Buchanan v. Banks

43 A. 1001, 192 Pa. 516, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 952
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 19, 1899
DocketAppeal, No. 355
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 A. 1001 (Buchanan v. Banks) 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
Buchanan v. Banks, 43 A. 1001, 192 Pa. 516, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 952 (Pa. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Gbeen,

The original judgment in this case was a judgment in ejectment, entered under an amicable action and confession upon a warrant of attorney contained in a written contract for the [517]*517purchase of certain oil-producing property. The judgment was entered against the defendants at the instance of the plaintiff by counsel employed by him. It was not in any sense the voluntary act of the defendants, nor had they any knowledge that it was done or about to be done, until the sheriff came to them at night with a writ of hab. fac. possessionem to eject them from the possession of the property. On the same night the defendant, Rebecca Wilson, formerly Miss Pierce, resorted to her counsel, who hastily prepared a petition to the court of common pleas asking for a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened and the defendants let hito a defense, and for stay of execution in the mean time. This petition was presented on December 8, 1894, and on the same day the learned judge to whom the petition was presented, disposed of it in the following manner: “ And now, December 8, 1894, upon reading, and considering this petition, I am of opinion that it does not show sufficient reasons for granting a rule and staying proceedings. The plaintiff specifically claims' a balance due on the contract of $2,584.57. The defendant swears that it is all paid but $988.47, but does not say when, where and how it was paid. Again, she swears that the purchase money was $11,500, but the contract shows it to be $14,500. If the title is bad the defendants ought to have tendered the balance due and demanded a good title. The prayer of the petition is refused.”

Now it happens that through every stage of the subsequent proceedings, every attempt made by the defendant, Mrs. Wilson, to get access to the courts and to have at least a hearing upon the merits of her contention, was defeated by the court always declaring that the judgment entered as hereinbefore stated, and disposed of by the brief ruling just mentioned, was a final and conclusive judgment, which being unappealed from and not opened, was an absolute bar to any further proceeding for relief. It was treated by the court continuously just as if it had been a judgment entered upon a verdict, after a trial before a jury, and the whole merits of the appellant’s contention heard and considered by the jury, and decided against her. For, after failing to get a hearing before the judge, she next filed a bill in equity for the specific performance of the original contract. This bill was filed on January 12, 1895, just about one month [518]*518after her application to open the judgment was refused. In the bill the facts 'of the appellant’s case were set forth much more fully and at much greater length, and they exhibited apparently a very strong case for equitable relief. But a demurrer was filed to the bill and the case was disposed of on the bill and demurrer. One of the points made in the demurrer was that there was a judgment in ejectment against the present appellant, who was the plaintiff in the bill; that a writ of possession had been issued on the judgment; that an application to open the judgment had been made and was refused, and therefore the court had no power to open or set aside that judgment. The only other points made were that the appellant admitted that she owed $988.47 of the purchase money, but had made no tender of the money, and without such tender she could not have specific performance, and, lastly, that the bill did not set forth specific facts sufficient to make out a case for specific performance, and there was an adequate remedy at law. The court sustained the demurrer, and in giving reasons for so doing made use of the defendant’s affidavit in support of the demurrer and cited facts set forth in it as though they were evidence on a hearing, which of course they were not. The judge said in his opinion: “ The judgment in ejectment had accomplished its purpose long before the bill was filed.” (It was only about a month before.) “ It is well settled that the execution of the writ for proper reasons might have been restrained in equity, but it is too late to do that after the writ has been fully executed by the sheriff and returned into court, which was the situation in this court.” The learned judge seemed to forget that the appellant did apply for this very relief on the instant the judgment was entered, and before the writ was executed, and was then refused redress for reasons the sufficiency of which will be hereafter considered.

An appeal was taken from the judgment on the demurrer to this Court, but nothing was decided here except that the plaintiff in the bill having two remedies, one at law and the other in equity, chose the former and was bound by her election. Then the appellant brought the present ejectment to October term, 1895. On the trial, the learned judge, after expressing a strong desire to submit the case to the jury on the merits, if it could be done, decided that it could not be done, because [519]*519when the original judgment was entered it “is conclusive between the parties until it is opened or set aside—which was entered at No. 216, December term, 1894—that was a judgment of this Court and its effect in law, that she had not paid the purchase money; that she had violated the conditions of her agreement; that she had forfeited her rights to this property and, until that judgment is opened or set aside, we can see no possible way under the law that we can allow a verdict and enter a judgment upon it in her favor in this action. ... Now if it is true, as she contends, that she had paid for this property, it may loot lite a hardship, but the remedy was to get that judgment opened or set aside, and then proceed if that was wrong.” After stating to the jury that the court was “utterly unable to see how we could submit the case to you or allow a verdict for the plaintiff to stand,” directed a verdict for the defendant, saying further, “We would gladly submit it to you if we could see our way to do so, but we cannot.” To show the consequences which the court below attached to the original judgment, it is only necessary to quote further from the charge, to wit: “We are compelled to decide this question as we understand the law. To us the law seems to be plain. That judgment is standing there. It is an adjudication of this Court, in its effect, that she was not entitled to this property any longer; she is out of possession of it. She is asking to be allowed to recover in this suit, and asking for a judgment that she may be allowed to go into possession of it, which would be diametrically opposite to that judgment.”

In consequence of this ruling, the appellant then made an application to have the original judgment opened, and this is the Avay in which that application was disposed of: “We can see no ground whatever for a rule to show cause why the judgment at No. 216, December term, 1894, should not be opened, and Ave therefore discharge such rule and dismiss the petition at the costs of Rebecca B. Wilson.” From this action the present appeal is taken.

It will thus be seen that throughout all the proceedings subsequent to the order refusing, on December 8,1894, to grant a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened, the fact of that judgment and the refusal to open it was interposed as a conclusive reason why there could be no relief granted of [520]*520any kind or nature, or in any kind of proceeding whatever. The result of this action of the court below is that up to this moment the appellant has never had a hearing hr a court upon the merits of her case.

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Related

Buchanan v. Banks
53 A. 500 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A. 1001, 192 Pa. 516, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-banks-pa-1899.