Grakelow v. Nash

98 Pa. Super. 316, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 195
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 10, 1929
DocketAppeal 250
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 316 (Grakelow v. Nash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grakelow v. Nash, 98 Pa. Super. 316, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 195 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This ejectment was tried without a jury under the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109. Plaintiff appeals from judgment for defendant, who stands on a tax-title; if that title is valid, plaintiff cannot recover; if invalid, plaintiff is entitled to judgment. “He who claims real estate by virtue of a tax-title must be able to point to a substantial compliance with all the essential requisites provided in the statute” (Osmer v. Sheasley, 219 Pa. 390, 395) authorizing the sale. The decision of this appeal depends on the proper construction of the Act of May 11, 1911, P. L. 257.

To defeat plaintiff’s prima facie case, defendant proved facts necessary to support a county treasurer’s sale of land for county taxes and relied on the deed to him from the county treasurer, dated August 1, 1925, recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds *319 June 14, 1927. The deed bore the seal of the court of common pleas and a certificate of the prothonotary of that court, certifying that on August 1, 1925, the treasurer appeared before the judges of the court and duly acknowledged the deed &e.

To rebut the effect of the deed in evidence, plaintiff put in the record of the court which disclosed that there was no minute identifying defendant’s deed as one that was acknowledged in court. The following facts were also found by the court:

“13. In the minute book of the court of common pleas of Montgomery County, under the date of August 1st, 1925, appears inter alia the following minutes:
“ ‘The county treasurer presented - deeds for property sold at treasurer’s sale for unpaid taxes in June, 1924, and acknowledged the same in open court according to law.’
“14. There is no other record in the office of the prothonotary or elsewhere (except the certificate on the deed itself) to show that the treasurer’s deed to James P. Nash was acknowledged in open court on August 1st, 1925.”

The court held that by the Act of 1911, the deed, bearing the certificate of the prothonotary, was prima facie evidence of its acknowledgment in the court, and (contrary to appellant’s contention) that the presumption or inference of that fact (so resulting from the statute) was not rebutted by the proof that the minutes of the court below established that the acknowledgment was not made before the court as certified by the prothonotary.

The contention of appellant is that the statute merely makes the deed, so certified, prima facie evidence of acknowledgment' in court, and that if the minutes, or other records of the court in evidence, show that such deed was not acknowledged, or (what, appellant asserts, is the same thing) if the minutes contain no entry that the acknowledgment took place, *320 such proof of want of acknowledgment in court rebuts the prima facie effect of the acknowledgment established by the statute, and constitutes conclusive proof that title did not pass. Defendant does not contend that any part of the minutes or record of the court below has been lost or destroyed.

The Act of 1911 is entitled “Relating to treasurers’ sales of land for taxes; making the prothonotary’s certificate of acknowledgment, endorsed on the deed, or the record thereof when such deed shall have been recorded, prima facie evidence of such acknowledgment.” The title gives notice that the legislature is specifying that either of the two acts named shall constitute “prima facie evidence of such acknowledgment,” — nothing more. The title is part of the statute and should be considered in construing it: Glen Alden Co. v. Scranton, 282 Pa. 45, 51; Matis v. Schaeffer, 270 Pa. 141, 143; Brink v. Marsh, 53 Superior Ct. 293, 298. To ordain that a certain act or acts shall be prima facie evidence of a fact means merely that from proof of the act or acts, a rebuttable inference or presumption of the fact shall be made; (Beeman v. Supreme Lodge, 215 Pa. 627, 629; Meeker v. L. V. R. R. Co., 236 U. S. 412, 430; Wigmore, Evidence, Vol. IV, Sec. 2494); it attributes a specified value to certain evidence but does not make it conclusive proof of the fact in question.

"With notice in the title that the purpose was to attribute to certain evidence a prima facie value, we take up the text: “Section 1. Be it enacted, &e., That in all cases of treasurers’ deeds for lands sold by county treasurers for non-payment of taxes, whether heretofore or hereafter made, the certificate of the prothonotary endorsed thereon, under the seal of the court, to the acknowledgment of such deed, or the record thereof when such deed shall have been recorded, shall be prima facie evidence of the fact of such acknowledgment: Provided, however, That such prima *321 facie evidence may be rebutted by showing that such deed was not acknowledged, when the records of the court do not contain any entry of the acknowledgment of such deed; And provided further, That this act shall not affect any adjudicated case.”

The provision that the acts specified “shall be prima facie evidence of the fact of such acknowledgment, Provided, however, That such prima facie evidence may be rebutted by showing that such deed was not acknowledged, when the records of the court do not contain any entry of the acknowledgment of such deed,” might have been written, and for present purposes of construction, may be considered as having been written by transposing the same words, to read “That such prima facie evidence may be rebutted when the records of the court do not contain any entry of acknowledgment of such deed, by showing that such deed was not acknowledged.” It may also be said here that the use of the well understood phrase “prima facie evidence of the fact” is in itself a legislative direction that the evidence described in the statute may be rebutted; indeed, it would be so construed, even though the proviso quoted concerning rebuttal were omitted from the act, because, in its context, the phrase must be given its well understood meaning.

We first inquire what was the law concerning county treasurer’s tax-sale deeds immediately prior to the Act of 1911 in the respect now involved. That inquiry of course takes us to the Act of April 3, 1804, 4 Sm. L. 201, and supplementary legislation and decisions under it (see Ryan v. Bruhin, 88 Pa. Superior Ct. 61). Section 2 required that the treasurer’s deed be acknowledged in open court; that requirement still exists, and as the acknowledgment of such deed is a judicial act, it is necessary, that the court make some record of the fact; the making of such record is inherent in the work of the court. It has never been questioned that a court must keep records of its judicial acts (compare *322 Dougherty v. Com., 69 Pa. 286). Such records import verity and serve many purposes. And the minute, however inadequate, quoted in the 13th finding of fact, is part of the record of the tax sales in which deeds were said to have been acknowledged on August 1, 1925-, though obviously so incomplete as to furnish no information of the identity of any particular sale. “The interpretation of the record is a question of law and not a mere matter of discretion”: Sheip v. Price, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 1, 5.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 316, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grakelow-v-nash-pasuperct-1929.