80 Pa. Super. 602 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Opinion by
This was an issue in sheriff’s interpleader proceedings growing out of an attachment issued against J. Lederman under the Fraudulent Debtor’s Acts. The goods attached were claimed by the plaintiff, C. A. Lederman, the brother of J. Lederman, and the issue was framed to try his title to them. While the case was pending in the court below, J. Lederman, the defendant in the attachment, was declared a bankrupt and his trustee, the present appellee, was subrogated to the rights of the attaching creditor and became the defendant of record. The claimant and plaintiff in the issue, set up in his statement of the source of his title, a purchase at a constable’s sale held on the premises of J. Lederman by Frank J. Allan, constable, under an execution in his hands against the said J. Lederman. The affidavit of defense denied that the plaintiff purchased the goods and chattels, as set forth, and averred that the sale was fraudulent and for the purpose of defrauding the defendant and other creditors. On the trial of the case, the plaintiff offered in evidence, without any objection on the part of the defendant, the records of two judgments obtained against J. Lederman before the justice of the peace on November 17, 1919, for $234.90 and $375, the writs of execution thereon showing the constable’s levy and his return that he had sold the goods levied bn to C. A. Lederman on November 24, 1919. There was proof that the plaintiff paid the constable, took possession of the goods and received a bill of sale therefor. This was in support of his contention that he had purchased, bona fide, at a constable’s sale, all the goods levied upon under the attachment. The defendant offered no evidence, but presented written requests for charge, one of which was for binding instructions for the defendant. A verdict was directed
The assignment of error raises but one question: Was there error in directing a verdict for the defendant? Defendant’s seventh point, requesting a charge that, under all the evidence as submitted in the trial, the verdict should be rendered in favor of the defendant, raises no question as to the correspondence between the declaration and the evidence, and .does not entitle the defendant to a direction of the verdict in his favor because of their disagreement: Cromelien v. Maugher, 17 Pa. 169. Treating as properly before the court, the point asking for binding instructions for the defendant on the ground that the allegata and the probata did not agree, we think there was error in affirming the point. The only variation between the declaration and the evidence was that1 the constable named in the declaration as making the sale was Frank J. Allan. The evidence showed that the name of the constable was Thomas J. McHale. It may
The judgment is reversed and a new trial is awarded.