33 Pa. 158 | Pa. | 1859
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The case presented is this. In 1848, Israel Smith was the legal owner of the “ Amos Achia claim” (part of the Benjamin Achia farm), and the equitable owner of the “ mill lot,” and of another tract of land called the “ Sarah Morrison tract.”
On the 13th of December 1848, Saunders and Crook obtained a judgment against Smith, which was a lien upon his equity of redemption. This judgment was revived on the 29th of June 1855, against the debtor, but not against terre tenants. • By virtue of executions founded upon it, the property in controversy was levied upon, condemned, and sold to Alanson B. Smith, the plaintiff in this ejectment. He received the sheriff’s deed on the 20th of December 1855. Previous to this sale, however, the whole Benjamin Ackla farm, including the “ mill lot,” had been levied upon as the property of Israel Smith, under an execution issued at the suit of John Ackla and others. The levy was made under a fi. fa. issued to September Term 1849; the property was condemned, and on the 6th of May 1850, was sold to Bell & Co. The sheriff’s deed to them was acknowledged on the 9th of the same month. Unless this sale was fraudulent, or unless, in some way, it raised a trust for the debtor, it, of course, destroyed the equity of redemption, and divested all the interest of Israel Smith — leaving nothing to pass under the subsequent sheriff’s sale to Alanson B. Smith. The contest in this case is between the claimants under these two sales. It may be added, that both were effected under judgments for debts existing when the original arrangement was made between Israel Smith and Bell & Co.
The case does not require us to consider, whether a mortgage to secure an existing debt, and future advances for the purpose of improving the mortgaged property, can be regarded as fraudulent
We come now to the question of notice. Overton purchased from Bell & Co. after they had bought at sheriff’s sale, and gave his bond for the purchase-money. Upon this bond, he paid $1000
This, perhaps, was a correct answer to the point which the defendants below propounded, and therefore cannot properly be complained of as erroneous. But as the case goes back for another trial, it is proper to observe, that the inquiry for the jury was not whether Overton had notice of Smith’s interest. If there was no resulting trust, the question was one of fraud upon creditors. Smith’s interest was of no consequence to any purchaser, for that was divested by the sheriff’s sale. It cannot be pretended, that he could have recovered in ejectment even against Bell & Co. But if the transaction was fraudulent, the rights of the creditors were superior to those of Smith. They claim not through the conveyances, but paramount to them; in spite of them. The notice, therefore, that could affect Overton, must have been notice of the rights of the creditors to resort to the land as Smith’s, notwithstanding his arrangement with Bell & Co., and the sheriff’s sale to them.
We will not enter now upon the inquiry, how far the possession of land is constructive notice to a purchaser of any other title or rights than those of the person in possession. That is a difficult subject, and will require careful investigation when it shall be presented. It is not now necessarily involved in this case. If it be conceded, that Smith’s possession, after his arrangement with Bell & Co. in 1848, was constructive notice of -whatever title remained
In the aspect which this case presents to us, however, the question of notice does not seem to be of much importance. If, as we have seen, there was no resulting trust arising from the sale to Bell k Co., then, even on the supposition that the original arrange
It is unnecessary to notice the other errors assigned in detail. They are sufficiently noticed in what we have already said. As the case goes back for another trial upon the principles here laid down, some of them are unimportant, and the others are embraced in those we have considered.
We may add, that we do not perceive how the plaintiffs in error were injured by the instructions given to the jury, to which exception is taken in the third assignment.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.