199 A. 213 | Pa. | 1938
Appellants borrowed from appellee $20,000 secured by a bond and mortgage on their real estate. Judgment on the bond was confessed against them for $24,622.20 and the real estate sold at sheriff's sale to appellee for $1,107.95, covering the costs of sale and unpaid taxes. Averring that the fair value of the property was not less than $30,000, appellants petitioned the court below to set aside the sale for gross inadequacy of price. Testimony established that appellants had paid $37,750 for the property, that it was assessed at $23,250 by the City of Pittsburgh, at $19,920 by Allegheny County. Appellants' expert witnesses estimated its worth as $30,605 and $32,100 respectively, while appellee's witnesses placed its value at $17,200, $15,480, and $15,000. The court below refused the petition, and from its order as amended this appeal was taken.
In this Commonwealth, the principle is established that gross inadequacy of price, on timely application by the mortgagor, furnishes sound basis for setting aside a sheriff's sale:Hettler v. Shephard,
Pennsylvania is not alone in this position;1 the cases cited in the note show that the rule that gross inadequacy of price is sufficient to prompt the court's exercise of equitable powers has been adopted in other jurisdictions.
The determination of the question presented in a petition to set aside a judicial sale is an exercise of discretion, *401
and for its abuse we will reverse on appeal. It is a necessary corollary to Hettler v. Shephard, supra, which, as stated above, determined that gross inadequacy of price offers a sound basis for setting aside a sale, that the possibility of abuse of discretion exists as well in refusal to set aside. The exercise of discretion by a court of equity is not an arbitrary or capricious function, but is one directed within the channels of precedent. See Sullivan v. Jones Laughlin Steel Co.,
Appellee argues that federal and state constitutional provisions forbidding the impairment of contracts deter the court's setting aside of the sale. But that constitutional restriction does not apply to judicial decisions: Sinking FundCommissioners of Philadelphia v. Philadelphia,
Order reversed with a procedendo.