Clawson v. Eichbaum

2 Grant 130, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 16, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Grant 130 (Clawson v. Eichbaum) 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
Clawson v. Eichbaum, 2 Grant 130, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 281 (Pa. 1853).

Opinions

The facts of the case are fully stated in the opinion of the court, delivered December 16, 1853, by

Knox, J.

— This is an appeal from the decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland county, distributing a fund raised from the real estate of James R. Speer, by sheriff’s sale.

Eichbaum, the appellee, claimed under the lien of a mortgage, dated July 5, 1848, and recorded, as appears by the record, on the 6th of December, Á. i>. 1848, at 8 o’clock, p. M.

The appellants claim by virtue of a judgment in favor of John Herron for their use, against James R. Speer & Co., entered of record on the 6th of December, 1848.

The mortgage and judgment appear to have been entered upon the same day, but each claims priority. Eichbaum alleges and proves that at the time the judgment was given to Herron, as trustee, it was agreed between himself and Doctor Speer, that his mortgage should be entered of record, so as to have priority of lien over the judgment, and that such were the instructions to the agent who was sent to Greensburg to carry out the arrangement.

■ The appellants contend that this agreement, being a secret one, does not bind them; and as their judgment was first actually placed upon the records, it has priority of lien.

It is stated by the court below, in its opinion, that the judgment was given to the prothonotary between 7 and 8 o’clock, p. m., on the- 6th of December, and that the mortgage was handed to the recorder about 8 o’clock the same evening, at a public house, the office being closed; and that it was entered the next morning, as if left for record, on the 6th, at 8 o’clock, p. M.

The Act of the 28th of March, A. D. 1820, makes it the duty of the recorder to endorse the time when a mortgage is left for .record, and the lien then commences. It cannot be, permitted that the record made by the officer, in pursuance of the directions of the statute, shall be contradicted by the parol evidence of the recorder, of other person, in a contest between lien creditors, unless for reasons which do not exist here.

Determining from the record as it stands, what would be the result ?

Both liens were created upon the same day. Are fractions to be counted ?, As between judgments, it is the well established rule, that those that are entered upon the same day have equality of right. Metzler v. Kilgore, 3 Pa. R. 245. In a contest between a judgment and a conveyance, fractions are admitted, and first in order first in right, is the rule. This is because a conveyance takes effect from its delivery, which is provable by evidence in pais, and because it would be impossible to put a [132]*132judgment and a conveyance upon a footing of equality. “ The one is a security which incumbers the property in exclusion of everything subsequent to it; the other, a conveyance excluding everything to which it is antecedent.” Mechanics Bank v. Gorman, 8 W. & S. 307.

Is a mortgage, as between creditors, to be considered as a conveyance or an incumbrance ? In such a contest, in my opinion, it is nothing but an incumbrance, and until recorded, unless given for purchase-money, not even that. The delivery, although giving life to the instrument between the parties, has no effect upon lien creditors, and even when delivered and recorded, though in form a conveyance, is in substance but a security for the payment of money, (Rickert v. Maderia, 1 Rawle, 327,) and confers upon the mortgage nothing more than a lien upon the land, which may be defeated by payment of the money loaned, at any time before the sale made by the sheriff, hUpursuance of our act of Assembly giving a remedy to the creditors. Asay v. Hoover, 5 Barr, 21.

The precise time when a mortgage is left for record is noted, in order to determine the priority between mortgages, but as no such minute is made upon the entry of a judgment, if fractions of a day are to be considered in ascertaining which is first in lien, parol evidence must necessarily be resorted to, and the value of the incumbrance will then depend upon the lives, accuracy, and truthfulness of witnesses, instead of the certain, safe, and reliable record open to the inspection of every person interested, and which tells the same story at all times, and under all circumstances.

I can see no reason why the same principle, which rejects fractions of a day in determining the lien of a judgment, should not be applied to a mortgage, when its contestant is a judgment. Under this rule, the evidence that the judgment was entered before 8 o’clock, p. m., on the 6th of December, was immaterial, and should have been rejected.

If the date of the record of the mortgage could not be contradicted by parol, and fractions of the day are to be rejected, the judgment and mortgage would thus far be entitled to equality of distribution, and there only remains to be considered the effect of the agreement between Speer and Eichbaum, and the instruction to the agent that the mortgage should be preferred.

That this agreement was made, and these instructions given, cannot be contradicted, and if they can be interposed here, will prove decisive of the contest.

Neither Herron, nor those represented by Mm, had any agency in, or knowledge of, the agreement, that the judgment should be postponed in its lien to that of the mortgage; Nor is it clear, that they knew that any judgment was given until some time [133]*133afterwards. In the absence of proof of actual recognition, by those who were to be benefited by the judgment, the law would presume their assent on account of the benefit to be derived. This presumption would be overthrown, or made conclusive, by the subsequent adoption or rejection by the persons for whose claims the judgment was confessed. When notice was given that the judgment was for their use, they could elect to take under it, or look to other means to enforce their demands. They chose the former, and now claim that what was apparently beneficial, shall not be rendered entirely worthless, by the intervention of •an agreement resting in parol, and of which they had no notice until more than two years had elapsed from the entry of the judgment, and the property real and personal, had been sold by the sheriff, and purchased by the appellee. The argument on behalf of the mortgage creditor is, that, in making this agreement, Mr. Speer was acting for the owners of the judgment, and that young Mr. Speer was the common agent of all, in procuring the entry of the judgment, and the recording of the mortgage, and that the appellants cannot adopt that part of the arrangement which was for their benefit, and reject what would be prejudicial. That the rule of entire adoption applies, and as they claim the benefit of the judgment, they are hound by the agreement to postpone its lien in favor of the mortgage.

Admitting the correctness of the appellee ; as a general rule, I am for refusing its applicability in the present case, upon the ground that his acquiescence in the state of the record, for such a, length of time, precludes him from denying its correctness.

The record showed that the mortgage and judgment were both entered upon the same day, and were therefore entitled to be paid pro rata, from the proceeds of the real estate. This was notice to all of the parties. Eichbaum knew that it was not in accordance with the understanding between him and Speer. The appellants kneAV nothing of the kind.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Home Savings Fund v. King
173 A. 891 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Grant 130, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clawson-v-eichbaum-pa-1853.