Aquilina v. Doan

97 A.2d 520, 374 Pa. 405, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 1953
DocketAppeal, 161
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 A.2d 520 (Aquilina v. Doan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aquilina v. Doan, 97 A.2d 520, 374 Pa. 405, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 408 (Pa. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Chidsey,

This proceeding was initiated by a bill in equity which prayed for the reformation of a release of chattel mortgage and also for an ordér directing defendant Smith to surrender a bill of sale for a certain bulldozer for correction.

The bill disclosed that both defendants resided in Jefferson County and the equipment in question was also in Jefferson County, and. prayed for extraterritorial service under the Act of April 6, 1859, P. L. 387, as amended, 12 PS §1254. Defendants filed an appearance de bene esse, objected to the service and. moved that the bill be stricken off. This motion was refused by the chancellor. The defendants then filed separate answers.

Oh December 30,-1950 a chattel mortgage in the amount of- $10,000 covering two bulldozers' and one power shovel was executed by. defendant Doan, as mort *407 gagor in favor of plaintiff as mortgagee. Doan’s signature on the mortgage was acknowledged before a notary public, but the space provided in the mortgage form for the signature of a witness was blank. This chattel mortgage was filed in the office of the Prothonotary of Clearfield County within ten days of its execution. The serial numbers on the various pieces of equipment covered by the chattel mortgage were furnished by defendant Doan. One of the bulldozers (8E6297) was in much better condition than the other (IH3089). Plaintiff knew nothing about the serial numbers of the respective bulldozers.

Subsequently, on June 9,1951, after Doan expressed a desire to sell the equipment separately, a second chattel mortgage on the same equipment was executed between the same parties in the amount of $11,518, the increased figure apparently representing an additional loan from Aquilina to Doan. This mortgage was properly signed, acknowledged and witnessed, but was not recorded. 1 In the second chattel mortgage, bulldozer 8E6297 (the better one) was valued at $518, and bulldozer IH3089 (the poorer one) was valued at $5,500. These respective values were furnished by defendant Doan. At the same time separate releases from the lien of the chattel mortgage were prepared for each piece of equipment to be retained by plaintiff’s attorney until the individual pieces were sold. At the time these chattel mortgages were executed, all of the equipment was in Clearfield County, but subsequently it was all removed to Jefferson County without the permission *408 of the mortgagee, contrary to the terms of the mortgage.

Defendant Smith agreed with defendant Doan to purchase the cheaper of the two bulldozers. In accordance with the arrangement previously made with the mortgagee, Doan and Smith delivered $518 to plaintiffs attorney; who thereupon filed of record a release from. the lien of the chattel mortgage for bulldozer 8R6297, which had been previously represented by Doan to be the poorer bulldozer. Doan then executed a bill of sale conveying bulldozer 8R6297 to Smith for a consideration of $518. After the bill of sale was executed, defendant Smith took bulldozer IH3089 to his farm in Jefferson County. Bulldozer 8R6297 and the power shovel were retained in the possession of defendant Doan and moved by him to another farm in Jefferson County. The defendants attempted to explain this arrangement by saying that bulldozer IH3089 was delivered to defendant Smith for repairs and bulldozer 8R6297 was loaned by him to defendant Doan for one month. . The chancellor found that this explanation was unworthy of belief and that although defendant Smith intended to purchase the cheaper of the two bulldozers, he joined defendant Doan in his misrepresentation in an endeavor to keep the more valuable bulldozer.

The final order of the court below directed that the release of lien recorded in the office of the prothonotary be changed from bulldozer 8R6297 to bulldozer IH3089 and directed that the bill of sale from defendant Doan to defendant Smith for bulldozer 8R8297 be changed to read IH3089. From this order defendants appeal.

. Appellants contend first that the Court of Common Pleas, of Clearfield County did not have jurisdiction over defendants since both defendants and equipment involved were in Jefferson County. The defendants were subjected to extraterritorial service under *409 the Act of April 6, 1859, supra, and in their de bene esse appearance attempted to object to such service. However, in this pleading defendants further advanced the proposition that the chattel mortgage was deficient since it was not witnessed in accordance with the statutory requirements. Defendants chose not to confine themselves strictly to the issue of the jurisdiction of the court, and in addition set up a defense on the merits. Under such circumstances the defendants must be deemed to have submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court and are bound by its determination of the legal questions involved: Byers v. Byers, 208 Pa. 23, 57 A. 62; Wormley Esiate, 359 Pa. 295, 59 A. 2d 98. In Commonwealth by Hilbert v. Lutz et al., 359 Pa. 427, 60 A. 2d 24, relied upon by appellants, the additional defense offered in a de bene esse appearance was addressed only to a formal defect of pleading, and this Court held that such additional reference in the petition did not amount to a general appearance. In the instant case, the additional ground relied upon by defendants for the dismissal of the bill is not a mere formal defect, but a matter of substantive law, which was subsequently decided contrary to appellants’ contention in the court below and will be referred to in detail later in this opinion.

Appellant Smith contends that there was no basis in the testimony to support the finding of the chancellor that he was guilty of fraud and no basis for reforming the bill of sale which Smith obtained for bulldozer 8E6297. It is clear that if appellant Smith did participate in the fraud, then reformation of the bill of sale was proper. The chancellor found as fact that Smith joined in the misrepresentation in an effort to keep the better bulldozer, although his original intention was, as he testified, to purchase the cheaper one. Immediately after the release of lien and bill of sale *410 were delivered on July 27, 1951, Smith removed the cheaper bulldozer (IH3089) to his farm in Jefferson County, and at the time of the hearing, May 1, 1952, did not even know the location of the better bulldozer (8R6297) to which he claimed title. Under these circumstances the chancellor would have been naive to conclude that Smith had no part in the fraudulent transaction.

Appellants contend that appellee had an adequate remedy at law which was invoked by him prior to his filing of the present bill in equity. The record discloses.that on August 16, 1951, appellee entered judgment in Jefferson County against appellant Doan on the. bond accompanying the mortgage of December 30, 1950 and issued a fi. fa., on. this judgment. Defendant Doan presented á petition to the Jefferson County Court for a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened with stay of all proceedings. This petition was granted and a rule issued.. No further steps were taken in that proceeding, pending the determination of the instant action in equity.

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133 A.2d 870 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A.2d 520, 374 Pa. 405, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aquilina-v-doan-pa-1953.