3 Watts 477 | Pa. | 1835
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
When Mahon & Duncan executed the mortgage to Clark, on which the plaintiff claims, Stocker stood as a mortgage creditor of the same premises, his mortgage being reinforced by a bond and warrant to confess judgment, not then entered up. Subsequently to Clark’s mortgage and bonds, he entered it up in Philadelphia county and acquired a lien there on the real estate of Duncan, one of the mortgagors; after which other creditors of Mahon & Duncan, as well as Duncan’s separate creditors, recovered judgments which also bound it. It will be perceived, then, that immediately previous to the vacation of Stocker’s judgment, matters stood thus. Clark had a subsequent lien on the mortgage premises in Perry county, and various other creditors had subsequent liens on the estate in Philadelphia, while Stocker had the earliest lien on each. Now if a chancellor would not have compelled him to apply his judgment in Philadelphia, it will follow that Clark had not an interest which could be prejudiced by withdrawing it; and he would have been compellable to apply it but on the foot of an equity in Clark against the other subsequent incumbrancers. A creditor with a right of recourse to two funds, must carve for himself so as to stand as little as possible in the way of those whose recourse is to-but one of them; because he might else cover the residue for the debtor to the prejudice of others having an undoubted right to it. But he is not bound to make room for the admission of one by incommoding another who has equal claims. In that predicament it is at his option to stand still: Between subsequent lien creditors on distinct parts of the general fund, whose equities are balanced, the legal course of execution, therefore, is not to be disturbed; and a chancellor suffers the general creditor to take satisfaction in the way most conducive to his convenience, or the gratification of his caprice. The rule which gives a separate creditor the exclusive enjoyment of his own peculiar fund, is founded in benevolence, and regulated in
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.