Miners Savings Bank v. Thomas

12 A.2d 810, 140 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 402
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketAppeal, 17
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 810 (Miners Savings Bank v. Thomas) 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
Miners Savings Bank v. Thomas, 12 A.2d 810, 140 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 402 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The question involved in this appeal may be stated as follows: Where a mortgage conveys to the mortgagee the rents, issues and profits of the mortgaged real estate, and is in default, is a later judgment creditor of the mortgagor, who issues an attachment execution and serves the tenant as garnishee, entitled to the rents accruing after notice and demand by the mortgagee to the tenant to pay the rent to him, as mortgagee; particularly where no order has been made by the court on the sheriff to collect the rents for the attaching creditor, pursuant to Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 568, secs. 66 and 67, 12 PS secs. 2944-2945?

The answer is, No.

In discussing the case, we shall pay no attention to statements in the appellee’s argument which run counter to the agreed statement of facts filed pursuant to Rule 56 of this court.

Prom this statement the following essential facts are taken:

Adrian R. Stevens is the owner of certain real estate in the Borough of West Pittston, which is rented to the Pittston Oil Company (the garnishee in this attachment execution), at a rental of $30 per month, payable in advance on the ninth day of each month. When the lease was made the real estate was subject to a mortgage of $2500, given by Stevens to D. H. Meyer and Anna Meyer, his wife, duly recorded, on which the principal, and interest since January 2, 1923, are due and unpaid. The mortgage is admittedly a first lien on the real estate. It contained a clause granting and conveying to the mortgagees the rents, issues and profits of the mortgaged premises, (see Randal v. Jersey *7 Mortgage Inv. Co., 306 Pa. 1, 6, 158 A. 865), as security for the payment of the mortgage debt. Anna Meyer is the surviving mortgagee.

The plaintiff, Miners Savings Bank of Pittston, obtained a judgment for $1500 against said Adrian B. Stevens et al. to No. 180 July Term, 1935, which is junior in lien to Mrs. Meyer’s mortgage.

On March 14, 1936, the bank caused an attachment execution to issue on said judgment, and served the writ the same day on Pittston Oil Company, tenant of the mortgaged premises, as garnishee. On April 13, 1936, the mortgagees caused a notice to be served on the tenant, demanding payment of the rent to them under the provisions of the mortgage. On the date of the service of said notice, two months’ rent, $60, was due and owing by the tenant under the terms of the lease, to wit, the rent due March 9, for the month of March, and the rent due April 9, for the month of April.

The court below (McLean, P. J.) on January 28, 1937, entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $36, the rent accrued under the lease for the period from March 9, 1936 to April 13, 1936, 1 which it held was subject to the attachment, but also held that disposition of the rental accruing after the mortgagees’ notice to the garnishee must await the outcome of the issue raised by the answer of the surviving mortgagee, who had been allowed to intervene in the attachment and file an answer.

Subsequently, the garnishee having admitted in its answer to interrogatories, that it owed rent under said lease from March 9, 1936 to July 8, 1938—28 months at $30—or a total of $840, and averred that it had been served with notice by the mortgagees on April 13, 1936, demanding the rents as mortgagees, the court (McDonald, J.) made absolute plaintiff’s rule on the *8 garnishee! and intervening mortgagee to show cause why it should not have judgment, and directed the garnishee to pay to plaintiff the balance of rents in its hands, to the extent necessary to pay its judgment, interest and costs, any overplus remaining after payment of the judgment to be paid to the mortgagee, Anna Meyer. Anna Meyer appealed.

The order will be reversed.

The Supreme Court, speaking through Justice (after-wards Chief Justice) Agnew, pointed out in Evans v. Hamrick, 61 Pa. 19, that an execution attachment differs from a foreign attachment, in that it “cannot be levied of land—that, the fi. fa. must reach—the attachment [execution] is levied only of debts! or choses in action ......When the attachment was laid in the hands of the garnishees they were not debtors to Owen Evans. Had the rent fallen due afterwards, then on the principle of after-accruing funds coming into their hands, the attachment might have held the rent. But before this event happened, the reversion to which the rent was incident passed out of Evans into his assignee in bankruptcy by operation of law. There was, therefore, no debt for the attachment to operate upon.”

The Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 755, relating to executions, provides for the attachment of corporate stock owned by a defendant, debts due the defendant, deposits of money made by him, or of his goods, chattels, etc., in satisfaction of a judgment, (Sections 34, 35, 36, 37 and 38), and directs that it shall be levied “in the manner allowed in the case of a foreign attachment,” and that the stock, debts, deposits and other effects “shall remain attached in the hands of such corporation or person in the manner heretofore practised and allowed in the case of foreign attachment.” The Act of June 13,1836, P. L. 568, prescribed the practice as to foreign attachments, and sections 66 and 67 thereof provide as follows with respect to the attachment of land which has been leased for years, to wit:

*9 “Section 66. It shall be lawful for the court, at any time after the return of the attachment, on application by the plaintiff, and affidavit of a just cause of action, to issue a writ to the sheriff, requiring him to collect and recover from the tenant of the premises, all such rent as shall have accrued, at the time of the execution of the writ of attachment, or as may accrue thereafter, until the further order of the court.

“Section 67. The sheriff or other officer shall, by virtue of such writ, proceed from time to time to recover such rents, in like manner and with like powers as are or shall be possessed by a landlord under the laws of this commonwealth, and it shall be his duty forthwith, on the receipt of any moneys arising from the recovery of such rents, to bring the same into court.”

If the practice in this respect is applicable, under the Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 755, supra, to attachments in execution, then, no such order was obtained from the court in this instance; and no rents were paid to or collected under the writ by the sheriff from, the tenant and brought into court, as was done in General Tire Co. v. Tennis, 21 D. & C. 85, relied on by the court below. Hence we must resort to the general principles applicable to attachments in execution, and to the rights of mortgagees to demand payment of rent to them on default by the mortgagors.

In Phillips’Est. (No. 4), 205 Pa. 525, 530, 531, 55 A. 216, our Supreme Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Brown, said: “The attaching creditors attached only what still remained to the debtor. They could get nothing from the accountants [garnishees] by their attachments that did not belong to him when the writ was served.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 810, 140 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miners-savings-bank-v-thomas-pasuperct-1940.