44 Pa. Super. 280 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
In 1904 Thomas Peter Gelston, otherwise called Peter Gelston, died intestate, seized of the lot of land in controversy, and left to survive him Mary A. Gelston, his widow, and Thomas P. Gelston and Annie Y. Smith, children of a deceased son of Thomas Peter Gelston and a former wife. On December 8, 1892, the decedent had executed and delivered to Joseph Fawell a mortgage for $300 ■ upon the property, which was duly recorded. Letters of administration upon the decedent’s estate were issued to the widow. On January 19, 1906, the mortgagee filed a praecipe for “amicable sci. fa. sur mortgage of
1. It is urged that the land was not bound by the judgment because no scire facias actually issued and no description of the land was filed in the case. But the praecipe and the paper signed by the widow and administratrix must be taken together, and, being so construed, they constituted an agreement for an amicable action and a confession of judgment therein, whereby the actual issuing and service of a scire facias was dispensed with. “The practice of entering an amicable action without writ, is very ancient in Pennsylvania, and very convenient. The issuing of the writ is dispensed with, but it is considered as having been issued, and may be filed at any time:” Morris v. Buckley, 11 S. & R. 168. True, in Wilson v.
2. It is further urged that the plaintiffs’ interest in the land was not bound by the judgment on the mortgage, and the sale thereunder was ineffective to convey the same, because no affidavit was filed at the institution of the proceeding as to who were the real owners of the land and because the plaintiffs were not made parties. In considering this objection it is to be observed that it is not disputed that the whole amount for which judgment was entered on the scire facias was due and unpaid, and it is not suggested that the plaintiffs have any defense of any kind to the mortgage that would have been available to them upon the trial of the scire facias. The Act of Jan
3. We find no evidence in the case that Fawell, the mortgagee, knew that the plaintiffs were the heirs at law of the mortgagor, or even that he knew of their existence. Nor is there any evidence outside the record, and there is certainly none in the record, that he omitted to file the affidavit with a fraudulent intent to defeat or prejudice the rights of the heirs at law of the mortgagor, whoever they might be. The effect of his omission was to be determined by the court as matter of law; the submission of the question to the jury with instruction that if they found it to be fraudulent would have been unwarranted by the evidence. Nor was there any evidence which would have supported a finding that Donnon, the defendant in the ejectment, procured the sheriff’s sale for the purpose of divesting the title of the heirs of the mortgagor, or that he purchased the land for the use and benefit of Mary A. Gelston, the widow and administratrix. Whatever title he acquired, he acquired in his own right and free from any trust in favor of her. Hence any representation that she made in her application for letters of administration could not affect him, in the absence of evidence that he was in some way a party to the representation and knew it to be untrue; and there is no such evidence. It is true he was the son of Mary A. Gelston, and one of the sureties on her bond, but these facts are insufficient to make him responsible for the representation she made in her
All of the assignments are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.