Pierce v. Potter

7 Watts 475
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 7 Watts 475 (Pierce v. Potter) 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
Pierce v. Potter, 7 Watts 475 (Pa. 1838).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff in error, in the court below, against the defendant, to recover a forfeiture not exceeding the amount of a mortgage given by the plaintiff to the defendant, securing the payment of 2500 dollars, to be paid in instalments, for not having, within three months after request and a tender of reasonable charges for doing so, entered satisfaction upon the margin of the record of said mortgage. The plaintiff claims a right to recover under the requisition of an act of assembly passed the 27th of May 1715, the ninth section of which enacts that “any mortgagee of any real or personal estates in this province having received full satisfaction and payment of all such sum and sums of money as are really due to him by such mortgage shall, at the request of the mortgagor, enter satisfaction upon the margin of the record of such mortgage recorded in the said office, which shall forever thereafter discharge, defeat and release the same, and shall, likewise, bar all actions brought or to be brought thereupon.” And then, by the tenth section, it is further enacted, “if such mortgagee, by himself or his attorney, shall not, within three months after request and tender made for his reasonable charges, repair to the said office, and there make such acknowledgement as aforesaid, he, she or they neglecting so to do shall, for every such offence, forfeit and pay unto the party or parties aggrieved any sum not exceeding the [477]*477mortgage money, to be recovered in any court of record within the province, by bill, plaint or information.” In order to maintain this action against the mortgagee, it ought to appear first that he had received “ full satisfaction and payment of all such sum and sums of money as were really due to him.” But it is not pretended here that the defendant had literally received the amount of the mortgage debt in money. Having, however, become the purchaser of the mortgage land at a judicial sale thereof made by virtue of a writ of venditioni exponas; and having thus united in himself both the legal title and the equity of redemption, it is contended that the mortgage not only became thereby extinct, but that the whole debt therein mentioned became satisfied; that, as a satisfaction in full for the debt, the defendant has got the land discharged from the equity of redemption, by its union with the legal title vested in him previously by the mortgage. If it were so that nothing but the equity of redemption was to be considered as actually sold under the venditioni exponas to the defendant, the reasoning of the plaintiff would not be without plausibility at least; but notwithstanding the act of the 6th of April 1830, whereby it is enacted that “from and after the passage of that act, when the lien of a mortgage upon real estate was or should be prior to all other liens upon the same property, except other mortgages, ground rents and the purchase money due to the commonwealth, the lien of such mortgage should not be destroyed or in any way affected by any sale made by virtue or authority of any writ of venditioni exponas.” We think that the sale under the venditioni exponas here was a disposition of the whole fee-simple estate in the land, including the interest of the mortgagee as well as that of the mortgagor; and had any third person become the purchaser at the sale, instead of the mortgagee himself, such third person would thereby have become owner of the fee in the land, discharged from the lien and effect of the mortgage, as also all other liens for and on account of debts. For though the words of the act are, that “the lien of such mortgage shall not be destroyed or in any way affected by any sale made by virtue or authority of any writ of venditioni ex-ponas,” yet when the whole section is considered in reference to this case, it is perfectly obvious that it cannot be held to embrace it. Here the writ of venditioni exponas includes the same debt mentioned in the mortgage, so that, of necessity, the sale by virtue of it could not but affect the lien of the mortgage by reducing, at least,, if not wholly discharging the debt, accordingly as the amount bidden at the sale might happen to be less or equal to the amount of the debt. It cannot be supposed that the legislature intended to exceed their power by extending the act to the case of a writ of venditioni exponas, grounded upon a judgment in favour of the mortgagee against the mortgagor for the same debt secured by the mortgage, because either a reduction or an entire payment of the debt by a sale under the writ of venditioni exponas would necessarily destroy or at least affect by lessening the amount the lien of the mortgage. And it was not [478]*478in tbe power of the legislature to continue the lien of the mortgage after the payment of the debt, though it was produced by a sale under the writ of venditioni exponas. This case then must be regarded as standing upon the same ground it would have done had (he last mentioned act never been passed ; and, according to the practice as also the judicial authorities anterior to the passage of the act, it was a settled rule that a judicial sale, either under a junior mortgage and writ of levari facias or a junior judgment and writ of venditioni exponas, discharged the land sold of all prior as well as subsecpient, liens on account of debts, whether created by mortgage, judgment or recognizance; so that the purchaser acquired thereby all the estate which (he defendant had in the land relieved from such incumbrances suffered either by himself or those under whom he claimed. Willard v. Norris, 2 Rawle 56 ; M’Grew v. Lanahan, 1 Penns. Rep. 44; M’Lanahan v. Wyant, 1 Penns. Rep. 112; Hoover v. Shields, 2 Penns. Rep. 135; Corporations. Wallace, 3 Rawle 109. Hence the defendant must be considered as having bought, at the sale made under the venditioni exponas, the fee simple estate in the land for the sum of money at which it was struck down to him; but that sum being greatly less than the amount of his judgment or the mortgage debt, it can only be deemed a satisfaction or payment thereof pro tanto. It may be, however, that at the sale the impression prevailed that it was only the equity of redemption that was being sold, or otherwise a much larger sum would have been offered by some of the bystanders; but the sale having been perfected, it is too late now to set up the plea of ignorance of the law in order to avoid it. This could only have been done at or before taking the sheriff’s acknowledgement of the deed which consummated the sale. But had an objection been made on this ground to the confirmation of the sale by the court, and it had been shown clearly that such was the case, doubtless the court would have interposed and set the sale aside, so that the land might have been sold again upon a correct understanding of the extent of the interest in it that the purchaser would take.

There is, therefore, no pretence for saying that the debt mentioned in the mortgage has been satisfied ; and this being the case, it necessarily follows that the plaintiff had no right to require of the defendant, that he should acknowledge satisfaction either upon the margin of the record of the mortgage in the recorder’s office or elsewhere; consequently he has no right to maintain this suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Watts 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-potter-pa-1838.