M'Clure v. Ege

7 Watts 74
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Watts 74 (M'Clure v. Ege) 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
M'Clure v. Ege, 7 Watts 74 (Pa. 1838).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Huston, J.

The facts presented the following case. On the 9th of February 1835, a fieri facias, at the suit of D. M’Clure, issued against Peter Ege. Real debt 2466 dollars 29 cents, and costs. And on the 18th and 19th of February, other writs of fieri facias ; [75]*75Crips, for Irvine, and Cassel and the Carlisle Bank, each & fieri facias, for sums, amounting, together, to above 3000 dollars.

On the 6th of March 1835, Peter Ege made an assignment of all his personal property at his iron works, and the stock at the works, particularly specified, to his sons, M. P. Ege and J. A. Ege, in consideration of 20,000 dollars, and rented the iron works at 7000 dollars per year. This, it was stated, was done with hopes that the sons, by their exertion, could raise money to extricate their father from his embarrassments. But the sheriff had levied the first, and then the other above specified executions, on this same personal property.

On the 26th of March an agreement was made as follows:

D. M’Clure v. Peter Ege ; No. 48, of April 1835. Crips for Irvine a. The same; No. 69, of same term. J. D. Cassel v. The same; No. 70, of same term. Carlisle Bank v. The same; No. 71, of same term. \

We agree that on the above recited fieri facias, now in the hands of the sheriff of Cumberland county, the sheriff shall not proceed to act any further, for the present, but the levies shall remain as they now are, and the writs remain in the sheriff’s hands. In case of the appearance of any such danger as would be likely to jeopard the safety of the debt, the sheriff may be directed to proceed. The securities and priority of lien of said executions shall remain as at present. This agreement shall have no effect, unless signed on behalf of all the plaintiffs. M. P. and J. A. Ege covenant that the above executions shall be paid out of the property sold to them by Peter Ege, and which has been levied on by virtue of said writs.

Signed by attorneys of all but the Carlisle Bank, March 16,1835.

Test, Joseph A. Ege.
M. P. Ege.

The deposition of J. A. Ege was taken, who stated that the paper above, contained the whole of the agreement, as he recollected it. That a Mr Weaver was indorser for the debt to the Carlisle Bank; and although he had agreed to the above arrangement, he refused to sign, or let the bank sign ; in consequence of which, be, Joseph A. Ege, paid the debt to the bank, and produced the sheriff’s receipt. That if the above arrangement had not been made, he and his brother would not have taken the personal property, on the assignment, or taken a lease of the works; and it would have been sold on the executions. That they had also paid a part of the debt to Cassel (above 1100 dollars), and they had paid many other debts of their father.

The depositions of the counsel who signed the agremeent were also taken, not varying the case otherwise than as to their understanding of it. And a notice, dated in August 1836, and served some time in the next autumn, was shown, in which the attorney of David M’Clure requested the sheriff to proceed and sell on bis execution. M. P. and J. A. Ege took possession of the property, and carried on the works in their names, immediately after the agreement of 16th [76]*76March 1835; and while so carrying on, became indebted, and writs of fieri facias issued against them to November term 1836, and to January 1837, and the other terms of that year; and a testatum fieri facias, for 7000 dollars, and another for 3000 dollars, came from York county. At length the sheriff sold, and to M’Clure’s execution returned (for the fieri facias had never been returned, until after the sale in 1838), “ Levied on the personal property of P. Ege, as per schedule (which specified almost every thing), and execution stayed by agreement signed by the plaintiff’s attorney, a copy of which is hereto attached ; after which a portion of said property was consumed, and disposed of by the defendant, the same being in use by the defendant, at his furnace called Pine Grove, and the residue was transferred by the defendant to M. P. and J. A. Ege, against whom writs of fieri facias were issued, and the property, embracing part of that I had so levied on, was sold for 12,889 dollars 79 cents, on said fieri facias, on which I have returned money made, as before the said sale. Mr Alexander, the attorney of the plaintiff, M’Clure, gave me notice to proceed on this writ. The money is in my hands for distribution, and I will pay the same according to the decree of the court.”

The amount due on the several executions against M. P. and J. A. Ege, exceeds the sum in court.

Peter Ege had assigned the lease from his sons for 7000 dollars per year, to a Mr Lewis, for the first year, and also for the year ending in 1837 ; and the lease for the year ending in March 1838, to a Mr Gardner. There was no allegation that these were not bona fide, and to pay moneys advanced by those gentlemen. There was due of rent of last year, after allowing all credits, 5542 dollars 46 cents. This was claimed for the landlord, under an act securing rent not exceeding one year.

J. A. Ege proved, that of the property sold, about 5000 dollars worth was the same which they got from their father.

It may not be amiss to take a short review of the practice and decisions relating to the subjects in contest here. In Leidy v. Wallace, 4 Dall. 163, we find it said: “ the law in this country is.not the same as in England. This departure from the English practice arose from sentiments of humanity, and the peculiar situation of the country. In the interior, goods were never removed, after the levy. If, however, the intention of leaving them with the defendant was fraudulent, a subsequent execution would be preferred in Pennsylvania, as well as in England.” The levies, in that case, were on horses and cattle and farming utensils, and the money was awarded to an execution levied two years before, in preference to a later one. A few pages after, in the same book, will be found Chancellor v. Philips, in which a distinction is taken between household goods and a store, or any articles expressly kept for sale.

I do not cite these cases as evidence of what the law now is, but as showing what it was once considered to be.

In Smith v. Lewis, 2 Serg. & Rawle 159, the position is distinctly [77]*77admitted,*that leaving property levied on in the hands of the defendant, does not make it subject to be taken by a subsequent execution; yet, it is said, leaving it a great length of time may make a difference, especially if the levy is not returned, and the defendant thereby gained a false credit.

In Eberle v. Myers, 1 Rawle 366, we find a case of a stay ordered by the plaintiff, and the property used and offered for sale by the defendant ; and other circumstances, which showed an intention to protect the defendant in possession of the goods; and a second execution took the proceeds.

In Howell v. Atkin, 2 Rawle 281, the plaintiff told the sheriff he need not remove the goods ; in less than a month there carne a second execution; but as there had been no orders to stay by the plaintiff, the first execution took the proceeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Watts 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclure-v-ege-pa-1838.