Bingaman v. McCandless

55 Pa. Super. 155, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 212
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 Pa. Super. 155 (Bingaman v. McCandless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingaman v. McCandless, 55 Pa. Super. 155, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

This contention arises out of the distribution of a fund produced by a sheriff’s sale of real estate. On its face the distribution presents no unusual features, the money having been awarded to the judgment creditors of the execution defendant in the order of their priority as shown by the record. The appellant excepted to the •decree made and claimed that the money should have been awarded to him to an amount sufficient to satisfy a mortgage which he held, executed by the defendant in the judgments; although the property pledged by that mortgage was not the property that was sold by the sheriff, and although the property sold never was embraced, and never was intended to be embraced in the mortgage. To make plain the nature of the somewhat unusual claim of the appellant under these circumstances it will be necessary to briefly state the facts which appear in the case.

Thomas H. McCandless and his brother, upon the death of their father in 1890, became the equal owners in common of the fee of certain property in the borough of Crafton, Allegheny county. Whilst the title remained in this condition certain judgments were entered of record against Thomas, one of the cotenants. These judgments, of course, became liens from the date of their entry upon his undivided half in the property aforesaid. In September, 1910, the same two brothers acquired by purchase the title to an improved lot of ground in the city of Pittsburg, each becoming the owner of the undivided one-half thereof. Later, in the same year, Thomas, the debtor in the judgments referred to, executed and delivered to Weaver, the appellant, a mortgage on his undivided interest in the Pitts-[158]*158burg lot. The judgments that had been entered, long before the acquisition of this property, were never revived so as to become liens upon it, and it is conceded that on the record of the mortgage referred to it became the first lien on the undivided half of the mortgagor in the Pittsburg property.

One of the brothers, in 1911, instituted an action of partition in the court of common pleas of Allegheny county which was so proceeded in that all of the common property, that in Crafton as well as that in Pitts-burg, was divided into two purparts which were appraised as of exactly equal value. One of these purparts was allotted to each one of the brothers in severalty. As a consequence there was no sale with the resultant conversion of any part of the common property into money, and there was no owelty from either brother to the other. The purpart allotted to Thomas, the judgment debtor and mortgagor, consisted entirely of property in Crafton, although it did not include all of the common property there located. The purpart allotted to his brother in severalty included the entire lot in Pittsburg and the remainder of the Crafton property not embraced in the purpart allotted to Thomas. The legal effect of the partition thus made, quo ad the judgment creditors and the mortgagee referred to, is the question presented by this appeal.

The learned counsel for the appellant starts with the proposition that the hen of his mortgage was discharged from the property on which it had rested by the allotment of that property in severalty to a cotenant of the mortgagor. Of the correctness of this proposition we have no doubt. It has been many times declared in the decisions of the Supreme Court and must mow be regarded as settled: Wright v. Vickers, 81 Pa. 122; McCandless’ Appeal, 98 Pa. 489; Stewart v. Allegheny Bank, 101 Pa. 342; Reed v. Ins. Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 113 Pa. 574; Eckels v. Stuart, 212 Pa. 161. The principle on which these decisions rest may be briefly stated thus: [159]*159The right of every one of a number of cotenants to have partition of the common property is superior or paramount to the right of any individual cotenant to affect it by the incumbrance of his undivided interest. Every mortgage or judgment creditor of the individual cotenant must take his incumbrance subordinate to that paramount right and his incumbrance creates no obstacle to the working out of the partition with all of the incidents that may by law attach. As a consequence, if a tenant in common is allotted a purpart of land, after his cotenant has incumbered his own undivided interest, the allottee must take the entire purpart free and discharged from the lien of any incumbrances which had theretofore existed against the undivided interest only of his cotenant. Such is the doctrine of the cases, and we must therefore agree that the lien of the mortgage of the present appellant was, by the decree in partition, lifted from the Pittsburg property and every interest in it, as effectually as if the title of his mortgagor had been overthrown by some paramount title in a stranger.

The second proposition of the appellant is that when the lien of his mortgage on the property in Pittsburg was lost by the operation of the decree in partition, it followed the title of the mortgagor and became seated on the purpart which he had acquired in severalty. We are of opinion the authorities cited will also sustain this proposition. It was said by Mr. Justice Tkunkey in Reed v. Ins. Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 113 Pa. 574: “The right of tenants in common to make partition, and enjoy all its incidents, is paramount to the right of the lien-creditor against any one of the tenants. If necessary to effect the legitimate purpose of the partition, the lien must be shifted to the part allotted to the debtor, or if none be allotted to him, the lien against the land becomes divested.” If the two propositions thus far considered were sufficient to sustain the claim of the exceptant, his case would be made out. But he must go a step, and a long step, farther.

[160]*160His third proposition is that his mortgage lien, after being divested from the property in Pittsburg, and after being shifted to the property in Crafton allotted to his mortgagor in severalty, takes precedence there over the judgment creditors whose liens had attached to the mortgagor’s interest in that property long before the mortgage was executed. What warrant can be found in the authorities for the soundness of this proposition? It was held in Wright v. Vickers, 81 Pa. 122, that a mortgage, first in lien upon an undivided interest, was discharged by the sale in partition which in that case became necessary in order to work out the rights of the cotenants; and this too notwithstanding the provisions of the act of March 23, 1867, P. L. 43, preserving the lien of a first mortgage from destruction “by any judicial sale or other sale whatsoever, whether such judicial sale shall be made by virtue or authority of any order or decree of any orphans’ or other court, or of any writ of execution, or otherwise howsoever.”

But it was further held that the fund arising from such sale was to be regarded as land, in another form, and that the share of the mortgagor therein truly measured the interest from which the lien of the mortgage had been discharged; and that as a consequence such lien would attach to that share of the fund and be payable out of it. But here we have no sale and no resulting fund belonging to the mortgagor to which the lien of the mortgage can be transferred. In Reed v. Fidelity Co., supra, there was no sale and no fund resulting therefrom. But the necessities of that case required that the land be divided into purparts of unequal value, and there resulted therefrom a sum of money, by way of owelty, due to the mortgagor, the lien of whose mortgage on his undivided interest had been divested by the decree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. Super. 155, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingaman-v-mccandless-pasuperct-1913.