55 Pa. 479 | Pa. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered, October 31st 1867, by
— This is an action of ejectment by Adams against the administrator of George B. Engles, deceased, and two others, probably tenants in possession. Adams gave in evidence a deed of voluntary assignment from Dr. John Plumb, and a deed from Hamilton Humes, trustee by appointment of the court under the assignment, to himself; and the two contracts of sale by himself to Dr. George B. Engles, dated April 1st 1839 and May 12th 1841, each for one-half of the property known as the Allegheny Eorge, and two tracts of land known as the Pinkerton and Patton tracts. On the part of the defendants it was shown that Adams had mortgaged the premises to Hamilton Humes to secure the unpaid purchase money. The mortgage was executed and recorded in 1836, before either sale of Adams to Engles. In 1839 Humes, the mortgagee, brought suit against Adams on one of the bonds secured by the mortgage, and after judgment sold the mortgaged premises upon it in 1846 to Andrew G. Curtin, who bought the property for the benefit of Dr. Engles, and conveyed it to him by deed dated June 12th 1847. The legal title, therefore, had fully vested in Dr. Engles before his death. He died in 1853, leaving issue to whom the estate descended, and in whom it was vested when Adams brought this ejectment against the administrators to compel payment of the purchase-money said to remain unpaid upon the two agreements mentioned. These agreements embraced other objects beside the sale of the real estate, the former the purchase of a store in Half Moon Yalley under a co-partnership in the forge and storekeeping business ; and the latter under a dissolution of the partnership and settlement of the joint affairs upon certain terms. The controversy between the parties really grows out of the other matters; but they become unimportant in the present opinion, as this ejectment cannot be maintained whatever may be the state of their affairs otherwise.
The first objection is not so material, but it may be said that the action was not well brought against the administrators. The title was not in them, but the heirs, and they did not represent it even if the purpose were to enforce payment of the purchase-money. Ejectment, as a remedy to enforce specific performance, is by rescission of contract through means of a verdict for the land itself upon the legal title, if the contract be not set up as a defence in equity ; or if set up, by a verdict for the land on such condition as will secure performance of the contract, or its rescission upon a failure to perform'the condition.. The ejectment must
The chief objection is, however, that the plaintiff below had no title to support his recovery. His estate had been divested by the sheriff’s sale at the suit of his own creditor, leaving no title, legal or equitable, in him. Engles had not only a right to purchase through Curtin, but was compelled to do so in self-protection against the earlier encumbrance. He bought for his own use and paid his own money, at an adversary sale, and therefore not in trust for his vendor. Adams is on no principle of law entitled to a reconveyance of the land. His title was sold from him on an adversary process at the suit of his creditor, on a prior encumbrance, and was not bought at the judicial sale, in trust for him. Equity may compel the purchaser to pay him the balance justly coming to him under the contract, but cannot divest the title fairly acquired at the judicial sale.
The plaintiff below relied upon that train of cases beginning with Tod v. Gallaher, 16 S. & R. 261, followed by Harper v. Jeffries, 5 Wharton 26; McGinness v. Noble, 7 W. & S. 464; Harrison v. Soles, 6 Barr 393; Renshaw v. Gans, 7 Barr 117 ; Dentler v. Brown, 1 Jones 295 ; Garrard v. Lantz, 2 Jones 186, and Mellon’s Appeal, 8 Casey 121; which decide that a vendee purchasing a vendor’s title at sheriff’s sale cannot withhold the unpaid purchase money except so much as he had expended in buying in the title. But in none of these cases was ejectment used by the vendor to enforce the payment of the balance due to him. To suffer him to do so would contravene the theory of the action, and the intent and legal effect of the sheriff’s sale. The earlier eases which introduced the doctrine of equity against withholding payment were all founded upon a note or bond given by the vendee on receiving a conveyance. The vendee it was who was driven into equity to show a failure of consideration by a sale of his title under an earlier encumbrance. Hence when the vendee was thus forced into equity, it was thought inequitable
Renshaw v. Ganz, soon followed by Dentler v. Brown, was the first case in which it was held that the vendor could support an action of covenant on the articles of sale to recover the residue of purchase-money. The only principle on which these decisions can stand is, that equity will view the sheriff’s sale as a medium by which the vendor’s own covenant for title was performed.; for otherwise he is met by the insurmountable objection that his own covenant was broken in its most essential particular. But the very vesting of the vendor’s title in the vendee by the sheriff’s sale, thus in equity as well as at law, is the reason why he cannot maintain ejectment afterward. These cases were followed by Garrard v. Lantz, in which the equitable doctrine was extended to a case where the sheriff’s sale was founded upon an encumbrance subsequent to the sale of the vendor. In arguing the propriety of compelling payment of the residue of the purchase-money, Justice Bell concedes that this equity can be administered only in an action directly for the purchase-money, and not in an ejectment because of the sheriff’s conveyance. The remarks of Justice Bell that the vendee purchasing at sheriff’s sale is a trustee of a beneficial interest in the land to the extent of the unpaid purchase-money is said arguendo, and is clearly contrary to his own concession that ejectment will not lie, and to the doctrine of trusts. A vendee who buys at sheriff’s sale without fraud or express trust, who pays his own money, and who is compelled to buy in order to .save his own title, can in no sense be a trustee of the land for the defendant in the execution, whether that defendant be his own vendor or any other. The remedy in equity is carried to its full limit in permitting the vendor in such a case to recover upon the contract. The doctrine of Peebles v. Reading, 8 S. & R. 491, pressed in the argument, is misapplied to this case. Justice Duncan there limits his own doctrine by saying: “ It (ejectment) is an equitable action, and whenever chancery would execute a trust or decree a conveyance, the courts of this state, by the instrumentality of a jury, would direct a recovery in ejectment.” But in this case there is no trust to be executed, and clearly a chancellor would not decree a conveyance, the effect of which would be to rescind or annul the sheriff’s deed made at the sale of a creditor in invitwm. The furthest he could go would be to treat the sheriff’s deed as performance by the vendor to enable him to recover upon his contract. We are therefore of opinion that the plaintiff below mistook his remedy.
The other questions raised by the assignment of errors became unimportant.
Judgment is therefore reversed.