13 Pa. 113 | Pa. | 1850
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Had the sheriffs sale of the premises now owned by Scott, occurred after the passage of the act of April, 16, 1845, Pun. Pig. 1048; the claim hei’e sought to be recovered would have been payable out of the proceeds, by virtue of the proviso in the 4th section of that act, and as a consequence, its lien divested, notwithstanding the intervening mortgage; for then, the plaintiff must have looked to the fund in exoneration of the land: Custer vs. Detterer, 3 Watts & Serg. 28; Appeal of Com’rs. of Spring Garden, 8 Watts and Serg. 444. But as the sale had place in 1838, the question presented must be solved by the law, as it stood at that time.
By the acts of February 3d and 27th March, 1824, the sum of money assessed to cover the costs and expenses incurred in laying iron water pipes in front of the defendant’s lot, became the first lien and was entitled to priority of payment: Pennock vs. Hoover 5 Rawle 315.
The subsequent act of April 6, 1830, Dun. Dig. 508, provided, in protection of mortgagees, that the incumbrance of a mortgage should not be divested by a sheriff’s sale under a subsequent encumbrance, where the lien of the mortgage was prior to all other liens on the same property, “ except other mortgages, ground rents and the purchase money due to the commonwealth.” As municipal taxes and assessments levied on real estate within the city and county of Philadelphia are not enumerated among the exceptions, a consequence flowing from the prior statutes, giving preference of lien to taxes and assessments, was to divest the lien of mortgages within the city and county, whenever the mortgaged premises became the subject of a judicial sale, if at the time, they happened to be subject also to a tax or municipal charge. This was deemed an evil, and to amend it, the legislature, by the act of April 11, 1835, Dun. Dig. 670, in substance, declared that no lien created by virtue of the act of February, 1824 shall be construed to be within the meaning of the act of 1830. Although
As the municipal charge now in question actually originated before the date of the mortgage, perhaps a sheriff’s sale, made for the purpose of realizing it, would have passed the premises wholly disincumbered to the purchaser. But if a doubt existed on this head, it is removed by the 4th section of the act of 16th April, 1845, Dun. Dig. 1048, according to the construction given it in Perry vs. Brinton. The proviso of that section is “that the continuance of the lien of such mortgage shall not prevent the discharge of such prior liens for taxes, charges or assessments, by such sale, (under a subsequent judgment) or the satisfaction thereof out of the proceeds of such sale.” So that now the proceeds of such a sheriff’s sale as had place in this case would be applicable in satisfaction of the charge for laying pipes, as already intimated. But, after the act of 1835, and before the act of 1845, such an application of proceeds would not have been sanctioned, since under the junior judgment nothing more was sold than the equity of redemption, leaving the estate still subject to the mortgage, and'the prior assessed claim. Were this otherwise — did the sale necessarily divest the lien of the claim, the effect would be to put it in the power of the tenant of the land, wholly to defeat the protection afforded by the act of 1824, by encumbering the estate
A consequence of the statutes I have noticed is to bring the case within the principle upon which was decided Mix vs. Ackla, 7 Watts 316; Tower’s Appropriation, 9 Watts and Serg. 104; Swar’s Appeal, 1 Barr 92; and Lauman’s Appeal, 8 Barr 473. It is thus stated by the court in one of those determinations:— “If a junior creditor is compelled to leave a particular incumbrance standing on the land, he is necessarily compelled to leave standing any other incumbrance which precedes it; and on a judgment subsequent to a fixed lien, the sheriff consequently sells the estate subject to incumbrances, which the proceeds might not satisfy, nor the sale dissolve.” Here, the precedent mortgage was a fixed incumbrance, unaffected by the sale caused by the junior judgment creditor, and therefore it interposed to prevent the otherwise legal effect of the sale from reaching and disturbing the superior lien of the claim now in suit.
Although not noticed on the argument, I ought not to conclude without saying in anticipation of a possible objection, that although the act of March, 1824, Pamph. laws 86, which gives a lien to claims like the present, and provides for their payment before subsequent incumbrances, is not specifically referred to by the act of 1835, yet as the preference conferred by the former act, is included in and covered by the lien given by the act of February, 1824, it is of course, affected by the statute of 1835, in the manner and to the extent already pointed out.
The argument may be thus briefly recapitulated. The acts of 1824 gave to taxes, -rates and levies, thereafter to be imposed, for any purpose, on real estate within the city and county of Philadelphia, a lien on such real estate prior to “ any recognizance, mortgage, judgment, debt, obligation or responsibility, which the said real estate may become chargeable with or liable to,” after the passing of -the acts. At this time, and down to 1830, a judidicial sale would have divested this and all other liens. But the act of 6th April, in that year, directed that, thereafter, where a mortgage constituted the first incumbrance, a sale by execution to enforce a younger incumbrance should not divest the lien of the mortgage. But, by the then existing law, municipal taxes, &c. without regard to the date of assessment, took precedence of even first mortgages, within the city and county. Now, as this would déprive a mortgage of its character of primary lien, it followed that in Philadelphia a sale under a junior judgment destroyed the
The court below was therefore wrong in saying to the jury that te although the lien of the district for laying pipes in front of the premises is prior to any other incumbrance, yet a sheriff’s sale subject to a mortgage, is not necessarily subject also to the prior lien for pipes.”
Judgment reversed and venire de novo awarded.
Note. — The Reporter was favored with the report of this case and of that of Thomas vs. Northern Liberties, by F. C. Brightey, Esq.