in the manner directed by the sheriffs in the act of 1804.
The 2d section provides for the case of the treasurer’s death after the sale, and before the deed is made. The succeeding treasurer is to execute a deed or deeds, on payment of the purchase-money : Purd. 1139.
The 3d section directs the purchaser to make payment as soon as the deeds are tendered; and, if not paid, to bring actions; and when judgment is obtained, there shall be no stay of execution. It
This act gives the treasurer the discretion, if the money is not forthwith paid when the tract is struck down, either to set up and sell again, or bring his action before he acknowledges his deed. Here the treasurer did not adhere to the act of Assembly; he trusted Staples, and took his written memorandum to pay when the deed was acknowledged. He never paid, and never received the deed. The trusting him by the treasurer, for a short time, when he absconded and never fulfilled the trust reposed in him by the treasurer, surely gave him no title, nor did it divest the title of Judge Witman, the original owner. It is contended, that as some of the tracts bid off by Staples were redeemed, that it was money in the hands of Weiser, that might have been applied to the payment of the taxes and costs on this tract. On this branch of the case, there was much evidence on both sides, and some that was contradictory. The coiu’t left it to the jury to determine whether Weiser, the treasurer, paid or settled with the county auditors for the amount of the taxes due on the William Green tract, which Staples had become liable to pay by his bid. The jury, by their verdict, negatived the fact relied on by the defendants ; and this, in my judgment, was leaving the case more favourable Tor Staples than the law would authorize. When Staples made the bid, he became liable, by the act of 1817, to pay the taxes and costs, or to be sued by the treasurer, in the name of the county, for the same. His title was not vested until he paid the taxes and costs, and gave his bond for the surplus. This he neglected for upwards of five years (nor did he ever attempt to perfect his title), when the representative of the original owner appeared, paid the
I am aware that there is much management and fraudulent perversion of the law about purchasing at treasurers’ sales. It is our duty to discountenance it. The intention of the legislature is plainly and clearly expressed, that, as soon as the bid is made and the hammer falls, it is the duty of the purchaser to pay the taxes and costs. If not, for the treasurer to compel the payment before the deed is acknowledged. Staples never had his title perfected as the legislature have required; he never received the treasurer’s deed, nor entitled himself to receive it, by the payment of the taxes and costs, and giving his bond for the surplus; although the deed was acknowledged, it never was delivered. All deeds take effect from delivery.
Delivery of the deed is necessary and essential to its creation as a conveyance — delivery of the instrument is necessary to constitute it a deed: McKinney v. Rhoads, 5 W. 343; without delivery it is no deed: 1 Inst. 35; see 2 Rep. 5; 5 W. 343. Placing the deed on record has been held not to be a delivery: Chess v. Chess, 1 Pa. 32.
As to the title of the defendants: they gave evidence of an agreement about the time of the sale in June, 1824, between Henry Donnel and Edward Staples. Donnel, for the consideration of one dollar, was to have an interest in the one-half of the William Green and other tracts. Mr. Donnel was an experienced surveyor and woodsman; directly after this arrangement, he was struck with paralysis, and died in 1826. The record furnishes no evidence of any other act of Henry Donnel. It is in evidence that, directly after young Witman paid the taxes and costs, and lifted the treasurer’s deed, Charles G. Donnel, the son of Henry, and a gentleman of respectable standing at the Northumberland bar, called on Weiser about these deeds, and, as proved by Weiser, inquired whether Mr. Witman did not get a deed from him that had been made out for Staples. Weiser replied in the affirmative, when Mr. Donnel requested him not to part with any of these Staples deeds to anybody else. He said he was going to Philadelphia, and he would see whether he could find Staples; that he had an interest in the lands. Weiser told Donnel that he had given up the deed to Witman, as he said the land belonged to his father, and he had paid him the taxes and costs. After this, Judge Donnel went to Philadelphia, and on the 31st of October, 1829, he obtained a deed from Staples for the William Green, and for four other tracts, for the consideration of $103.74. On the 24th of August, 1829,
The whole evidence in the cause demonstrated that Judge Donnel knew of the Orphans’ Court sale, of Witman’s paying the taxes and costs, and of his lifting the deed before he had applied for the sale to pay the debts of his father. He knew that the treasurer’s deed never could be delivered either to him or to Staples for the William Green tract.
The bills of exceptions to evidence were either abandoned, or the argument was deemed by the court unworthy of further notice.
An error has been assigned, by leave of the court, immediately before the argument commenced, that the limitation of five years in the second section of the act of 1804 (Purd. 1136), is a bar to the plaintiff’s right to recover, the suit not having been brought within five years after the sale to Staples. We are unable to discover that this limitation can be applied to the case before us, having held that the title of Judge Witman never was divested, nor vested in Staples or his alienees.
Judgment is affirmed.