Pennsylvania Co. for Insurances on Lives & Granting Annuities v. Broad Street Hospital

47 A.2d 281, 354 Pa. 123
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1946
DocketAppeal, 85
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 281 (Pennsylvania Co. for Insurances on Lives & Granting Annuities v. Broad Street Hospital) 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
Pennsylvania Co. for Insurances on Lives & Granting Annuities v. Broad Street Hospital, 47 A.2d 281, 354 Pa. 123 (Pa. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

, The point for decision is whether a mortgagor’s right of redemption must be exercised before the sheriff’s hammer falls, or whether the right may be exercised after *125 such sale but before acknowledgment and delivery.-of the sheriff’s deed following the sale. The point has not heretofore been expressly passed on by this court. The court below held that the right to redeem could be exercised after the sale but before the acknowledgment and delivery of the sheriff’s deed. The correct decision is of considerable importance in the conduct of such sales and the effect to be given to them. It happens that the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County recently reached the opposite conclusion: Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation v. Howard, 47 D. & C. 64, and denied redemption after the property had been knocked down to the sheriff’s vendee. It is elementary that “all judicial sales must be open to free and fair competition” (Slingluff v. Eckel, 24 Pa. 472, 474) and that courts will reject any procer dure easily adapted to frustrate free and fair judicial sales.

The defendant, Broad Street Hospital, made two mortgages to the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities, the first one dated May 2,1927, and the second one, dated January 10,1938, and defaulted on both. On November 5, 1945, judgment for $73,946.67 1 was entered on the bond accompanying the second mortgage. On November 8, 1945, Pennsylvania Comphhy issued a writ of fieri facias, returnable on the first Monday of December, 1945. On November 27,1945, after the writ was issued but before the return day, the suit was marked to the use of the appellant, The Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia! On December 3, 1945, at the sheriff’s sale on the fi. fa., the mortgaged property was sold to the appellant for $124,500. On December ll, 1945, on defendant’s motion, the court granted a rule to show cause why the sheriff’s, sale to appellant should not be set aside on the ground that after *126 the sale, defendant had tendered the amount of the judgment with interest and costs. Appellant answered responsively but the court made the. rule absolute. 2 This appeal then followed.

The reason given by the learned court for setting aside the sale was that the “owner of mortgaged real estate has the right to redeem it until the acknowledgment and delivery of the Sheriff’s deed, and that he is not finally foreclosed by the Sheriff’s hammer alone.” The court stated that there were no “equities” “sufficient to warrant setting aside the Sheriff’s sale,” no gross inadequacy of price, “no misleading or fraud, and there are no technical defects.”

The fact, then, is that the record disclosed no defect that would justify the order appealed from. If there is no defect in the record, we must sustain the appeal and reverse the order unless the right to redeem remained after the sale of defendant’s equity.

The appellant contends that the mortgagor’s right to' redeem ended when the property was knocked down to appellant; -that the only right then left in the mortgagor was to have possession during the period between the sale and the delivery of the deed: compare Hardenburg v. Beecher, 104 Pa. 20.

The mortgagor’s equity of redemption is the title remaining in him subject to the mortgage, and the right of redemption is the right to require the holder of the mortgage to receive payment of the matured debt and to satisfy the lien. We have no statutes regulating the exercise of this right of redemption. No statute author *127 izes redemption after the sale. The court was therefore without power to make the order allowing redemption after the sale. In Parker v. Dacres, 130 U. S. 43, Harlan, J., said, at p. 47, “In the view we take of this case it is unnecessary to express an opinion whether the provision relating to sales under execution, properly interpreted, gave a right of redemption after sale under a decree of foreclosure. If it did not, the decree below. must' be affirmed, for a right to redeem, after sale, does not exist unless given by statute. Counsel for the plaintiff speaks of a common-law right of redemption after sale that attaches in the absence of any statutory provision on the subject. We are not aware of any such right existing at common law, or in the system of equity as administered in the courts of England previous to the organization of our government ...” •

Our statutes authorize the taking of land in execution and provide that the purchaser at sheriff’s sale shall take the land (as provided in the Act of 1705,1 Sm. L. 57, section 6, 21 P.S. 791) “for such estate or estates as they were sold or delivered,, clearly discharged and freed from all equity and benefit of redemption . . or (as provided in section 66, Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 755, 12 P. S. 2447) the land “shall be quietly and peaceably held and enjoyed by the person'to whom the same shall be sold or delivered, and by the heirs, successors or assigns of such persons, as fully and amply, and for such estate and estates ... as he or they for whose debt or duty the same shall be sold or delivered might, could, or ought to do at or before the taking thereof in execution.”:

The sheriff’s sale was conducted in the usual way. The accepted view of a sale by auction is stated by Williston, Contracts, sec. 29, vol. 1, p. 68. “The auctioneer may more accurately be said to invite offers than himself to be an offeror, and the law has adopted this doctrine. Since the bargain is incomplete until the hammer falls, a bidder may therefore retract his bid .until that time. The same point is involved in decisions turning-on *128 the right of the auctioneer, to withdraw an article offered for sale; and for the same reason, until the hammer falls, the auctioneer may withdraw, unless it has been advertised or announced that the sale shall be without reserve . . See Restatement, Contracts, section 27, vol. 1; Stover v. Rice, 3 Whart.2 1; Fisher v. Seltzer, 23 Pa. 308; Stroup v. Raymond, 183 Pa. 279, 38 A. 626; Acker v. Snyder, 250 Pa. 57, 95 A. 325. When the sheriff accepted the bid, the purchaser acquired a right to a deed on complying with the terms of sale and assumed the obligation of complying with those terms: Dickson v. McCartney, 226 Pa. 552, 75 A. 735. The appellant purchaser’s position was, in substance, that of a purchaser by articles- of agreement; the purchaser had acquired an equitable interest which would become a complete title on complying with the terms of the sale: compare Stover v. Rice, 3 Whart. 21; Slater’s Appeal, 28 Pa. 169.

For many years it has been the general understanding in this Commonwealth that the sheriff’s sale takes place when the hammer falls. Recently in St. Louis B. & L. Ass’n v. Hamilton, 319 Pa. 220, 179 A. 604 (1935), in considering the time when a sale takes place, Mr. Justice Schaffer said: “Certainly in common parlance the word ‘sale’ when used.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Margaret M Jager
W.D. Pennsylvania, 2021
Karlene Sandra Parker
S.D. Florida, 2021
Pamela C. Parker
W.D. Pennsylvania, 2021
Commonwealth v. Investment Resource Holding, Inc.
168 A.3d 225 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2017)
In Re: Balaji Investments, LLC, and Savana Properties, LLC
148 A.3d 507 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)
In re Monteleone
553 B.R. 288 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2016)
In re Pittman
549 B.R. 614 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2016)
Beal Bank SSB v. Brown (In Re Brown)
311 B.R. 721 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2004)
In Re Joan Walker
Third Circuit, 2002
WALKER v. PNC BANK, N.A.
47 F. App'x 108 (Third Circuit, 2002)
Davis v. SunTrust Mortgage, Inc. (In Re Davis )
281 B.R. 626 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2002)
In Re Townsville
268 B.R. 95 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2001)
In Re Moore
267 B.R. 111 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2001)
Golden v. Mercer County Tax Claim Bureau (In Re Golden)
190 B.R. 52 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1995)
Bundy v. Donovan (In Re Donovan)
183 B.R. 700 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1995)
New York Guardian Mortgage Co. v. Brokenborough
575 A.2d 121 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1990)
United States v. Capobianco
836 F.2d 808 (First Circuit, 1988)
United States v. Capobianco
836 F.2d 808 (Third Circuit, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 281, 354 Pa. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-for-insurances-on-lives-granting-annuities-v-broad-pa-1946.