57 Pa. 498 | Pa. | 1868
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
As this case stood when referred to the auditor, the question was one of distribution between lien-creditors. The sheriff was ruled to bring the proceeds of sale into court, and on the same day several lien-creditors moved for leave to take their claims out of the fund, and thereupon the auditor was appointed to make distribution. But the result before the auditor showed that the fund was applicable to the judgment standing in the name of Henry L. Powell, and that this judgment was claimed by different persons, to wit, by Lancaster, as the alleged cestui que trust of a portion of the judgment, and by Souder (the appellant) as the assignee of Henry L. Powell of the whole of it. It is clear that jurisdiction had fully vested in the auditor to make distribution according to the provisions of the Act of 1836, which gives a right to demand an issue for the trial of facts. The only question before us on this part of the case is, whether the auditor’s authority ceased with his finding that the fund was distributable to the judgment of Henry L. Powell, or whether, having acquired jurisdiction, it extended to the determination of the rights of the claimants of this judgment. The right of Souder to demand an issue depends on the determination of this question. For if the decision of Lancaster’s right to the money as cestui que trust of the Powell judgment does not belong to the question of distribution, but was one to be tried by the court after the auditor had awarded the fund to the judgment, it did not fall within the provision of the Act of 1836, and Souder could not demand an issue as a matter of right. It would then be purely discretionary with the court. When money is paid into court upon a-judgment, and is claimed by different persons as owners of the judgment, the question is one of mete ownership, and may be determined by the court itself, or submitted to a jury at its own discretion. But if the ownership of the encumbrance arises legitimately in a proceeding to make distribution, there seems to be no good reason why it should not be determined in the proceeding itself, as one of the incidents of distribution, necessary to point out to the court or its officer making payment of the fund the proper person to receive it — thereby avoiding both prolongation and circuity of
An issue was demanded in writing by Souder, on the coming-in of the auditor’s report, to try the fact, whether the judgment-bond was given to and accepted by Powell, on the condition of his paying the notes of the obligors held by Lancaster; and no objection appears to have been made to its form or effect. The court below denied the issue solely on the ground that the demand for an issue came too late. In this we think there was error.
An issue under the Act of 1836, and its prototype of 1827, is demandable of right, as numerous authorities declare: Bichel v. Bank, 5 Watts 140; Trimble’s Appeal, 6 Id. 133; Reigart’s Appeal, 7 W. & S. 267; Overholt’s Appeal, 2 Jones 225; Benson’s Appeal, 12 Wright 159. In Trimble’s Appeal the demand was held to be in time when made after the evidence was in, the arguments closed, and when the court was about to pronounce its decision. The same was held in Reigart’s Appeal. In Ross’s Estate, 9 Barr 17, a lien-creditor was held not to be excluded from a fund by his neglect to present his claim to the auditor; justice could be done before final judgment and decree. Where the request does not come in proper form, or where it embraces questions of law instead of fact, or it is manifest that the matter to be tried cannot affect the decision, the demand may be refused: Robinson & Minis’s Appeal, 12 Casey 81; Dickerson & Haven’s Appeal, 7 Barr 255; Benson’s Appeal, 12 Wright 159; Dougherty’s Estate, 9 W. & S. 192. But the demand here was for the trial of a specific fact, essential to the determination of the right to the money, and falls within none of the exceptions; and it does not appear that there was any rule of the court below regulating the practice in such a case. Bradford’s Appeal, 5 Casey 513, cited by the learned judge, was a case in the Orphans’ Court, in which an issue is not of right, but lies in discretion. The issue ought to have been granted therefore by the court below, and the right to it derives force from the fact that it is very doubtful whether the trust for Lancaster was clearly proved.
We do not think that Souder was estopped from having an appeal, by his taking out of court the undisputed part of his claim to the judgment. That part was not claimed by Lancaster. It is only when a party sets up a claim inconsistent with the finding
The decree of the court below is therefore reversed, a procedendo awarded, and the record ordered to be remitted fo.r proceedings in accordance with the principles contained in this opinion.