7 Watts 20 | Pa. | 1838
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Both parties derive their claim to the land in ques tion from John Snell, who was the owner and seised thereof in fee. The plaintiff, who was also the plaintiff below, claims it as a purchaser at sheriff’s sale, made under an execution, sued out upon a judgment in favour of Jacob K. Boyer, after it had been assigned by Jacob K. Boyer to Isaac Boyer, against Snell. The process under which the land was seized, was issued for the use of Isaac Boyer from the common pleas of Berks county, wherein the judgment had been obtained, to August term 1820: but Isaac Boyer dying before the execution of the process was completed, the plaintiff in this action, in conjunction with the widow of the deceased, administered upon his estate, and became the purchaser of the land, at a sale thereof made afterwards by the sheriff, under a writ of venditioni iexponas issued to April term 1823. At this term the sale was perfected by the execution and acknowledgement of the deed, by the .sheriff conveying the land to the plaintiff. This having been all ■shown, by the plaintiff’s evidence, to the court and jury, the defendant then offered evidence to prove that on the 5th of January 1818, upwards of two years before Isaac Boyer appeared to have any interest in the judgment under which the land was sold, John Snell, •the defendant in the judgment, and then owner of the land, by his deed, sold and conveyed it in fee to Jacob K. Boyer, the plaintiff in, and then owner of the judgment, for the consideration of 8000 dollars: and that Jaeob K. Boyer again, on the 23d day of March 1819 .(upwards of thirteen months before the judgment was marked on the doeket for the use of Isaac Boyer, or the latter appeared to have any claim to it), by his deed, sold and conveyed the land in •fee, clear of all incumbrances, to Frederick Weitzell, in consideration of 7647 dollars ; that Frederick Weitzell, by his deed, dated the 30t.h of May 1820, sold and conveyed the land again in fee to Jacob
It is contended, first, that the evidence ought not to have been received, because if Snell, the defendant in the judgment and execution, had continued to have been the owner of the land at the time of the sheriff’s sale, he could not have gainsaid the validity of it; and inasmuch as the defendant derives his claim to the possession of the land from Snell, he cannot be considered as standing on any better footing than Snell himself would, had he not parted with the land, and therefore he is concluded by the sale. Then again, in the second place, it is objected that, even if the defendant or Wicks, under whose representatives he holds the possession, could have been relieved at any time against the judgment, or the sale of the land made by the sheriff under it, he is now too late: that he ought to have made his application to the court when the process, under which the sale was made, was sued out, before the sale was approved and confirmed by the court. We, however, think that neither of these propositions is tenable.
In regard to the first,, it must be observed, that although it may be said that the defendant claims possession of the land, ultimately, from Snell, yet he claims it, intermediately, through Jacob K. Boyer himself, the plaintiff in the judgment, who had a right to sell the land discharged from it and its lien, even had there been any at the time; and having done so in effect by the very terms of his deed, it must, be so considered. Then, after having thus sold the land, he could not claim, to levy the judgment out of it; and if he could not, it is equally clear that his assignee of the judgment could have no other rights than he had, in this respect, himself. Besides, he must be viewed as having held the land, from the moment he became the owner of if, entirely free from all lien on account of the judgment; because, being the owner (as it most clearly appears from the evidence) of the judgment, when he bought the land from Snell, the defendant in the judgment, the lien of the judgment thereby became extinct through operation of law; there being no agreement made, or intention manifested at the time, to continue it for any purpose whatever. And, indeed, having become the absolute owner of the land, and being so also of the judgment, at the same time, it is not very easy to conceive why the lien should have continued to exist longer: because it would be idle, if not perfectly absurd and ridiculous, for a creditor to wish that his own property should be bound
Next, as to the second ground of objection to the admission of the evidence, it is argued that the suing out of the fieri facias, and the seisure of the land under it, were equivalent to the suing of a scire facias quare executio non, fyc., and a service thereof on George A. Wicks, who was, as it appears at the time, terre-tenant of the land: and because he did not come into the court from which the fieri facias issued, either upon the return of the seizure of the' land, or, at furthest, before the confirmation of the sheriff’s sale, he is now concluded. But this is all fanciful; there is no analogy, in this respect, between a scire facias quare executio non, which is served upon the terre-tenant, and a fieri facias and a seizure, in virtue thereof, of the land. The latter is purely a judicial writ, and an authority to carry into effect the judgment of the court, that is, to levy and make the amount of the money mentioned in the judgment, which is recited in the writ, without requiring any notice thereof, in any event, to be given to the terre-tenant. The defendant mentioned in the fieri facias is the only person the sheriff has to deal with, in executing the writ; and if the defendant does not show, or the sheriff cannot find, personal property sufficient to levy on, then he is required to levy the money out of the real estate of the defendant, if to be found within his bailiwick. But a scire facias, though a judicial writ, also partakes, in some degree, of mesne process; at least, so far as to allow the party a day in court, and to plead to it. On a fieri facias, however, neither the defendant nor the terre-tenant has any day in court. But even in the case of a scire facias, the terre-tenant is not concluded by a judgment awarding execution therein, unless it appear that he had notice of the writ, or it was served upon him in due time, so as to have afforded him the opportunity of making a defence. And, to prevent injustice being done to him, for want of such opportunity, he will be permitted to make the same defence on the trial of the ejectment brought against him by the purchaser of the land at sheriff’s sale, that he might have set up in the scire facias. Nace v. Hollenback, 1 Serg. & Rawle 548; Young v. Taylor, 2 Binn. 231; Mather v. Clark, 1 Watts 491; Walters v. Pratt, 2 Rawle 268; Cowen v. Getty, 5 Watts 535. We therefore think the court were right in admitting the evidence.
The second error includes, first, an exception to the opinion of the court, in admitting the record of a former ejectment, brought by the plaintiff, for the same land, against the defendant, wherein, upon trial, a verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendant. The admission of this evidence is sanctioned by every day’s practice; and though not conclusive, it is only because it has been made an exception to the general rule in this respect, that it is not so. But it is
The second exception in this error is to the opinion of the court in admitting the record of a former ejectment, brought by the same plaintiff, for the same land, against the defendant, wherein, after the jury had been called and sworn, the evidence all given to them, on both sides, and the charge of the court delivered thereon to them, the plaintiff took a non suit. Now although a non suit has not that conclusive effect, generally, in any case, that is given to a verdict and judgment rendered upon it, yet upon principle it may be fairly regarded as some evidence against the party suffering it: and though in most cases the effect of it, as evidence against the party, may possibly be repelled by the attending circumstances, yet it may very properly, in some cases, be entitled to some weight. It carries with it an implied admission on the part of the plaintiff at the time, that he did not think he had made out such a case as would insure him a verdict in his favour. We therefore think it was admissible.
The third error has been given up by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, and not insisted on, as to H. W. Smith’s evidence; but was insisted on as to Henry Betz’s evidence. We, however, are unable to perceive any good reason why the evidence of Henry Betz ought to have been rejected. It is not denied that he was competent as a witness; and the subject matter of his evidence appears to have been relevant. Among other things, it rather tended to prove that Jacob K. Boyer had, from the part he acted in regavd to the sheriff’s sale, an interest in the purchase, and if so, no credit ought to be given by the jury to his testimony which he had given for the plaintiff.
The fifth bill of exception, which is included in the fourth error, is insisted on, but the sixth, which is also included, is abandoned. The mortgage mentioned in the fifth bill of exception was offered in evidence, as appears by the bill, for the purpose of proving that the deed of conveyance from Jacob K. Boyer and wife to Frederick Weitzell, though dated on the 10th of April 1819, was not delivered until the 15th of that month; and likewise to show, that, according to the understanding between Jacob K. Boyer, Weitzell, and G. A. Wicks, the judgment against Snell in favour of J. K. Boyer, upon which the land was sold by the sheriff, was to continue. No doubt his judgment, as well as the other small one, was to continue and be in force until paid or satisfied in some way. This the defendant does not pretend to deny; in fact, he admitted it distinctly on the trial. But if this evidence were offered to prove that the lien of either one or both of these judgments continued upon the land, notwithstanding the purchase of it by J. K. Boyer, of Snell, it is clear that neither it nor any other evidence given, tended in the slightest degree to prove such fact. It is also perfectly clear, as has been shown already, that after Boyer bought the land of Snell, the
The fifth error has been argued- and insisted on with a good deal of earnestness; but it is difficult to discover any plausible, much less good ground for its support. That part of the charge complained of in this error is in these words: “there is no evidence.in the cause which shows that Boyer had assigned the judgment before he bought the land, nor before he sold the land.” The evidence particularly, and indeed, I believe, wholly, relied on, to show that the president judge of the court erred in giving this direction to the jury, is that of Jacob K. Boyer, the assignor of the judgment, as taken down in writing on a former trial, and testified to by Mr Hoffman, one of the counsel for the plaintiff. It is somewhat different, though perhaps only verbally so, from the notes thereof, as taken at the same time, by Judge Mallory, who presided in the court on that trial, and testified also to the correctness of his notes. According to Mr Hoffman’s notes, Jacob K. Boyer testified as follows:
“At the time I entered satisfaction on the large judgment against John Snell, Weitzell and Wicks were present at the prothonotary’s office with me. The two judgments which I had previously held against Snell, one for 330 dollars, and the other for 360 dollars, and transferred to -Isaac Boyer, in satisfaction of a debt I owed him, amounting to 2000 dollars. They were shown to Weitzell and Wicks. Weitzell asked me for what they were given; I told them they were for other transactions. They observed they were small, and supposed that Snell’s other property would pay them: I told them I could not enter satisfaction on them. They were transferred after 1816, but cannot tell how long after.” According to Judge Mallory’s notes, Boyer testified thus: “At the time I entered satisfaction in the large judgment against John Snell, Frederick Weitzell, and George Adam Wicks were in the prothonotary’s office. The two judgments which I held previous to that, against John Snell, one for 330 dollars, the other for 360 dollars, they were showed to Weitzell and Wicks at the time. Weitzell asked me if they were for the same transactions: I told him no, they were for a different transaction. They said they were small sums, and they supposed Snell’s other property would pay them. I told them I could not enter satisfaction on them. Snell at that time owned two houses in this town [meaning Reading]. I owed Isaac Boyer a debt, after 1816, of upwards of 3000 dollars: I gave him a bond, with my father as security, for 2000 dollars. They were transferred to Isaac Boyer for the debt after 1816; can’t tell the time.” The time of entering satisfaction on the large judgment, to which Boyer refers, appears from the record to have been the 15th of April 1819; and it is said,
As to the other matters assigned for error, we think there is nothing in them that seems to require particular notice; and it is sufficient to say that the court below were clearly right in instructing the jury as they did in regard to each of them.
Judgment affirmed.