Hunter v. McKlveen

45 A.2d 222, 353 Pa. 357, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 25, 1945
DocketAppeal, 181
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 222 (Hunter v. McKlveen) 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
Hunter v. McKlveen, 45 A.2d 222, 353 Pa. 357, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 247 (Pa. 1945).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

William Hunter, plaintiff and appellant, a resident taxpayer of Westmoreland County, filed this taxpayer’s bill in equity, and after preliminary objections thereto, filed by some of the defendants, had been sustained refusing the prayer and dismissing the bill, and the decree nisi had been made absolute, he took this- appeal. De-. *359 fendants, the appellees, are James S. Blair et al. The Prothonotary and County Commissioners of Westmoreland County were also joined as defendants. Since the issues to be decided arose out of the sustaining of the preliminary objections, the facts alleged in the bill must be taken to be true. The bill therefore constitutes a complete history of the facts of the case. In résumé, and as far as possible in chronological order, the facts are:

On October 10, 1938, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, created by an Act of Assembly of May 21, 1937, P. L. 774, and authorized therein to condemn lands for highway purposes, appropriated certain lands in Westmoreland County, being a part of a tract of 6889 acres of which James S. Blair et al., hereinafter referred to as the Blairs, claimed to be the owners. In a viewers’ proceeding the Turnpike Commission named the Blairs as the owners of the land. During April, May, June, July and August, 1939, the Turnpike Commission entered and improved the land taken as a right of way. The lands were unseated and had been sold to the County. Commissioners at various times for delinquent taxes, the last sale being on June 13,1938.

Following an appeal from the award of the Board of Viewers the Turnpike Commission filed a petition and obtained a rule on the County Commissioners of Westmoreland County to show cause why they should not intervene by reason of tax sales of said lands to them. The Commissioners filed a disclaimer in which they said they disclaimed “. . . all title or claim of title or of right to or interest in or possession of the premises described in the Petition and Statement of Claim . . . and to every part thereof, now or at any time heretofore, and we do likewise disclaim any interest or property in the damages caused by reason of the condemnation of all or of any part of the said premises by the said Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.” The Commission then made a motion for judgment on the record on the ground, that the Blairs had no interest in the land and that the *360 title was in the County. This motion was overruled, the decree leaving the question of ownership open to be disposed of at the trial of the issue.

On February S, 1942, the Blairs paid all the delinquent taxes on the lands involved. On May 2, 1944, a jury was sworn and a compromise or special verdict agreed to in the sum of $16,400.00, and providing “the same to be paid into Court in full of all damages for property taken, damaged or destroyed of the above named plaintiffs, owners or reputed owners, or by whomsoever owned”. (Italics added).

On June 23, 1944, appellant filed this taxpayer’s bill alleging these facts and particularly that on October 10, 1938, the date of the appropriation, said lands were not owned by the Blairs but were owned by the' County of Westmoreland by reason of five Treasurer’s Sales to the County Commissioners for taxes on said land, which sales occurred on June 11,1934, and June 13, 1938, and that the land had not been redeemed at the time of the appropriation by the Turnpike Commission or within the statutory period of two years after the last tax sale, and averring that the County of Westmoreland was entitled to the fund paid into court, pursuant to said verdict, rather than the Blairs.

Appellees’ first objection to the bill is that equity has no jurisdiction to consider it. A court of equity generally will not take jurisdiction to try title to real property: Harris v. Brewster, Perkin’s Appeal, 154 Pa. 22, 25 A. 829; Butler County Commrs’. Petition, 141 Pa. Superior Ct. 597, 15 A. 2d 504. However, where the right is clear and there is no serious dispute as to any of the material facts, equity will assume jurisdiction in such a case: Piro v. Shipley, 211 Pa. 36, 60 A. 325; Richmond v. Bennett, 205 Pa. 470, 55 A. 17; Manbeck v. Jones, 190 Pa. 171, 42 A. 536. In the case at bar there is no dispute as to any material fact, only a difference of opinion as to whether the lands were redeemed, the application of redemption acts and a question of the validity of the disclaimer. In Richmond v. Bennett, supra (p. 474), this *361 Court said: “It is true that in actions respecting real property, where the plaintiff's right has not been established at law or is not clear, he is generally not entitled to remedy by injunction; but where in a proceeding in equity the plaintiff's title is clear, and all the evidence relating to it is of such a character that a judge in a trial at law, upon the same evidence, would not be at liberty to submit the question of the plaintiff’s title to the jury, equity will grant relief although there has been no adjudication of the title at common law.” In this case the owner of the lands after the tax sales and at the time of the condemnation is determined by public records. There can be no question of the tax sales and the purchases by the County Commissioners. There could be no submission of the question of title to a jury. In a trial at law the court would be bound to give binding instructions in favor of the County.

It should also be remembered that in order to oust equity jurisdiction there must be a legal remedy and one that is adequate and complete: Fraser Fund v. Fraser, 350 Pa. 553, 40 A. 2d 22; York Rys. Co. v. Driscoll, 331 Pa. 193, 200 A. 864. We agree with the learned court below that “. . . by reason of the special verdict it is necessary for a Court to determine who is to receive this fund of $16,400.00, now lying idle in the hands of the Prothonotary. Ejectment would not lie and the redemption of the land by payment of the delinquent taxes prevents proceedings under the validation acts. We are confronted with a situation where the law is deficient. There is no remedy at law and it would therefore appear that equity has jurisdiction.”

At the time of the condemnation title was in the County by reason of the tax sales of June 11, 1934 and June 13, 1938. The right to redeem these lands existed thereafter for a period of two years as provided by the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 141. Since title passed conditionally to the County at the time of the tax sale, June 13,1938, the owners had until June 13,1940, to pay the *362 taxes and redeem the lands. At the time of the condemnation, October 10, 1938, the title passed conditionally from the County to the Turnpike Commission, and became absolute at the expiration of the statutory period of redemption. It was not until February 3, 1942, that the taxes were paid and an attempt made to redeem the property. It was then too late to do so, it was long after the period of redemption fixed in the statute had expired. The money received for the lands from the Turnpike Commission was therefore the property of Westmoreland County, from which source the title to the Turnpike Commission was directly derived.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 222, 353 Pa. 357, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-mcklveen-pa-1945.