Grace v. Shively

12 Serg. & Rawle 217, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1825
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Serg. & Rawle 217 (Grace v. Shively) 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
Grace v. Shively, 12 Serg. & Rawle 217, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 1 (Pa. 1825).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Tilchman, C. J.

Our act of assembly of the 21st of March, 1772, is the same in'substance as the statute 11 Geo. 2. c. 19. s. 1, from which it was copied very nearly verbatim. Where any tenant shall fraudulently or clandestinely convey away, or carry off or from the demised premises, his goods or chattels, to prevent the landlord or lessor from distraining the same for arrears of the reut reserved, it shall be lawful for the landlord or lessor, or any other person or persons by him for that purpose lawfully empowered, within the space of thirty days next ensuing such conveying away .or carrying off such goods or chattels, to take and seize such goods and chattels, wherever the same may be found, as a distress for the said arrears of such rent, &e.i&c.

A removal of the goods in the night, is in itself clandestine, and sufficient evidence of fraud. But I will not say that no removal, except in the night, can be fraudulent under the act of assembly. On the contrary, I can easily imagine a case which would be fraudulent. Suppose the landlord should come to the premises for the purpose of distraining, and should refrain from a distress, on the tenant’s promising that he would pay the rent, or give satisfactory secury by a certain hour, and in the mean time his goods should remain where they were; and after this should remove the goods as soon as the landlord’s back was turned, and all this in the day time. This would be a palpable fraud. But where there is no evidence of more than a simple removal in the day time, without the knowledge of the landlord, there is no ground for presumption of fraud, nor will the law suffer it to be presumed. The tenant is not bound to give notice to the landlord that he is about to remove his goods, nor is he under any obligation not to remove them. It is the landlord’s business to be vigilant. He has a right to distrain whenever the rent has become due; and, if he neglects it, he runs the risk of losing this extraordinary remedy with which the law has favoured him. If it had been the intent of the act of assembly, to consider every removal as fraudulent which was made after the rent became due, it would have been easy to say so; but the expressions fraudulent or clandestine, show that something more [219]*219Was intended. In the case before us, the jury, from the manner in which it was submitted to them, might have found the removal fraudulent or not, according to conjecture, whim, or caprice, — for there was no fact to enlighten them. They ought, therefore, to have been told, that the evidence did not warrant a legal presumption of fraud.

2. But is this a case within the act of assembly, no rent being in arrear at the time the goods were removed? In my opinion, it is not. The removal, to bring it within the law, must be, with an intent to prevent the landlord from distraining for ar-reara of rent; which cannot be, when there is no arrear, and there can be no arrear before the rent is-due. Suppose, now, the tenant should remove his goods thirty-one days before the rent is due. It will hardly be contended, that in such case the landlord could distrain within thirty days from the time qf removal, because the rent would not be due at the end of thirty days, and yet there would be a right to distrain within thirty days, unless the act of assembly is construed, so as as to be confined to cases where the goods were removed after the rent was due. For that reason, the English statute, from which ours was taken, has been held to be confined to a removal of the goods, after the rent is actually in arrear. It must be confessed, that our act of assembly does not go so far for the protection of landlords, as justice and good policy seem to require. But that is a consideration for the legislature, before whom, I believe, the subject is now depending, and not for this court. Our duty is to construe the law, and not to remedy it, should we think it defective.

I am of opinion that this judgment should be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Serg. & Rawle 217, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grace-v-shively-pa-1825.