6 Whart. 277 | Pa. | 1841
delivered the opinion of the Court.
, A merger is a common law doctrine, and exists where there is a union of the legal estate in pne person, in the same right and at the same time. Where such legal ownership of the term and inheritance meets, the term which was before personal property, falls into the inheritance and ceases to exist. But, in no instance, can the legal estate merge in the equitable ownership. In the sixth chapter of Mr. Preston’s Treatise on Conveyancing, which contains an enumeration of the circumstances, which must concur in order to accomplish the operation of the law of merger, it is said, the several estates must be held in the same legal right: and in page 566, “ the exception to merger arising from the circumstances", that the same person takes in different rights, must also be attended by the circumstance, that both these rights are recognized by law and considered to be distinct. And as a legal estate cannot merge in an equitable one, it is matter of consideration, whether the term be not legal, and the inheritance equitable and e converso.” Here the ground-rent was a legal estate, and recognized as such at law; but the character of
In Morrison v. Wurtz it is said, that a sheriff’s sale is attended by the ordinary incidents of a sale by an individualand if this had been a private sale, by articles of agreement, no money paid, nor possession taken, a legal title .to be made, and ■ the contract to be consummated at a time fixed by the parties, and in the intermediate time the testator had died, it would be clear, that the case would not fall within the operation of the law of merger. It would not merge at the time of the agreement, and there can be no intermediate time; for until the time agreed upon, the ground landlord would be entitled to his rent, which is inconsistent with the notion that the rent - is extinguished: and until the sheriff’s deed in the case, in law, he is the owner of the rent.
Judgment for $■400 .and 89 .cents.