6 Pa. 277 | Pa. | 1847
The case of Colhoun v. Snider, 6 Binn. 135, settled, that after-acquired lands were not bound by a judgment previously entered; and the law is the same whether they were acquired by descent or purchase, and this upon the usage and course of decision in Pennsylvania, without regard to the English law. Mr. Justice Yeates, whose experience went beyond that of any man then living, says that “ it is the obvious meaning of the legislature in the act of 1705, (1 Smith’s Laws, 7,) that the lands directed to be sold should be such lands as the debtor had at the time of the judgment in default of his personal property. But it is also a reasonable construction, that if the lands to which the debtor was then entitled should be insufficient to pay the debt and costs, other lands which he might acquire afterwards, either by descent or purchase, should be subject to the execution of the creditor; provided that no injury was done thereby to third persons, and that the lands belonged to the debtor at the time of the taking thereof in execution.” 6 Binn. 145. Brackenridge, Justice, also says, in the same case, “ Can the judgment enlarge itself as to the subject of it ? It can bind, only that for which it- was a security, or what was pledged
The decree of the Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.