192 A. 246 | Pa. | 1937

Argued April 13, 1937. Plaintiff bank, having judgment against Martin M. Tracy and his wife, Agnes C. Tracy, in a proceeding to collect on their bond and mortgage to the bank, issued execution and on a writ of fi. fa. caused two parcels of real estate in the City of Pittston to be sold and became the purchaser at the sheriff's sale. Only one of them was subject to the lien of the mortgage, and, as to that, no question is raised. The other property, number 55 Church Street, is the subject of this suit. It was not included in the bank's mortgage but became subject to the lien of the judgment on the bond which was entered April 12, 1932. Delivery of possession of 55 Church Street to the bank as purchaser at the sheriff's sale was refused, whereupon it filed this petition, pursuant to the Act of April 20, 1905, P. L. 239,* 12 PS section 2571 *369 et seq., for a citation to Mr. and Mrs. Tracy commanding them to show cause why possession should not be delivered. The citation issued and a return was filed showing service on Mr. and Mrs. Tracy and that the writ server "also served the within citation and petition at the same time on Catherine Toole found in possession of said real estate, by leaving with Martin M. Tracy, an adult member of her family, at her residence 55 Church Street, Pittston, Pa. an exact copy of each."

The Tracys and Mrs. Toole filed a joint answer. They admitted the judgment and execution, but averred, inter alia, that what was sold by the sheriff and bought by petitioner was merely the interest of the Tracys and not the interest of Mrs. Toole; that formal notice to petitioner was given at and prior to the sale, that "Catherine Toole was the owner of the real estate described in said citation and petition and that Agnes C. Tracy and her husband, Martin M. Tracy, or either of them, had no estate or interest therein." They averred that by deed dated October 8, 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Tracy conveyed the property to Mrs. Toole in fee for value and that the deed was recorded May 24, 1935, and that the petitioner had knowledge of the conveyance at the time of and prior to the sheriff's sale, and that, while Mrs. Toole and the Tracys lived together in the house, the Tracys were "members of Catherine Toole's household." Respondents demanded a jury trial under section 5 of the Act: Knecht v. Reichard, 60 Pa. Super. 273,277. Issue was joined and the case came on for trial. The learned trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant Catherine Toole. Plaintiff's motion for judgment n. o. v. was granted and Mrs. Toole has appealed.

There is no dispute of fact. Mrs. Toole was a very old lady; Mrs. Tracy was her daughter; they lived in the same house. On October 8, 1931, the Tracys conveyed the premises to Mrs. Toole who testified: "Q. Mrs. Toole, how much did you pay for the property at 55 Church Street on October the 8th, 1931? A. Fifty-five *370 hundred. Q. Whom did you pay that fifty-five hundred dollars to? A. I paid it to my daughter. Q. Do you have the receipts? (Book produced). The Court: How old is Mrs. Toole? Mrs. Tracy: Over eighty. By the Court: Q. Do you remember, Mrs. Toole, all these transactions? A. Yes, I remember them. Q. Where do you live? A. I live right in Pittston there, 55 Church Street. Q. You live in what house? A. Mr. Tracy's house. Q. With your daughter? A. Yes. Q. You and your daughter — A. Yes. Q. — live with Mr. Tracy? A. Mr. Tracy and his family. Q. That is, your grandchildren? A. Yes. Q. Whose house is it? A. It is my daughter's house, ain't it? Q. It is your daughter's house. Is it your house? A. My house; I got it. Q. What? A. I got it. Q. When did you get it? A. I forget now. Q. You forget? A. Yes. The Court: I think you better prove that some other way."

Mrs. Tracy testified and produced receipts showing that beginning with December 3, 1925, to October 5, 1931, she had received from her mother various sums of money aggregating, as she said, "close on to fifty-five" hundred dollars. She was asked "Q. You borrowed that money from your mother? A. Well, my mother sort of loaned it to me. Q. Did she lend it to you or give it to you? A. She didn't give it to me. The property was the consideration. Q. So you and your husband deeded the property? A. Yes. . . ."

When the judgment was entered and became a lien, the record title was in the Tracys. Their deed to Mrs. Toole (though dated October 8, 1931) was not recorded until May 24, 1935, four days after the writ of fi. fa. issued; the sheriff's sale was held June 14, 1935.

The majority of the judges of the learned court below were of opinion that Mrs. Toole's delay in recording her deed rendered it void as to subsequent judgment creditors, such as plaintiff, under the Recording Act of May 121 19259 P. L. 613, as amended June 12, 1931, P. L. 558, *371 21 PS section 351. The dissenting judges were of opinion, as they said, that "This is not such a bona fide judgment creditor as was contemplated by the statute, since the mother was in possession, lived in the home, even though her daughter, the grantor, lived with her. The joint possession misled no bona fide creditor. This possession, and the facts and circumstances surrounding it, we deem, was sufficient notice to one who seeks execution, not as a subsequent or misled judgment creditor, but one seeking to collect a deficiency which, according to the evidence, did not exist."

Assuming that the conveyance was valid as between grantors and grantee, her failure to record her deed left it in the power of the grantors, holders of the record title, apparently to deal with the property as their own even to the length of making a valid bona fide conveyance to another without notice of the prior deed; that is, they might divest the title theretofore granted to Mrs. Tracy's mother. Having that general power the grantors might exercise it in part by mortgaging or, as they did here, by subjecting the property to the lien of their debts, which is only a method of preparing the way to divest by judicial sale the title of the grantee granted by the unrecorded deed. And the possibility of such action by the grantor the statute recognizes. It provides "That all deeds, conveyances, contracts, and other instruments of writing wherein it shall be the intention of the parties executing the same to grant, bargain, sell, and convey any lands, tenements, or hereditaments situate in this Commonwealth, upon being acknowledged by the parties executing the same or proved in the manner provided by the laws of this Commonwealth, shall be recorded in the office for the recording of deeds in the county where such lands, tenements, and hereditaments are situate. Every such deed, conveyance, contract, or other instrument of writing which shall not be acknowledged or proved and recorded, as aforesaid, shall be adjudged *372 fraudulent and void as to any subsequent bona, fide purchaser or mortgagee or holder of any judgment, duly entered in the prothonotary's office of the county in which the lands, tenements, or hereditaments are situate, without actual or constructive notice unless such deed, conveyance, contract, or instrument of writing shall be recorded, as aforesaid, before the recording of the deed or conveyance or the entry of the judgment under which such subsequent purchaser, [or] mortgagee, or judgment creditor shall claim. Nothing contained in this act shall be construed to repeal or modify any law providing for the lien of purchase money mortgages." (Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 613, as amended by Act of June 12, 1931, P. L. 558, 12 PS section 351.) Or, briefly, the unrecorded deed shall be deemed "void as to any subsequent bona fide . . . holder of any judgment, duly entered in the prothonotary's office . . . without actual or constructive notice unless such deed . . . shall be recorded, as aforesaid, before . . . the entry of the judgment under which such subsequent purchaser . . . or judgment creditor shall claim."

It is clear that on April 12, 1932, when the judgment was entered, the record title was in Mr. and Mrs. Tracy and that, as to third persons they could divest the estate granted by the unrecorded deed to Mrs. Toole, either by making another conveyance to a bona fide purchaser or by suffering the property to become subject to liens for their debts in favor of a bona fide creditor without notice. The good faith of the lien creditor must be determined as of that date; if the lien is then valid, it does not become invalid by the judgment creditor's discovery at a later date of some fact which would have prevented priority had actual or constructive notice of it existed before the lien attached. The plaintiff is therefore unaffected by the fact that shortly before the sheriff's sale, Mrs. Toole's deed was recorded and that notice was given at the sheriff's sale. See Uhler v. Hutchinson, 23 Pa. 110 *373 ; Calder v. Chapman, 52 Pa. 359; Lefever v.Armstrong, 15 Pa. Super. 565.

As the recording of her deed in 1935 does not help appellant, we are confronted by the fact that she lived at 55 Church Street. She testified that she lived with her daughter and her daughter's family. The case then comes to this; that when the judgment became a lien the premises were occupied by the record title holders, Mr. and Mrs. Tracy, their children, and by Mrs. Tracy's mother. Of what facts should the plaintiff have been advised by that showing? The answer is supplied in part by the statute and in part by our decisions. The rule was thus stated in Smith v. Miller, 296 Pa. 340, 344, 145 A. 901, in which it appeared that parents and their son (who conveyed to his mother by a deed not recorded) resided on the premises: "When Frank C. Miller conveyed the property to defendants' predecessor in title, both parties were living in it and both continued to reside there. By failing to record the deed, the record title remained in Frank C. Miller. Hence, when it was sold at sheriff's sale as his, the record title and actual possession were in the same person, and there was no constructive notice of a different ownership by reason of the fact that his mother, the grantee in the unrecorded deed, was also living in the property. We said in Salvation Army,Inc., Trustees, v. Lawson, 293 Pa. 459, 463: 'There can be no doubt whatever of the proposition that where the land is occupied by two persons, as, for instance, by husband and wife, and there is a recorded title in one of them, such joint occupation is not notice of an unrecorded title in the other. . . . The rule is universal that if the possession be consistent with the recorded title, it is no notice of an unrecorded title.' Many cases so held, but it is sufficient to refer to Stewart v. Freeman, 22 Pa. 120, 123;Townsend v. Little, 109 U.S. 504; Kirby v.Tallmadge, 160 U.S. 379, 388; Rankin v. Coar,46 N.J. Eq. 566, 22 A. 177. Indeed, this conclusion is but an application of the general principle *374 that, in the absence of proof to the contrary, actual possession is presumed to be in him who has the record title. It would be intolerable to require an intending purchaser or encumbrancer to ask every person living in a property, be they many or few, whether or not he has a better title than the record owner, who is also in possession. This would be to shift the burden of clear proof of notice from him whose neglect to record his deed has caused the trouble, to him who has been guilty of no neglect; and would reverse the rule that the possession of one holding under an unrecorded deed, in order to be effective as against a subsequent purchaser, must be open, notorious, distinct and unequivocal: Rankin v. Coar, supra." See also Buck's Appeal, 100 Pa. 109;Harris v. McIntyre, 118 Ill. 275, 8 N.E. 182;Atwood v. Bearss., 47 Mich. 72, 10 N.W. 112.

The presumption is of course rebuttable but in this case there is nothing to rebut it; appellant's evidence supports the facts bringing the case directly within the statute. It is suggested in the argument on her behalf that a "subsequent bona fide . . . holder of any judgment, duly entered in the Prothonotary's office . . ." means one who "acquires his rights as a creditor after the execution of the belated deed, and not one, as in instant case, whose rights as such were acquired on August 2, 1926, more than five years before the date and delivery of said belated deed on October 8, 1931." that "The purpose of . . . [the] . . . recording acts was to protect those who subsequent to the execution or delivery of the unrecorded deed would give credit on the faith of the property." We can find nothing in the statute to support the suggested construction. Appellant also contends that the act is unconstitutional on the ground that the subject is not clearly expressed in the title; we think this point does not merit discussion. It is also suggested, perhaps as an afterthought because it is inconsistent with the position taken in the answer, that Mrs. Toole's title can only be attacked by "ejectment *375 at the instance of purchaser at Sheriff's Sale, or by a proceeding in equity under section 9 of the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act of May 21, 1921, P. L. 1045-1047." Appellant availed herself of the jury trial allowed by section 5 of the Act of 1905 which furnishes an adequate remedy: Knecht v.Reichard, 60 Pa. Super. 273, 277; M. G. B. a L.Assn. v. Wilcox, 273 Pa. 385, 117 A. 89; as she claimed through the Tracys whose rights were extinguished by the sale, the case is within the statute. She also complains that she was not permitted to show an oral agreement that execution should be restricted to the mortgaged laud; this was properly excluded: Gianni v. Russell., 281 Pa. 320, 126 A. 791;Fields v. Sipe Co., 319 Pa. 448, 181 A. 377.

Judgment affirmed.

* The title to the act is "An Act Providing for and defining the rights, remedies, duties, and liabilities of purchasers of real estate at judicial sales, and of their grantees, heirs and devisees, and of the persons then in possession thereof."

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.