Bausman v. Eshleman

1 Foster 121
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County
DecidedJanuary 18, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 Foster 121 (Bausman v. Eshleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bausman v. Eshleman, 1 Foster 121 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Opinion delivered January 18, 1873, by

LivingstoN, P. J.

After having a number of judgments entered against them in Lancaster county, these defendants, or some of them, became purchasers at sheriff’s sale, and owners of certain real estate therein.

After their acquisition of said real estate (none of the judgments here represented against them being a lien thereupon), on April 3, 1872, The Inland Insurance and Deposit Company issued a fi. fa. on their judgment, to April term, 1872, No. 88, which, on the same day, at 12.15 o’clock, P. M., was placed in the hands of the sheriff. At a later hour on the same day Bair & Shenk issued fi. fas.' on their judgments to April term, 1872, Nos. 90 to 97, inclusive. These came to the hands of the sheriff at 2.30 o’clock, on the same afternoon.

On April 4, 1872, Jacob Bausman issued fi. fas. on his judgments, to April term, 1872, Nos. 100, xoi, and 102. These came to the sheriff’s hands at 11 o’clock, A. M., on that day.' At the time these several writs, were placed in the hands of the sheriff, no instructions were given him with, reference to any of them, other than those contained in said writs. But at 11.45 o’clock, A. M., on April 4, 1872, Mr. Bailsman!s counsel went to the sheriff’s office and there directed him to levy upon the defendant’s after-acquired real estate, above-mentioned, which the officer proceeded to do,, as appears on reference to the Bausman executions. He says he commenced to write it down immediately, but at that time he made no entry or levy on the writs received by him on the day previous, and which were then in his hands. At 5 o’clock, P. M., of the same day, Bair & Shenk’s-counsel, finding that the sheriff had made this levy on Bausman’s writs,, ordered him to levy on this same real estate on their writs, which he did as of that date. No instruction of any kind was given him at any time by The Inland Insurance and Deposit Company, except what the writ contained.

[122]*122The sheriff did not see the defendants until April 6, when he made an endorsement levying upon all their propeidy, real and personal, upon all the writs.

On the return of the writs of fi. fa,, writs of vend, exponas were issued and on August 3, 1872, the real estate levied on was sold.

On August 24, 1872, so much of the proceeds of said sale as was not required to pay liens upon said real estate prior to the issuing of these executions, was ruled into court, to wit: $5,460.38. On September 18, 1872, an auditor was appointed to make distribution of this fund among those entitled thereto. Before the auditor, Mr. Bausman’s counsel claimed to be first paid the full amount due on his executions issued April 4, 1872, .because he first gave the sheriff special directions to levy on this after-acquired real estate, and thus obtained the first levy and lien thereon.

The Inland Insurance and Deposit Company claimed to be first paid out of this fund, because they had issued the first execution, and had it in the sheriff’s hands on April 3, 1872 (the day before Bausman’s was issued), and upon it the sheriff was bound to levy without special orders, on the after-acquired real estate. Also, that the executions first placed in the sheriff’s hands, are first entitled to be paid out of the money made.

The auditor being of opinion that the issuing of an execution and levy are both necessary to acquire a lien upon a defendant’s after-acquired real estate — that the mere issuing execution and placing it in the sheriff’s hands does not bind defendant’s after-acquired real estate, an actual levy on the specific property being required, and that Bausman having been the first to cause a levy upon the real estate in question, has the first lien upon the fund in court — directs that the amount of his executions be first paid in full, to wit: $3453.15, and then directs the balance, after deducting costs of audit ($162.50), to be paid to Bair & Shenk, on account of their claim, viz: $1844.73, as they were next in order in directing the sheriff to levy on said real estate. And to The Inland Insurance and Deposit Company, who issued and placed in the sheriff’s hands the first execution, he awards nothing, because they gave no special direction to the sheriff to levy on this particular real estate.

To this report the following exception is taken : “ The auditor erred .in not allowing the claim of The Inland Insurance and Deposit Company.” 'This exception was filed December 10, 1872, and on the same day “with- , drawn so far as it pertains to the money awarded on the judgments against John J. Good,” said company having no judgment against him.

The sheriff has paid the money into court, and this, as Judge Gibson has said in McDonald v. Todd, relieves him from responsibility, and throws the burden of properly distributing the fund upon the court. It is therefore necessary that we should examine the case presented, and decide it as to law and justice may appertain.

Under the English statutes, when land is taken in execution; it is [123]*123delivered specifically to the creditor to make satisfaction by the profits of it, without regard to the debtor’s title to it, and this is the course pursued in sonic American states.

But in Pennsylvania the sheriff sells — not the land, as the incontestable property of the debtor, but his estate in it, or title to it, as a chattel, and at the risk of the purchaser, who takes his chance of recovering on it, against whomsoever may be in possession under an adverse title. Mitchell v. Hamilton, 8 Barr 488; Freeman v. Caldwell, 10 Watts 10. And under our statute law, all possible interests in, and titles to, land may be taken in execution — the sheriff sells, and the purchaser buys, the defendant’s right, title, and interest in said land; land being considered in Pennsylvania a chattel for the payment of debts. How does this case stand ?

Three writs of fieri facias were issued and placed in the sheriff’s hands; the first on April 3, 1872, at 12.15 o’clock, P. M.; the second at 2.30 o’.clock, P. M., on the same day; and the third on April 4, 1872, at ix o’clock, A. M.; each of them commanding the sheriff that of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of these defendants,” he should cause to be made and levied, the amounts in said writs respectively named.

The real estate afterwards levied on and sold, was, at the time the whole of these writs were issued, owned by the defendants. No levy was endorsed upon any of the writs until 11.45 o’clock, A. M., on April 4,' 1872, when an endorsement of levy was made, at the instance of counsel for plaintiffs on the last execution, and at 5 o’clock, P. M., of the same day, the same endorsement was made, also by direction of counsel, on the second execution; but the sheriff did not see defendants until April 6, when he made an endorsement levying itpon all their property, real and personal, upon all the writs (so that if an actual seizure or levy, was necessary to bind after-acquired real estate, none was made until April 6, and then it was made upon all the writs, and the evidence does not show upon which writ a levy was first made upon that day).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Foster 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bausman-v-eshleman-pactcompllancas-1873.