Friedly v. Scheetz

9 Serg. & Rawle 156, 1823 Pa. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 Serg. & Rawle 156 (Friedly v. Scheetz) 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
Friedly v. Scheetz, 9 Serg. & Rawle 156, 1823 Pa. LEXIS 2 (Pa. 1823).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was' delivered by

DüNCAN, J.

This was an action of debt oh a single bill, given by plaintiff in errdr, defendant below, to defendant in error, for 2,310 dollars, on what the partiés went to trial, On the plea of payment, with leave to give the special matter in evidence, Under this plea, the defendant gave notice of special matter, which set out the defence, the consideration for which the bill was given, and the failure of that consideration. The. notice was as follows, (here his Honour read the defendant’s notice of special matter). On the trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence, the bill, and conditions of sale, referred to in the bill, and proved a tender of conveyance, duly acknowledged, and a demand of the purchase money. The defendant declined receiving it, saying, “when the Sheriff made him a clear title, he would pay the money ; but that he was not ready at that time;” and further proved, that at the time of the sale, the defendant read a paper, signed by Henry Friedly, Senr. cautioning the bidders not to bid for the property, as the title was not in Henry Friedly, Jun., but in Henry Friedly, Senr., and that there were many good bidders at the sale. ■

The defendant then offered in evidence, pursuant to his notice. [161]*161a deed, dated May 24th, 1817, from Henry Friedly, Jr. to Henry Friedly, Senr., to shew the title was not in the defendant in the execution, as whose property it was sold.” This evidence was objected to, and was not received, and exception taken. The jury gave a verdict in debt for a numerical sum, beyond the sum demanded by the writ or declaration. The extra sum, by calculation, appears to be the interest due on the bill, and in strictness ought to have been given by the name of damages.

On the merits, besides the rejection of the evidence, the defendant below, plaintiff in error, contends, though the objection does not appear to have been made in the Court of Common Pleas, that no action could be supported, until there had been a resale, and that only for the difference, if the second sale was for a less sum

He makes objections to the form of the proceedings; to the declaration, because it sets out no breach of the conditions of sale, or that there was a sale; shews no cause of action, or title to the money demanded; to the verdict, because the verdict and judgment are for a debt greater than plaintiff demands. The notice of the special matter is to be_ considered in the light of a bill in equity, to be relieved from a legal obligation, which, in conscience, ought" not to bind him. It states jno fraud committed on the vendor by the ven-dee; no misrepresentation; no concealment; no ignorance of facts; but seeks protection and absolution from his obligation, by reason of a fact not only known to him, but which he, as agent of Henry Friedly, Jr., in order that there might be no pretence of a purchase without notice, publishes at the time of sale. For if he did not act as the agent of Henry Friedly, Senr. he would be committing a palpable fraud, in exciting apprehensions as to the title in the minds of the other bidders and thus obtaining property at an undervalue, and if he did, and afterwards bought, he would be presumed to have knowledge of the title, and to have bought confident in his own knowledge of the law. Now in such a case as this, it a man has knowledge o.f the fact, and acts presumptuously on bis own opinion of the law, though mistakenly, if not fraudulently drawn into the mistake, that is no ground for relief in equity. I speak of sales by judicial process, and contracts between man and man, which was the case of Steinhauer v. Wit-man, 1 Sergt. & Rawle, 438. That case is not well understood. It does not go to the wild length, as some have supposed, that a man who purchases a title, with all its defects and imperfections, and whose conveyance contains no covenant of warranty, is not bound to pay the bonds he has given for it. For Mr. Justice Yeates, the great advocate for the departure from the general rule both of law and equity, of caveat.emptor, in the sale of lands, yet restrains its operation; for he puts it on a very rational principle. The obvious and plain rule, he says, is, what was the true meaning of the contracting parties; was it contemplated mutually, that the purchaser should hold the land under a good title, or that he should [162]*162run his chance of getting a title and be exposed to all hazards,’" page446. And in 447, resting it solely on the foundation of usage, he observes, “I have asserted the general understanding to have been that in all eases, unless where it plainly appeared that the purchaser agreed' to run the risk of the title, either by special contract, or where it might be fairly inferred from the consideration money, being highly inadequate to the value of the premises, at the time of .the contract, he might defend himself in a suit for the consideration money, by shewing that the title was defective, either in whole or in part, whether there was a covenant of general warranty or other engagement, on the part of the vendor, that he had a good right to convey, or of quiet enjoyment, or the like covenants, or not.” The nature.of a Sheriff’s sale, it is well known, is a sale of the defendants title. He conveys to the purchaser á free and clear estate, as fully and amply, as they were in the debtor. The Sheriff enters into no covenant. Inadequacy of price alone is no objection to a sale under process of law. 11 Johns. 555. The doctrine in Steinhauer v. Whitman, has ño relation to sales by a Sheriff on executions. It is not pretended by any one, that the usage asserted and maintained by Judge Ye ates extended to them. If any fraud was practised on the purchaser, or any mistake in the description, application' should be made to the court at the term at which the writ is returnable to set aside the sale. I do not say, that the neglect of this would prevent a purchaser from setting up this defence to an action by the plaintiff. But the acquiescence would diminish the force of the objection, though if the court refused to set aside the sale, it might not be conclusive. But this Is not a case of fraud, either ’alleged in the notice, or offered to be proved at the trial. The deed from Henry Friedly the younger to Henry Friedly the elder, was offered to show, that the title was not in the younger Friedly. The question is then reduced to this single point, can a purchaser, having direct notice at the time of sale, that the defendant in the execution, has sold and conveyed the estate before the judgment, set up that conveyance as a defence in a suit for the purchase money by. the Sheriff. It is conceived, but one answer can be given to this question, that he cannot. It would obstruct the recovery of all debts, if this could be done: for by a family arrangement, friends might again and again bid in the property, and then defend themselves from payment, on the want of title. It is a mistake when it is supposed, that the Sheriff sells a sound title. He sells the claim of the defendant in the execution, and no more, as free and clear an estate as the debtor held; and- the rule of caveat emptor, is binding on every purchaser at Sheriff’s sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Serg. & Rawle 156, 1823 Pa. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedly-v-scheetz-pa-1823.