Nice's Appeal

54 Pa. 200 | Pa. | 1867

The opinion of the court was delivered, by

Agnew, J.

By the terms of the Act of 28th May 1715, no mortgage, or defeasible deed in the nature of a mortgage, shall pass the estate it purports to convey unless it be recorded within six months. But it has been held that an unrecorded mortgage is not wholly inoperative. It will avail against the mortgagor himself, or his alienee or mortgagee with notice or a voluntary assignee for creditors ; and a mortgage for purchase-money is good against a judgment-creditor with actual notice before his debt was contracted: Mellon’s Appeal, 8 Casey 121; Brittain’s Appeal, 9 Wright 172.

The reason seems to be, that the Act of 1715 being intended to protect subsequent mortgagees and others from injuries caused by secret pledges of property; where actual notice exists no injury is done — eessante ratione eessat ipsa lex. But though the letter of the law gives way to promote the equity of the spirit, still an unrecorded mortgage is a forbidden thing; and this exemption is not to be allowed to prejudice a necessary system for the government of decedents’ estates, and the policy which gave it birth. We are asked to extend the exemption of an unrecorded mortgage, lying dormant at the death of the mortgagor, from the legislation which forbids it and limits its operation, and to give it precedence over the lien of the general debts of the decedent. The argument to support this claim is specious — that as the mortgage was good against the mortgagor himself while he lived, it must intercept claims which attach only at death and must be in the order of time an instant later. However plausible this might *202appear against heirs and devisees whose rights are inferior to those of creditors, it is inadmissible against the lien of the general debts.

So long as a man lives his estate follows him, is guided by his hand, and floats with his interests. But death casts it into an unchangeable mould, the law then fixing its condition and prescribing its management and its distribution. His real estate becomes assets for the payment of debts. An Orphans’ Court sale converts it, and transfers the title discharged of all liens. But an unrecorded mortgage has no lien, a lien being prohibited by the express terms of the Act of 28th March 1820.

It must operate therefore on the estate, if it avail at all. To avail as an estate it must resist the power of the Orphans’ Court sale, and this is not conceded to the recorded mortgage, which is neither prohibited by the Act of 1715 nor limited by the Act of 1820: Bowers v. Oyster, 3 Penna. 240; Moore v. Shultz, 1 Harris 98; Foster’s Appeal, 3 Barr 79. If it be neither a lien nor such an estate as stands in the way of an Orphans’’ Court sale for payment of debts, it is manifestly no higher than a specialty debt, and this is the precise position given to it by this court in Adams’s Appeal, 1 Penna. 447. “In fact,” remarks Justice Smith, “ to give it now the validity of a regular mortgage would repeal the Acts of 28th May 1715 and 25th March 1820, and the 14th section of the Act of 1794.” To those I may add the 21st section of the Act of 24th February 1834, establishing the order for the payment of debts, and the 24th section of that act controlling the lien of the general debts by a limitation of five years. It excepts the lien of mortgages and judgments, but this evidéntly refers to recorded mortgages, for none others become a lien at law. An unrecorded mortgage to which a lien is prohibited, must therefore intercept the proceeds of sale between the recorded mortgage or judgment and the general debts. To allow this, is to give it a place unprovided for in the system established for the regulation of decedents’ estates, and upon a principle of an imperishability of interest, which is forbidden by the law of Orphans’ Court sales for the payment of debts.

We therefore hold that a debt secured by an unrecorded mort-. gage without possession taken under it in the lifetime of the decedent, has no right to take precedence of the general debts, but must come in for its share as one of them.

The decree of the court below is affirmed, with costs to be paid by the appellants.

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