General Tire Co. v. Tennis

21 Pa. D. & C. 85, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 28

This text of 21 Pa. D. & C. 85 (General Tire Co. v. Tennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Tire Co. v. Tennis, 21 Pa. D. & C. 85, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 28 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Atlee, P. J.,

Counsel for the respective contestants in this matter have agreed upon a stipulation of facts as follows:

“1. On the .... day of......... 1928, a mortgage was executed and delivered by R. H. Tennis et al. to Cecil National Bank of Port Deposit, Md., recorded on June 6, 1928, in the sum of $1,250, with interest at 6 percent, which purports to he a first lien on premises in Pulton Township, Lancaster County, Pa.
“2. On August 22, 1930, R. H. Tennis and Mary C. Tennis executed and delivered to Cecil Clyde Squier a mortgage covering the said premises in Pulton Township, Lancaster County, Pa. The mortgage was recorded on August 27, 1930, in the sum of $500.
“3. On April 18,1931, General Tire Company instituted an action of foreign attachment against R. H. Tennis and Mary C. Tennis, and on April 20,1931, the sheriff attached the real estate covered by said mortgage and all rents and profits thereof. R. A. Grubb was then and still is tenant of said premises under lease from R. H. Tennis and Mary C. Tennis, and said tenant was made garnishee in said attachment.
“4. On October 7, 1932, this court entered judgment in favor of General Tire Company and against R. H. Tennis and Mary C. Tennis, in said foreign attachment proceeding, in the sum of $1,279.90.
“5. On February 25, 1933, this court entered judgment in favor of General Tire Company and against R. A. Grubb, garnishee, for rents in his hands, and $500 was paid to plaintiff and credited on the judgment.
“6. On July 17, 1933, this court made an order on the sheriff to collect the rents of said premises as they accrued, from the garnishee, under the provisions of the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 568, secs. 66 and 67, to be applied to plaintiff’s judgment.
“7. On July 19, 1933, the garnishees paid to the sheriff under said order the sum of $110.
“8. The sheriff of Lancaster County now has in his hands the sum of $242, rent paid to him on behalf of R. A. Grubb, the said tenant.
[86]*86“9. The said mortgage to Cecil National Bank is now held by Dr. W. G. Jack, Walter Touchstone, and C. Clyde Squier, trustees of the said bank.
“10. There is now interest due and owing on the said mortgage, together with interest payment due in the sum of $143.75.
“11. In addition to the said mortgage to Cecil National Bank, the said R. H. Tennis is indebted to the said bank and trustees thereof in an amount of approximately $4,000.
“12. There is now due and owing accrued interest on the second mortgage held by Cecil Clyde Squier the sum of $57.50.
“13. General Tire Company claims to be entitled to the rents in the sheriff’s hands, and has asked for an order directing him to pay them over.
“14. The said mortgagees oppose payment to the plaintiff and demand that the rents accumulated be paid on account of the interest charges on the first and second mortgages.
“15. An answer has not been filed by Cecil Clyde Squier, second mortgagee, in that the facts are to be included in the above stipulation.
“16. The said Cecil Clyde Squier et al., as trustees, join in this stipulation and in this proceeding for the purpose of protecting interest due and accumulated on the first mortgage heretofore mentioned.
“17. This statement of facts is not intended to be exclusive of any other facts which may appear of record and which may be pertinent to the issue.
“18. The sum of $242 now in the hands of the sheriff was paid to him at the following times, to wit, $110 on July 19', 1933, and the balance of $132 in January 1934.
“19. Counsel for Cecil Clyde Squier, mortgagee, notified the sheriff on July 21, 1933, that he claimed the rents of said premises on account of said mortgage, and on the same date, counsel notified W. Hensel Brown, Esq., attorney for R. A. Grubb, the tenant, of the claim of the mortgagee to the rents.
“20. At the time of attachment of the rents by the plaintiff and at the times of entry of judgment against defendant and garnishee, the tenant R. A. Grubb, was in possession of said premises under a lease from the defendants, R. H. and Mary C. Tennis, dated May 29,1929, and a new lease between the parties changing the rental from $25 to $22 a month was executed in the month of March 1933.”

The immediate question now before the court for disposition is: Can a mortgagee under the circumstances set forth in the foregoing stipulation of facts intervene and claim the rent moneys in the sheriff’s hands as against the attaching creditor, the plaintiff in the foreign attachment in assumpsit, under which attachment the debtor’s real estate was attached, as well as rents due by the tenant to his landlord, the attachment debtor? Counsel for the attaching creditor, General Tire Company, in their brief say that this precise question has not been raised before and that they therefore can cite no authorities immediately deciding the present controversy. From the foregoing stipulation of facts, we note the following as being pertinent in the instant discussion, ■ namely:

“6. On July 17, 1933, this court made an order on the sheriff to collect the rents for said premises as they accrued, from the garnishee, under the provisions of the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 568, secs. 66 and 67, to be applied to plaintiff’s judgment.
“18. The sum of $242 now in the hands of the sheriff was paid to him at the following times, to wit, $110 on July 19, 1933, and the balance of $132 in January 1934.
“19. Counsel for Cecil Clyde Squier, mortgagee, notified the sheriff on July 21, [87]*871933, that he claimed the rents of said premises on account of said mortgage, and on the same date counsel notified W. Hensel Brown, Esq., attorney for E. A. Grubb, the tenant, of the claim of the mortgagee to the rents.
“20. At the time of attachment of the rents by the plaintiff and at the times of entry of judgment against defendant and garnishee, the tenant, E. A. Grubb, was in possession of said premises under a lease from the defendants, E. H. and Mary C. Tennis, dated May 29, 1929, and a new lease between the parties changing the rental from $25 to $22 a month was executed in the month of March 1933.”

The provisions of the Act of 1836, under which the court directed the sheriff to collect and recover from the tenant the rents, are as follows:

“It shall be lawful for the court, at any time after the return of the attachment, on application by the plaintiff, and affidavit of a just cause of action, to issue a writ to the sheriff, requiring him to collect and recover from the tenant of the premises all such rent as shall have accrued, at the time of the execution of the writ of attachment, or as may accrue thereafter, until the further order of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Pa. D. & C. 85, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-tire-co-v-tennis-pactcompllancas-1934.