Long v. Long

1 Watts 265
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 Watts 265 (Long v. Long) 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
Long v. Long, 1 Watts 265 (Pa. 1832).

Opinion

[266]*266The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

This is an action of debt, brought by- Samuel Long, for his own use, in the name of Jlbraham Long, against Benjamin Long, with notice to Conrad Zeigler. The bills of exception, and the errors assigned, raise two questions.

1. Whether the action can be maintained so as to entitle the plaintiff to a judgment, to be levied out of the land in the possession of Conrad Zeigler, which he bought at sheriff’s sale as the property of Benjamin Long, the defendant in this action, subject to the payment of the debt herein claimed.

2. Whether Benjamin Long, the defendant, was a competent witness for the plaintiff, on the trial of the issue between him and Conrad Zeigler, the terre. tenant.

From the nature of the plaintiff’s claim, as set out by himself, it was certainly necessary to prove, that the debt was due, and owing to Abraham Long by Benjamin Long, under a valid and binding contract ; and that it was such as created a lien upon the land for the payment of it, of which land Zeigler had become the terre tenant; and that he had full notice of the lien at the time he bought. We think, that the evidence set forth in the several bills of exception, which have been made the ground of the errors assigned in this case, tended to show all this, and, therefore, ought to have been received. Why the court below rejected the testimony, does not distinctly appear upon the record; but it is said, that it was because they thought that this action could not be supported for the purpose of making the land in the hands of Zeigler liable for the payment of the debt. If such was the opinion entertained by the court below, we think it was erroneous. Taking all for true, which the plaintiff offered to prove, there can be no doubt, but that the debt claimed, was justly owing to him by Benjamin Long ; and that he had, according to the terms of the contract, a double security for the payment of it: first in the personal responsibility of Benjamin Long ; and next, in a lien upon the land purchased by him. It has, however, been objected'to the arrangement or agreement out of which this debt has arisen, that Martin and Jlbraham Long, two of the persons interested in the lands which were the subject matter of the arrangement, which was an agreement of compromise of family disputes and quarrels, and therefore much to be favoured, were minors at the time; and that, therefore, they were incapable, either by themselves or their guardians, of becoming parties to it, and so to dispose of their rights in the land. Admitting that these minors were incapable of binding themselves, or of being bound by their guardians for such purpose, still the contract, for reasons which will appear in the sequel, was not void, but at most only voidable ; and the other contracting parties who were of full age were absolutely bound by it, and could only be released by the consent of all, or by those infants taking advantage of their infancy, and making it a plea against the fulfilment of the agreement upon their part, when they came of full age. But instead [267]*267of doing this, the evidence offered by the plaintiff, and rejected by the court, was, to prove, inter alia, that these infants, after their arrival at full age, had complied with, and performed the agreement in every respect; and that Abraham, who is the nominal plaintiff in this case, after he was of full age, and before the bringing of this suit, executed and tendered a release of his right and interest to and in the land, to Zeigler the terre tenant. This was all that was wanting to make his title to the land, which he then had and still has in possession, perfect. And if it be true, as the plaintiff further offered to prove, that Zeigler bought the land, expressly subject to the payment of this money, upon Abraham’s effectually releasing his right and title to it; why should Zeigler not either pay the money, or suffer the land to be sold for it ? Upon every principle of honour and justice, he ought to feel himself bound to do so, rather than suffer Benjamin Long to lose any thing on account of it.

If the rightof the plain tiff to demand and recovérthe money claimed in this suit were to be made manifest, as the plaintiff by his proofs proposed, he most unquestionably ought to have a remedy for the recovery of it. For it is a rule of our law, that wherever it confers a right, it will afford a remedy by an action of some.kind ; and the right being once clearly established, it belongs to the courts to adopt a suitable remedy. 3 Black. Com. 123 ; 1 Salk. 21 ; 6 Mad. 54; Per Lord Kenyon, Chief Justice, 1 East 226 ; 1 Chitty, Pl. 83.

The action adopted by the plaintiff as a remedy here is debt; and is it not, I would ask, a suitable one? It is money that is claimed to he due, and sought to be recovered in this case; and debt is a more extensive remedy for the recovery of money than assumpsit, or perhaps any other form of action; for it lies to recover money due upon legal liabilities, or upon simple contracts, express or implied, whether verbal or written; and upon contracts under seal or of record ; and on statutes by a party grieved, or a common informer, whenever the demand is for a sum certain, or is capable of being reduced to a certainty, &c. 1 Chitty, Pl. 101.

Where an annuity or rent is charged upon lands of the testator by his will, after his death an action of debt will lie in favour of the legatee to recover it, as often as it shall be in arrear and unpaid, against those who shall have succeeded to the possession of the lands, and have become the pernors of the profits thereof. Dupa v. Mayo, 1 Saund. 282. The liability of the pernors of the profits in this case does not arise ex contractu, but is cast upon them by operation of law upon their acts and conduct, in having taken possession of the land and received the profits of it, which were the fund appropriated by the testator in his will for the payment of the annuity or the rent. So a legacy consisting of a gross sum of money, given and charged by a testator upon his land lying in this state, may be recovered in an action of debt, to be brought against the terre tenant with notice to the executors. The judgment, however, to be rendered in such case would be for the amount of the legacy, to be [268]*268levied only out of the land upon which it was charged. An action of ejectment was at one time held to lie by some of our courts in this state,-and resorted to occasionally, as a remedy by legatees whose legacies were charged by the testators upon the real estate. But of late, the action of debt seems to be the remedy that has been finally adopted, and that is now considered by this court as the most appropriate to promote the intention of the testator, and to secure to the legatee his right. This has been devised and - adopted from necessity, in order to prevent a failure of justice.

Upon siinilár principles, and from a like necessity, we think, then, that if the plaintiff here shall make out by proof the facts of his case as he proposed, to the conviction of the jury, that, in law,- he would be entitled to a judgment for the amount of his debt, to be levied out of the land upon which it was charged, and subject to which Zeigler purchased.

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98 Pa. 489 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1881)
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2 F. 71 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1880)
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Bluebook (online)
1 Watts 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-long-pa-1832.