183 A. 773 | Pa. | 1936
Argued January 8, 1936. A landlord seized his tenant's goods in execution for defaulted rental payments of an apartment. The tenant secured a writ of replevin and, on the filing of a bond, the goods were released from the lien of the execution but the sheriff permitted them to remain on the premises. After the writ was returned, the goods were removed *195 by a deputy sheriff to a public warehouse. The tenant then brought an action against the landlord charging that this removal was an unlawful eviction and in violation of her right to have the personal property remain on the premises.
When the tenant's case was on trial, unable to prove any title or right to remain in possession of the premises or one that would enable her to keep her goods on the place, she was forced to try her action as one of forcible entry and detainer. To sustain such action there must be evidence of a breach of peace with a strong hand, coupled with dispossession from the premises and the exercise of an unlawful detention by menace, force, threats or fraud: Com. v. Brown,
Appellant claims she had a right to the leased premises. This she says was in dispute and, until settled, she argues that it was her right to have the goods remain there. A complete answer to this suggestion is, first, she had defaulted in the payment of rent under her lease. That was an adjudicated fact by our decision in Chelten Ave. Bldg. Corp. v. Mayer,
The goods were removed to a public warehouse by a deputy sheriff acting under the direction of the sheriff's solicitor. When the writ of replevin was executed by the sheriff the goods were left in the possession of the tenant. Ordinarily when the writ is returned it has spent its force and can no longer be acted on. But, if the sheriff, in the execution of a writ of replevin, permits the goods to remain on the premises or leaves them where they cannot be secured by the owner, the sheriff has not made a complete execution of the writ. He may thereafter take further steps to deliver the goods into the plaintiff's possession, a bond being posted and no counterbond filed by the defendant. Until proper execution of the writ the goods are in the custody of the sheriff: First Nat. Bank v. Dunn,
So in any aspect of the case, even on the causes of action for which appellant contends, this record would not permit a recovery. It shows that the deputy sheriff removed the goods acting under instructions from the sheriff's solicitor and not from appellee. With the covenant of the lease and an admitted default, it is difficult to understand *197 how appellee could be liable even if it had instructed the sheriff to remove the goods.
Judgment affirmed.