26 A.2d 318 | Pa. | 1942
This appeal is from an order striking off an entry of satisfaction of a judgment. It has been said that when a court orders the satisfaction of a judgment, "It not only annihilates the judgment, but it extinguishes both the evidence of a debt and the debt itself," and that without statutory power to do so, a court may not order satisfaction summarily: Horner McCann v. Hower,
The judgment which is the subject of this appeal was entered June 9, 1932, pursuant to a warrant accompanying a bond secured by mortgage. The mortgaged property was sold on a writ of fieri facias April 2, 1934, for a nominal bid. Plaintiff did not have the value fixed by the court, and on October 8, 1934, on the order of defendants' attorney, the prothonotary entered satisfaction in accord with the Deficiency Judgment Act of January 17, 1934, P. L. 243. So the matter stood until May 8, 1941. Appellee then filed this petition for a rule on defendants to show cause why the satisfaction should not be stricken from the record. Defendants answered and averred that the petition had not been filed within three months after the effective date of the Act of March 24, 1937,* P. L. 112, the limitation period therein prescribed. *127 They also averred that the right to have the satisfaction stricken off was barred by delay.
The proceeding was heard on petition and answer; the rule was made absolute November 18, 1941, and the entry of satisfaction was stricken off. The learned court held that the Act of 1937, perscribing the three months' period of limitation, was special legislation prohibited by Article III, section 7, of the Constitution, and that the record must be regarded as if the satisfaction had never been entered.
In City Deposit B. T. Co. v. Zoppa,
"These cases show that effect will be given to judicial acts done pursuant to statute subsequently declared unconstitutional in other proceedings, when equitable considerations require it for the purpose of doing justice in the circumstances of the given case."
It was stated during the oral argument that no rights, based on the satisfaction have intervened, as, for example, was the case in City Deposit B. T. Co. v. Zoppa, supra; accordingly, no equitable considerations are presented requiring the court now to treat the satisfaction as a fact lawfully established between the parties.
The Deficiency Judgments Acts of 1934 and 1935, and also the Act of July 2, 1937, P. L. 2751, were considered and held invalid in Beaver County B. L. Assn. *129 v. Winowich,
The position now taken by the appellant is substantially this: It is true that the deficiency judgment acts were unconstitutional as special legislation changing methods for the collecting of debts, etc., and that satisfaction entered pursuant to the unconstitutional legislation might have been regarded as ineffective; but although the legislature's classification of judgments could not be sustained, it may nevertheless put those satisfied judgments in a single class and provide a special limitation period in which a plaintiff must move to strike off the satisfaction. Certainly, if the three months' limitation period created by the Act of March 24, 1937, had been appropriately inserted in the Deficiency Judgments Acts, the court would have been required to hold it unconstitutional for the reasons given in the cases cited above. As its operation is confined to a class which the legislature was powerless to create, it cannot be regarded as less invalid merely because separately enacted. We think the Act is clearly unconstitutional for the reasons stated inPennsylvania Company, etc., v. Scott, supra.
We may repeat by way of caution that parties may have so conducted themselves after the entry of satisfaction, that rights may have intervened; these will of course be protected by the application of equitable principles. On proper showing, a plaintiff may be regarded as disabled from taking advantage of the fact of unconstitutionality.
Order affirmed.