Court Opinion

ID: 6244801
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:55:29.237704+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:15.664258
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Stebbett,
The controlling question in this case is whether the plaintiff, as sheriff, was entitled to recover from the defendant the difference between tire price for which the house and lot was sold to him at the first sheriff’s sale and the sum realized by the second sale.
*379The property referred to was owned by James Judge, who in 1886 died seized thereof and intestate, leaving to survive him a widow, Alice Judge, and a minor daughter, then about seven years of age. The sheriff’s return to the writ on which the first sale was made was: “ September 28, 1898, real estate sold to J. H. Miller for $2,525, and tendered him a deed, and demanded the purchase money, the payment of which was refused, when confirmation was taken off and this writ returned for nonpayment of the purchase money.” Subsequently the property was resold on an alias writ for $1,100, and duly conveyed by the sheriff to the purchaser who afterwards conveyed the same to Mrs. Judge, the widow. The defense set up was that the parties agreed to a resale in order that the title might be vested in the widow. The learned trial judge properly charged that the parties to said agreement were powerless thereby to bind the minor daughter’s estate, and that there was no evidence that the execution creditor assented to a rescission of the contract of sale. “At most, all he did consent to (says the learned judge) was that the confirmation of the sheriff’s sale should be taken off, and he should issue a new writ, because he could not get his money by the first writ. And there is no proof that any representative of the minor, who held the fee simple, consented to a rescission.”
In this connection it may be stated that as soon as the widow acquired title by deed from the sheriff’s vendee under the second sale, she mortgaged the property to secure her indebtedness to the defendant, contracted after her husband’s death; and by subsequent proceedings against her that indebtedness was paid, and fully satisfied.
The learned trial judge directed a verdict for plaintiff subject to the question of law reserved, viz : “ T. D. Hughes, the plaintiff, as sheriff of Blair county, having duly acknowledged his deed to J. H. Miller, in pursuance of sale made September 29, 1893, and such acknowledgment having been duly confirmed by the court, was such confirmation of such sheriff’s deed stricken off by the court with sufficient formality, and after such due proceedings as to notice to Miller as purchaser, as will render Miller liable for the difference in price at a resale ? ”
This question was determined in defendant’s favor, and judg*380ment was accordingly entered for him and against the plaintiff non obstante veredicto. In this, we think there was error; and it evidently arose from the mistaken assumption that acknowledgment of a sheriff’s deed, without more, vests title in the purchaser. This overlooks the fact that delivery of the deed is also essential: Collins v. London Assurance Co., 165 Pa. 308. As was said in Hawk v. Stouch, 5 S. & R. 160: “No right attaches to the purchaser, until he receives his deed.” To the same effect is Lodge v. Berrier, 16 S. & R. 299. The defendant’s liability in this case sprang from the facts that he purchased the property at the sheriff’s sale and, upon demand and tender of a duly executed and acknowledged deed, he refused to pay the purchase money, and thus a resale became necessary ; and the property sold for less than one half the amount of his bid at the first sale: Forster v. Hayman, 26 Pa. 268; Tindle’s Appeal, 77 Pa. 201. In the face of his refusal to comply with the terms of his contract by paying the purchase money and accepting the deed that was duly tendered to him, he can claim no right under the deed. The action of the court in striking off the acknowledgment was made necessary by the defendant’s refusal to perform his contract, and, according to the undisputed facts, it was clearly warranted. As testified to by himself, defendant’s object in purchasing at the first sale was to save his own claim. It is very evident that the new arrangement, by which the title was to be vested in the widow, was made after he discovered his mistake in becoming a purchaser at the first sale, and was a further effort to realize the amount of his claim against the widow. That he succeeded in doing; but he cannot be permitted to do so at the expense of the minor child’s estate. Having made it necessary by his own default that the acknowledgment of the sheriff’s deed should be stricken off, or vacated, he cannot be heard to complain' that such action was taken. He deliberately declined and refused to comply with his contract, and was therefore not entitled to any further notice.
The practice of presenting sheriff’s deeds for acknowledgment before the purchase money is paid or adjusted in any way should not be encouraged; but, the power of the court to strike off or vacate an acknowledgment that has been improvidently taken .or when the purchaser refuses to pay the purchase money and accept the deed cannot be doubted.
*381It follows from wbat bas been said that the judgment must be reversed, and judgment entered for plaintiff on the verdict.
Judgment reversed, and judgment is now entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant on the verdict for $1,745.62, with interest from the date of the verdict.