Brown v. Parkinson

56 Pa. 336, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Pa. 336 (Brown v. Parkinson) 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
Brown v. Parkinson, 56 Pa. 336, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 35 (Pa. 1868).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, January 7th 1868, by

Read, J.

On the 29th March 1865 William. Parkinson, by deed dated on that day, conveyed a tract of land containing 29 acres, situate in Elizabeth township, Allegheny county, to George Jenkins and five others in fee simple. The consideration in the [339]*339deed was $8500. For part of this purchase-money he took two judgment-notes — one for $4640, and the other for $2860. These notes were payable in instalments, the earliest on the 6th June 1865, the last on the 6th June 1872. These grantees had, on the 19th May 1862, taken a lease of a coal privilege in this land for ten years, and were working it at the period of the conveyance to them. These parties had from 1862 to the time of the conveyance large transactions in coal with William H. Brown.

The next day after the conveyance, which gave the grantees •the fee simple in the land on whieh their coal works were erected, they gave William H. Brown a note for $8150, and a warrant of attorney dated the day after (31st March 1865), on which judgment was entered on 4th April 1865 for amount of note, interest $6.80, and commission $407.50, making the judgment $8564.30, being $64.30 more than the purchase-money of the land. The warrant of attorney contained a waiver of inquisition, &c.

On the same 30th March 1865, Jenkins, Hill & Co., per William Jenkins, gave their draft in favor of William H. Brown for $11,500, payable at sight, and accepted by Jenkins, Neish & Co.; and on the same day Jenkins, Neish & Co. gave a warrant of attorney to Mr. Burgwin (to whom the other warrant was given), on which judgment was entered on 4th April for $12,084.20, including interest $9.29 and commission $575, without stay— waiver of inquisition, &c.

A similar judgment on the same day, and the same amount in favor of William H. Brown, was entered against Jenkins, Hill & Co. on the said draft on like warrant of attorney.

On the 1st April 1865, Greorge Jenkins and others gave William H. Brown a mortgage on the land conveyed by William Parkinson, and on leasehold whieh was acknowledged on the 29th of the same month, and recorded on May 20th 1865,

On the day of the date of the mortgage, Jenkins, Neish & Co. had given William H. Brown their judgment-bond in the penal sum of $30,000, conditioned for the payment of $15,000, and the mortgage was given to secure the said sum and the note for $8150 and the draft for $11,500, amounting to $34,650, the note and draft being included in the judgments above mentioned.

On the two first judgments executions were issued on the 12th May 1866, and the sheriff levied on the personal property of the defendants in the executions at the coal works in Elizabeth township, advertised and sold the same on Juno 5th 1866 for $4977.50. The coal-cars, flats and leasehold of landing and improvements, with six years to run from May 19th 1866, were purchased by William H. Brown.

After this sale the sheriff levied on the 29 acres of land (coal works) advertised, and sold it on July 27th 1866 to William H. Brown for $7000.

On the 4th April 1865, William Parkinson entered judgments [340]*340on the two judgment-notes given for purchase-money of the land bound by Brown’s judgments entered on the same day. Parkinson having an execution on his larger judgment in the sheriff’s hands, on the 11th August 1866 applied by petition to the District Court, stating the facts relating to his own judgments and those of Brown’s three judgments, and that these judgments were taken for a much larger amount than was actually due, and for the purpose of hindering, delaying and' defrauding the petitioner, and other just creditors of said defendants, &c., and on the same day the court awarded a feigned issue to try the validity of the said three several judgments, and proceedings stayed in the meantime, and directed the issue to be in the form of a wager, wherein William Parkinson should he plaintiff and William' H. Brown defendant. A narr. was filed containing several counts, and defendants by plea traversed the allegations.' On the 20th October the jury were sworn, and on the 2d November gave a verdict for the plaintiff. On the same day defendant moved for a new trial, which was argued on the 22d November, and on the 30th March 1867 the new trial was refused, and on the 18th April judgment was entered on the verdict.'

From the evidence in the appendix connected with the origin of the three judgments, there was ample testimony to sustain the verdict of the jury, and the charge of the learned judge, which is spread upon the record, is so clear and impartial as to leave no doubt that the decision was correct both in law.and fact, and eminently just. The record shows the court to have been deliberate in its judgment, and that it should not he disturbed unless some error has been committed on the trial.

There is no error assigned to the charge of the judge. The 2d and 3d errors assume what is not shown, that the notes and judgments were not duly stamped. We think the 4th is not supported. The lease was intimately connected with the whole history of the case and the origin of Brown’s judgments and his proceedings under them. Eliphalet Downer had no interest in the issue ; no other creditor than Parkinson could avail himself of the verdict. The declarations of persons actually engaged in a proved conspiracy are always evidence.

There is nothing on the record showing the nature or character of the motion in arrest of judgment, and this disposes really of all the exceptions.

There is, however, a complaint against the judge, not in any way supported by the record, that he erred in treating the matter as an action at common law to be determined alone by the jury. This complaint arises from a vague notion that the court should intimate in some strong way its opinion on the facts to the jury. Which, if they had done, and it would undoubtedly have been against the defendant, then it would have been said, and justly, [341]*341that he threw his opinion into the jury-box when the object of the issue is to have the unbiassed verdict of the jury on the facts presented for their decision.

In Gratz v. The Lancaster Bank, 17 S. & R. 278, Judge Huston assigns the reason for resorting to a feigned issue in cases of distribution of money arising from sheriffs’ sales: “ If there was no issue, real or feigned, it was settled and well understood everywhere, that the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas was final. And in every instance where either party wished a revision of the opinion in a superior court, a case was stated with, express right to take a writ of error, or an issue, real or feigned, was resorted to.”

In Vansant v. Boileau, 1 Binn. 444, upon a feigned issue directed by the Register’s Court to the Common Pleas, it was held, a writ of error "lies from the Supreme Court to a judgment rendered by the Common Pleas upon a verdict in it.

In Kellogg v. Krauser, 14 S. & R. 137, which was a writ of error to a judgment in a feigned issue to try the validity of a judgment, O. J. Tilghman said. (p. 143) : “ What we have to do is to decide whether there was error in anything that occurred on the trial of the feigned issue. That is in form a complete action, unconnected with the motion to open the judgment, with which we have no concern.

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Related

Knowles v. Jacobs
4 Pa. Super. 268 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
56 Pa. 336, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-parkinson-pa-1868.