Cambria County Commissioners' Petition

59 Pa. D. & C. 519, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 180
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedMay 5, 1947
Docketno. 190
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Pa. D. & C. 519 (Cambria County Commissioners' Petition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cambria County Commissioners' Petition, 59 Pa. D. & C. 519, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 180 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

Under the provisions of section 17 of the Act of May 29, 1931, P. L. 280, as last amended by the Act of May 24, 1945, P. L. 945, 72 PS §5971q, the commissioners of Cambria County filed their petition asking that this court grant a rule to show cause why a decree should not be made that certain real estate situate in the seventh ward of the City of Johnstown, assessed in the name of Emmerling Products Company, should not be sold free and clear of mortgages, municipal claims and ground rents.

The petition sets forth that the land described in the petition was sold to the county commissioners on October 13,1930, at a sale held by the county treasurer for unpaid taxes; that the right of redemption expired on October 13, 1932, and that said right has not been exercised by the owner or any lien creditor; that the commissioners fixed an upset price of $73,751.85, sufficient to pay all costs, taxes and municipal claims, etc., against the property, in accordance with the Act of 1931, as amended, supra, and exposed the property to public sale on October 7, 1946, and received no bids sufficient to pay said upset price. The names of the record owner, lien creditors and municipal claimants are set forth in the petition, as well as an abstract of title showing the state of the record. The abstract shows title in the name of “Emmerling Products Company”, a first mortgage in favor of Philopena Emmerling, dated January 14, 1918, and recorded January 18, 1918, in Mortgage Book, volume 86, page 312, in the sum of $123,764.17; a second mortgage in favor of the Johnstown Trust Company, trustee, dated December 1, 1919, and recorded December 16, 1919, in Mortgage Book, volume 109, page 9; and an instrument dated January 24, 1924, recorded March 26, 1924, whereby it is agreed that the lien of the first mortgage shall be postponed to the lien of the second mortgage, except in the sum of $10,000, for which amount the [521]*521first mortgage retains its first lien. The first mortgage was assigned to the Johnstown Trust Company, then to the Title, Trust and Guarantee Company of Johnstown, and was finally sold as a part of the remaining assets of the Title, Trust and Guarantee Company to A. E. Corn. The second mortgage was assigned to H. W. Berkey as trustee for bondholders. A large amount of taxes have accrued against this property, the city taxes have been unpaid since 1924, the county taxes since 1927, and the school taxes since 1924.

Upon the presentation of the petition, a rule was granted, returnable February 3, 1947, directing Emmerling Products Company, the owner, and A. E. Corn and H. W. Berkey, trustee, mortgagees, to show cause why a decree should not be entered authorizing petitioners as the Commissioners of Cambria County to sell the property described in the petition at public sale, without further advertisement, free and clear of all mortgages, municipal claims, ground rents and other encumbrances.

No answer was filed by the owner, nor by the second mortgagee, but A. E. Corn, the first mortgagee, filed an answer to the rule, wherein he averred that the Act of 1931, supra, “cannot be constitutionally invoked to divest the lien of defendant’s mortgage for, to do so, would impair the mortgagee’s contract with the mortgagor and would result in the retroactive application of said acts of assembly”.

Respondent concedes that in the case of Erie v. Piece of Land, 339 Pa. 321, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a similar sale procedure provided by the Municipal Lien Act of May 16,1923, P. L. 207, 53 PS §2051; but attempts to distinguish the rule laid down in that case, and contends that such rule is not applicable to the procedure provided for by the Act of 1931, supra.

[522]*522We are of the opinion that the rule in the Erie case is applicable to the procedure provided for by the Act of 1931. Respondent’s contention is that the Act of 1923 gave an opportunity to any person interested to pay the taxes, interest and costs at any time before the sale, and that the Act of 1931 provides no such opportunity for a lien creditor. It is true that the opinion of the Supreme Court in the Erie case referred to this provision in the act of 1923. However, we are not convinced that the sine qua non of the rule in the Erie case was the provision contained in the Act of 1923 that a lien creditor, inter alia, could pay the taxes, interest and costs at any time before the sale. Though that provision in the act was referred to in the opinion, as we view it, the basis of the decision was not the fact that a lien creditor might at any time before the sale pay the taxes, interest and costs, but rather that the legislature had the right to provide that the claims of the Commonwealth and its political subdivisions should be prior to the lien of a mortgage. The court said (p. 326) :

“There is no legal reason why the legislature should not require a mortgagee, who has had the protection of the government, to submit to the collection of the taxes out of the land against which they are assessed if his own debtor neglects to pay them. The procedure was prospective; that its application would operate on relations theretofore existing did not make the statute retroactive in any prohibited sense: compare City of Johnstown v. Dibert, 88 Pa. Superior Ct. 117, 120. The land had always been subject to taxation. If a mortgagee elects not to foreclose for default in payment of taxes on the land he holds as security, he does not, by his election, exempt his interest or estate in the land from taxation; no law gives him such right of exemption. When he secured his loan by taking the mortgage, he did so with knowledge that the land was, [523]*523and would continue to be, taxed. He will not be heard to say that because he had a lien under the recording acts, the government must go without its taxes. All his relations growing out of his contract with his debtor were subject to the implied condition that the taxes must be paid out of the land. There is therefore no impairment of his contract with the mortgagor. . . . In Bryan’s Appeal, 101 Pa. 389, 393, Paxson, J., said: ‘It has never been held that charges upon or estate in land created by the owner thereof can avail as against the taxing power of the Commonwealth. Municipal liens for grading and paving streets are a species of taxation and come within the rule. Such liens bind the entire estate in the land, except where an Act of Assembly directs otherwise. If it were not so, the owner of real estate could wholly defeat the taxing power by charging it with the payment of a sum of money equal to its full value.’ ”

Respondent refers to the case of Beaver County B. & L. Assn. v. Winowieh et ux., 323 Pa. 483, in which case the earlier Deficiency Judgments Act of January 17, 1934, P. L. 243, was held to be unconstitutional. In that case, the court said that while the legislature has the power to alter and suspend modes of procedure, even as to preexisting contracts, yet “Any change in procedure which does not supply an alternative remedy, equally adequate and efficacious, in place of that which existed when the contract was made, is violative of the constitutional prohibition.”

It will be noted that the constitutionality of the later Deficiency Judgments Act was upheld in the case of Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company v. Allen et al., 343 Pa. 428, and The Pennsylvania Company, etc., v. Scott, 346 Pa. 13. Moreover, the alternative remedy, whose adequacy the court was considering in the Beaver County B. & L. Assn, case, was the remedy of a mortgagee against a mortgagor. In the present

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Related

Moats v. Thompson, Exrs.
129 A. 105 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Allen
22 A.2d 896 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Pennsylvania Co., Etc. v. Scott
29 A.2d 328 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Sheehan B. L. Assn. v. Scanlon
164 A. 722 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Naffah v. City Deposit Bank
23 A.2d 340 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Erie v. Piece of Land
14 A.2d 428 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Beaver County Building & Loan Ass'n v. Winowich
187 A. 481 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Roth Appeal
47 A.2d 716 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
City of Johnstown v. Dibert
88 Pa. Super. 117 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Bryan's Appeal
101 Pa. 389 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
59 Pa. D. & C. 519, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambria-county-commissioners-petition-pactcomplcambri-1947.