Gibson v. Lyon

115 U.S. 439, 6 S. Ct. 129, 29 L. Ed. 440, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1854
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 23, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 115 U.S. 439 (Gibson v. Lyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Lyon, 115 U.S. 439, 6 S. Ct. 129, 29 L. Ed. 440, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1854 (1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court. After stating the facts in the language above reported, he continued :

Before proceeding to consider this case, as presented by -the findings of fact, it is necessary to dispose of an assignment of error based on a ruling of the Circuit Court during the progress of the trial. It appears from a bill of exceptions that “the plaintiff offered to prove that a tender of the money, under decree of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in suit No. 60, January term, 1868, was made about the end of May, 1869, by Charles II. Muirhead; that the assignment was returned from Lyon and Taylor executed in blank; that said C. II. Muirhead required that an assignment of said- mortgage, with the blanks filled in, should be signed by said Lyon and Taylor; that A. Y. Parsons, Esq., representing the parties, Lyon and Taylor, agreed to procure the assignment so com *445 pleted, but that- such an assignment was not made, and the parties, Lyon and Taylor, absolutely refused to make the assignment and receive the money. Counsel, on being asked, say that the money was ready, but was not actually shown Lyon and Taylor, or their attorney, and aver that an actual tender was not necessary under the refusal of Lyon and Taylor to take the money and make the assignment.”

It will be observed that the tender referred to in this offer was not made by the party obliged to pay the debt or entitled to do so, for the purpose of removing the encumbrance of the mortgage upon the property, nor in payment of the mortgage debt, and in satisfaction of the mortgage and the judgment rendered thereon, but was an offer made by a stranger to pay the amount due on account thereof, accompanied with a demand to execute an assignment to a named third party of the debt and securities, compliance with which was a condition of the offer of payment. If accepted, the effect would have been to transfer the debt and mortgage and judgment rendered thereon to an assignee, and not to extinguish it. This the plaintiffs were under no legal obligation to do, neither by contract, nor by the terms of the decree referred to, inasmuch as the time within which such payment might be made for that purpose was limited by the decree to May 10, 1869. After that they were expressly left at liberty by the decree itself to proceed, at law, upon the mortgage and judgment previously rendered thereon.

This question being removed from the controversy, it is urged by counsel for defendants in error, that the judgment of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in the ejectment in favor of the defendants against the immediate grantors of the present plaintiff below, referred to in the eighth finding of fact, if not entitled to the force of an estoppel as res judicata, is at least an authoritative decision of the highest court of the State upon the law of the case, which, as it involves only questions of title to real estate within its territory dependent on its local jurisprudence, ought to furnish the obligatory rule of decision for the courts of the United States.

The former judgment in ejectment is not a bar to the present action, according .to the law of Pennsylvania, where the subject *446 is regulated by statute. 1 Brightly’s Purdon’s Digest Laws of Pennsylvania, 535.

By the act of April 13, 1807, two successive verdicts and judgments in favor of the same party will defeat a third ejectment ; but where there is verdict against verdict, and judgment thereon, a verdict and judgment in a third ejectment is conclusive. Britton v. Thornton, 112 U. S. 526.

As a precedent, the decision of the Supreme Court of the State, though single, is entitled to peculiar respect, because all the questions decided arise upon the local law of the State; but it cannot have conclusive force in the courts of the United States, unless it has become a rule of property. Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S. 20; Carroll County v. Smith, 111 U. S. 556.

The plaintiff in error, being a citizen of New Jersey, had a constitutional right, by virtue'of that fact, to invoke the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States, and is entitled to their judgment upon his rights under the laws of Pennsylvania.

The title of the plaintiff is derived from Sarah A. Jermon. Her title was vested in her by the deed from Rice mentioned in the third finding of fact, and that of Rice was acquired by the conveyance described in the second finding, and the proceedings in the Orphans’ Court of Philadelphia from which it resulted. Each of these conveyances contains a recital that it is made under and subject to the payment of the mortgage under which the defendants claim.

It is contended, on behalf of the plaintiff in error, that he is not estopped by these recitals to deny the existence of the mortgage, and to assert that,-in point of law, it was extinguished by the sale ordered by the Orphans’ Court, such sales being required by law to be clear and discharged of all liens in the hands of the purchaser, and that consequently he is at liberty to insist that the subsequent sale, made under the mortgage as a subsisting and valid lien, was void.

It is true that the statute of Pennsylvania, by which the sale ordered by the Orphans’ .Court was authorized, act of April 18, 1853, 2 Brightly’s Bdrdon’s Digest of Pennsylvania Laws, 10th ed. 1242, Section'5, p. 1244, provides that “by every such *447 public sale the premises sold, shall be discharged from all liens; ” and it is also true that the sale prayed for in this instance was of the premises, “ clear and discharged of all liens in the hands of the purchaser,” and that the sale to Rice, approved and confirmed by the court, was for the sum of $10,-500, the full price and consideration of the purchase; -yet, it is equally true, as appears from the recitals in the deed to Rice, which was duly acknowledged before the Orphans’ Court, that of the consideration, as finally agreed upon between the parties, there was actually paid in cash only $5500, the remainder being represented by the existing mortgage' to the Reliance Mutual Insurance Company, under and subject to which the conveyance was made, approved, and accepted. The proceedings and judgment of the Orphans’ Court must be taken as a whole, and to include the execution, acknowledgment, and delivery of the deed. The sanction of the court to the fact and form of the conveyance was a judicial act, necessary to perfect the proceeding, for, without the deed, the sale would not have been consummated, and no title would have been divested and passed. Foster v. Gray, 22 Penn. St. 9, 15; Brown's Appeal, 68 Penn. St. 53. If the wholq, proceeding be void, because the court confirmed a sale upon terms not authorized by law, the plaintiff below had no title on which to base a recovery, and the defendants below were mortagees in possession within the protection of the decision in Brobst v. Brock, 10 Wall.

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Bluebook (online)
115 U.S. 439, 6 S. Ct. 129, 29 L. Ed. 440, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-lyon-scotus-1885.