Harper v. Consolidated Rubber Co.

131 A. 356, 284 Pa. 444, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 531
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1925
DocketAppeals, 91 and 92
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 131 A. 356 (Harper v. Consolidated Rubber Co.) 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
Harper v. Consolidated Rubber Co., 131 A. 356, 284 Pa. 444, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 531 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschziskeb,

This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from an order of the court below distributing a fund raised by the sheriff through a sale of property held in the name of the Consolidated Rubber Company, a Delaware corporation. The property in question was sold under a fi. fa. sur judgment entered on a warrant of attorney accompanying a bond, which in turn accompanied a purchase-money mortgage given by the rubber company to Harper, the present plaintiff. The Commonwealth claimed state taxes settled against the corporation after the mortgage was recorded. The sheriff allowed this claim in full, thus giving it priority over plaintiff’s judgment for the principal debt and attorney’s collection commissions due under the terms of the before-mentioned bond and on another bond of similar kind, also held by him and accompanying a second purchase-money mortgage on the same premises; whereupon plaintiff excepted. The court below sustained the exceptions and ordered the fund, after payment of local taxes, costs, and attorney’s commissions, to be applied on account of the judgment debts due to plaintiff. Since the fund was inadequate to satisfy these latter claims, the Commonwealth received nothing; hence the present appeals.

The attorney general contends that, under the Act of June 15,1911, P. L. 955, the State’s claim is preferred to those of plaintiff. The statute in question provides, by section 1, that “all state taxes......settled against any corporation.... . .shall be a first lien upon the...... property.....of such corporation.....; and whenever the......property of a corporation......shall be sold at a judicial sale, all taxes,......due the Commonwealth shall first be allowed and paid out of the proceeds of such *448 sale, before any judgment, mortgage, or any other claim or lien against such corporation.”

The court below held, on two grounds, that this case was not governed by the above act; first, because, in the present instance, the attorney’s fees alone would exhaust the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale, and “Even taxes due the Commonwealth may not be allowed as against attorney’s commissions” for collection stipulated for in bonds and mortgages. To sustain the position just stated, the court below cited Bauer v. Wilkes-Barre Light Co., 274 Pa. 165, which rules that receivers’ counsel fees and commissions are allowable as costs ahead of claims of the Commonwealth; but attorney’s commissions stipulated for in a warrant of attorney accompanying a bond, or. in a mortgage, are not costs, — they are part of the judgment and belong to the plaintiff: Mahoning County Bank’s App., 32 Pa. 158, 160; McAllister’s App., 59 Pa. 204, 208; Schmidt & Friday’s App., 82 Pa. 524, 527; Daly v. Maitland, 88 Pa. 384, 386; Calligan v. Heath, 260 Pa. 457, 462, 463. Consequently such commissions are to be preferred or postponed as the principal debt is preferred or postponed.

The second ground stated by the court below, and the one on which plaintiff largely bases his argument, is that the rubber company, having given purchase-money mortgages at the time the land was deeded to it, had no more than an equity of redemption; that the real ownership of the property remained in plaintiff, as mortgagee, and, consequently, there was no judicial sale of “the property of [the present] corporation,” as required by the above-quoted act in order that the Commonwealth might have a preference; that, in any event, plaintiff’s estate in the land, under the mortgage accompanying the bond here sued on, could not be discharged as though it were a mere lien.

In considering these propositions, we must look at the language of the statute, which, eliminating words unnecessary to our present consideration, reads, “Whenever *449 the property of a corporation shall .be sold at a judicial sale, all taxes due the Commonwealth shall first be paid out of the proceeds before any judgment, mortgage, or other claim or lien against such corporation.”

It is to be noticed that the statute does not say “Whenever the real estate of a corporation shall be sold,” but, “Whenever the property of a corporation shall be sold.” Whether the rubber company be viewed as the real owner of the land in controversy or merely as the possessor of an equity of redemption, whatever it had was “property”; and it is conceded of record that this property was, at the behest of plaintiff, seized and taken in execution by the sheriff as belonging to the Consolidated Rubber Corporation. Finally, the bonds and mortgages here involved, on which plaintiff bases his claims, were given by the rubber company itself; hence they come directly within the words of the act as either “judgments, mortgages, claims or liens against such corporation.” All this being manifestly true, the question may well be asked, how, under the circumstances, did the court below sustain its position that the Commonwealth’s claim for state taxes was not entitled to preference?

Sweeney v. Arrowsmith, 43 Pa. Superior Ct. 268, is relied on as authority. There, a prior act, containing substantially the same terms as the Act of 1911, was construed and applied; but the facts were materially different from those at bar. The purchase-money mortgage, which was there given precedence over the Commonwealth’s claim for state taxes assessed against the corporation figuring in that case, was not executed by the delinquent corporation, but by one of its predecessors in title; the corporation had acquired the land subject to the mortgage. That this was a controlling fact is clearly indicated by the following passage from the opinion of President Judge Endlich, on whose opinion the Superior Court affirmed. He said (p. 271): “The liens postponed to that of the Commonwealth......are *450 such as are created by or procured against the delinquent corporation, [and] it is very plain that neither the mortgage, incumbered with which the Pendora Park Company bought this land, nor the judgment on the sci. fa., was a lien created or obtained against the company In the present case, as previously said, the bonds and mortgages were given by the rubber company; they were its direct obligations, and, as such, are clearly within the class of liens over which the act gives preference to the claims of the Commonwealth.

Again, in Sweeney v. Arrowsmith, supra, the court states (p. 270), as a ground of decision, that “It cannot be reasonably supposed......that one selling land to an individual [which was the fact in that case] and taking a mortgage upon it from him, for part of the price, should foresee or actually contemplate the eventuality of its passing at some future time into the hands of a corporation, a failure of that corporation to pay its state tax upon capital stock, and the impairment, possibly the wiping out, of the security for the unpaid purchase money by the enforcement of a lien filed therefor by the Commonwealth and taking precedence of the mortgage.” Of course the above reasoning does not apply here, because this is not such a case as outlined by Judge Endlich ; on the contrary, in the present instance the land passed directly from plaintiff to the corporation and, when taking the mortgage from the latter (in August, 1921), plaintiff knew that the Act of 1911 in express terms gave a preference to the Commonwealth for state taxes which might in the future be assessed against the mortgagor.

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 356, 284 Pa. 444, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-consolidated-rubber-co-pa-1925.