Dougan v. Blocher

24 Pa. 28, 1854 Pa. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 Pa. 28 (Dougan v. Blocher) 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
Dougan v. Blocher, 24 Pa. 28, 1854 Pa. LEXIS 150 (Pa. 1854).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered, October 17, by

Woodward, J.

Disentangling the material facts of this case from the knots and snarls in which the paper-books have involved them, they may be briefly stated thus:—

Thomas Foster, who was confessedly the former owner of the land in controversy, mortgaged it to William Hogg, to secure the payment of the sum of $5000. After the death of the mortgagee, his executors closed the mortgage and brought the premises to a sheriff’s sale on the 13th July, 1842, when James Yeech, Esq., bid them off for George Hogg at $7200.

13th September, 1842. Sheriff’s deed to George Hogg in pursuance of said sale.

[29]*2912th July, 1847. Deed George Hogg and wife to George E. Hogg, in consideration of $6700.-

28th October, 1847. Deed George E. Hogg and wife to James E. Breading for same premises, in consideration of $7500.

The plaintiffs in error, who were defendants, below are the tenants of James E. Breading, and such is their title to the possession.

Chauncey Brooks having obtained judgment in the Common Pleas of Fayette county against Samuel Blocher, Isaac Shoemaker, and Joseph it. Taylor, issued execution thereon, dated the 6th October, 1845, and levied on this land as the property of the defendants; and the sheriff having sold the same to C. B. Snyder, made his deed therefor to Snyder on the 9th June, 1847.

6th October, 1848, C. B. Snyder and wife conveyed to John Blocher, the plaintiff below and defendant in error.

The date of the Brooks judgment is not ascertainable from the paper-book, but it seems from the evidence that the sheriff had in his hands a vend. exp. for sale of same land on a judgment of N. Ewing, against the same defendants, entered January 26, 1848, and that the sale was made under this writ as well as that issued on the Brooks judgment.

It is apparent that the only interest which Snyder acquired by the sheriff’s sale was such as the defendants in these judgments had in the land on the 26th January, 1848, and that interest, whatever it was, is all that was vested in the plaintiff below. To show what it was, he relied on a parol agreement made between the defendants in the above judgments and George Hogg before the sheriff’s sale of 13th July, 1842, to the effect that they were to have the land after the sale, and to secure to said Hogg the amount of his mortgage — that in pursuance of the agreement they took possession of the farm immediately after the sale, and on the 1st of December following executed and delivered to George Hogg their mortgage for $15,500, being the amount of the original mortgage, the consideration agreed on for the farm, and a debt of $8000 which he also held against them. George Hogg was the executor, and perhaps the heir of William Hogg, and as such was entitled to treat in reference to the Foster mortgage; and desiring only to have that money secured, it was competent for him to contract with Samuel Blocher & Co., that he would buy in the Foster farm and convey it to them on their making him secure. The plaintiff alleges that he did so contract, and that the contract, though resting in parol, was so far in part performed as to exempt it from the operation of the statute of frauds and perjuries, and therefore that he, claiming under Samuel Blocher & Co., has good right to demand the full and specific performance of the said contract.

The mortgage executed to Hogg for the $15,500, though not [30]*30furnished or explained in the evidence, must be understood to have been on other land of the mortgagors, which was adequate security, and to have stipulated for payment of principal and interest at satisfactory periods; for the evidence of Mr. Yeech, as furnished by the plaintiff, shows that Hogg accepted that mortgage, and that it was duly recorded. The possession alleged to have been taken under the parol agreement became vacant in 1844 by the death of the tenant Kimmell, and Hogg then obtained it, and, in the spring of- 1845, put his tenant in, and he and those claiming under him have had the possession ever since.

It is obvious in this view of the case that the present action of ejectment is in the nature of a bill in equity for the specific performance of a parol contract' of sale and purchase. If the plaintiff, John Blocher, clothed with all the equities of S. Blocher & Co., by virtue of the sheriff’s sale of 9th June, 1847, is entitled to demand and have a deed of conveyance made to him by the present owners of the legal title to the Foster farm, then his recovery in this action was right; if he be not so entitled, he ought not to have had the verdict and judgment. In assuming that he .is clothed with the equities of S. Blocher & Co., we do no more than give effect to the general principle, well settled in Pennsylvania, that a judgment binds every interest a man has in lands in the county at the time of the rendition of the judgment, and that a sheriff’s sale on that judgment transfers to the purchaser all that interest exactly as it existed.at the date of the judgment.

■ Having thus developed the position of the plaintiff and the character of his claim, it is proper now, before scrutinizing the evidence relied on to sustain it, to State the grounds of defence.

Foster’s property consisted not only of the fax m now in con-troversyj but of a factory and some other lots, and George Hogg, in his own right and as executor of William Hogg, seems to have been his principal creditor, having three debts against him amounting in the aggregate to $521,000 or $22,000. The first of these was the mortgage on this farm in the name of William Hogg for about $7000, and which was called the $7000 debt, and for which he had no other security than the farm. The next was a debt of $8000, for which he had Judge Ewing and other,good men bound as sureties. And lastly a debt of $6000, for which he had ten good men bound and a judgment against most of them.

The contract alleged on the part of the plaintiff is denied by the defendants, and it is insisted that the only contract made between George Hogg and, S. Blocher & Co., was in December, 1842, when it was agreed to take a mortgage on their property for the two first of the above debts, and that Hogg should hold the title to the farm as security for the $6000 debt, which was to be paid in the course of a few months, and when paid, the farm was to be conveyed to them; but that in point of fact not a dollar [31]*31was ever paid either of the $6000 debt or of the $15,500 mortgage ; that, the possession of the farm having been surrendered to Hogg, and no performance of the contract offered for several years, he had a right to consider it as rescinded and abandoned, and that the present plaintiff, without a tender of money or offer of performance, has no right, after a lapse of six years, to demand its execution.

Such was the general course of the defence, and if well grounded in the evidence it ought surely to have prevailed, for nothing can be more clear than that the legal title to this farm, if held by George Hogg as security for the $6000 debt, is not to be decreed to a party claiming under S. Blocher & Co., until they or he have paid that money.

Adverting now to the evidence in the cause, it is to be observed that Samuel Blocher is the only witness who speaks of the' agreement with Hogg before the first sheriff’s sale. Sometime before that sale, in May or June he thought, he went to see Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Pa. 28, 1854 Pa. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougan-v-blocher-pa-1854.