319 Pa. 220 | Pa. | 1935
Opinion by
The question to be answered in this case as a result of the appeal of Ethel M. Hamilton, one of the defendants, is whether the Deficiency Judgment Act of January 17, 1934, P. L. 243, 21 P. S., section 806, applies where a property is sold at sheriff’s sale on December 23, 1933, before the passage of the act and the sheriff acknowledges the deed on February 8, 1934, after the act was in effect. The learned president judge of the court below held that the statute did not apply.
The act provides: “That whenever any real property is sold on any execution on the foreclosure of any mortgage, or on a judgment entered on any obligation secured by mortgage, and the sum for which such property was sold is not sufficient to satisfy the debt, interest and costs, the plaintiff or use-plaintiff shall, within six months after such sale, petition the court out of which such writ of execution issued to fix the fair value of the property sold.”
It is the contention of appellant that the right to proceed under the act did not accrue until the sheriff’s deed was acknowledged, which was the first time when it could be definitely ascertained that the amount realized is insufficient to satisfy the debt, interest and costs. This reason, which is advanced to sustain the argument that the words “sold” and “sale” in the act should not be given their customary import, namely, the time when the
Certainly in common parlance the word “sale” when used in connection with a sheriff’s vendue means the time when he knocked down the property to the bidding purchaser. If the legislature had meant to extend the time within which to present a petition to fix the fair value of the property to six months after the acknowledgment of the sheriff’s deed, it would have been very easy to say so. Later language in the act in which the same word is used negatives the idea that any other day than the sale day was to be the starting time for the computation of the six months’ period. It says “the fair value of the premises sold at the time of the sale ” This could not mean at the time the deed is acknowledged.
The tax sale cases such as Grakelow v. Nash, 98 Pa. Superior Ct. 316, Osmer v. Sheasley, 219 Pa. 390, Waln v. Shearman, 8 S. & R. 357, cited by appellant, cannot control here; the decisions reached in the cited cases were based largely on the practical considerations surrounding the right to redeem. In such cases until the deed was made the owner could not know with certainty that his title had been transferred or what was his real situation.
With reference to sheriff’s sales, as in other kinds of legal proceedings, a legal terminology has grown up, used and understood by all the bar, such as “issue of the writ,” “judgment of two nihils,” “condemnation,” “hand bills,” “sheriff’s return,” “sheriff’s sale,” “acknowledgment,” “sheriff’s deed,” “attorney on the writ,” “sci. fa.,” “real owner,” etc. These words have definite connotations for
The word “sale” from a very early date has been used in many statutes as meaning the time when the property is knocked down.
It is by no means true that a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale gets none of the incidents of ownership until the deed is acknowledged. Indeed, it is almost a contradiction in terms to say that the words “sale” and “sold” relate to the time the deed is acknowledged. In Slater’s App., 28 Pa. 169, it was held that the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale prior to such acknowledgment gets an inceptive interest which may be bound by a judgment against him during this period (Morrison v. Wurtz, 7 Watts 437); Stover v. Eice, 3 Wharton 21, decided that a purchaser at sheriff’s sale acquires an equitable estate
We agree with the court below that the statute in question, approved after the date of the sheriff’s sale, has no application to this proceeding.
Order affirmed at appellant’s cost.
Scire Facias Act of 1705, 1 Smith’s Laws 57, sections 4 and 6; Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 155, 12 P. S., section 2443; Act of April 22, 1905, P. L. 265, 12 P. S., section 2536; Act of July 2, 1895, P. L. 420, section 1, 12 P. S., section 2444; Act of April 16, 1845, P. L. 538, section 2, 12 P. S., section 2442; Act of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1218, section 185, 16 P. S. 185.
Hawk v. Stouch, 5 S. & R. 157; Thomas v. Connell, 5 Pa. 13; Bellas v. McCarty, 10 Watts 13; Collins v. London Assurance Corp., 165 Pa. 298; Vastine v. Fury, 2 S. & R. 426; Warren Pearl Works v. Rappaport, 303 Pa. 235; Hoyt v. Koons, 19 Pa. 277; Media T. & T. Co. v. Kelly, 185 Pa. 131.