Taylor v. Young

71 Pa. 81, 1872 Pa. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 4, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 71 Pa. 81 (Taylor v. Young) 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
Taylor v. Young, 71 Pa. 81, 1872 Pa. LEXIS 112 (Pa. 1872).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, by

Agnew, J.

If this case stood upon the aspect of the judgment alone, after a return of two nihils, it would be governed by Warder v. Tainter, 4 Watts 270, and Hartman v. Ogborn, 4 P. F. Smith 120. The return of nihil habet to two successive writs of scire facias are held to be eqivalent to a return of scire feci; and scire feci implies that the defendant is alive ; for otherwise the sheriff ought to have returned mortnus est. This is purely technical, but it is necessary to protect persons buying at sheriff’s sale on the faith of the judgment. The technicality, however, cannot reach beyond this immediate purpose of supporting the judgment in a collateral proceeding. To cany the presumption of life beyond the judgment and into the execution, would defeat the express prohibition of a statute, overturn the system provided for the estates of decedents, and disregard our own recent decisions. Robt. Earnet, Jr., died before the levari facias issued in this case; Indeed, his death was suggested on the record three weeks before the entry of judgment, and ought to have prevented judgment. This, however, is immaterial, as we have seen the presumption of life lasted until the judgment was entered, and the suggestion is mentioned only as showing that the fact of his death was well known. The fact that he was dead when execution issued, is one which no art can hide, or fiction should withhold from the judicial mind; unless we choose to be judicially blind and refuse to see the statute which stares us in the face. This we cannot do. The 33d section of the Act of 24th of February 1834, has received a judicial interpretation heretofore in Cadmus v. Jackson, 2 P. F. Smith 295. The portion which concerns us reads as follows: “ No execution for the levy or sale of any real or personal estate of any decedent shall be issued upon any judgment obtained against him in his lifetime, unless his personal representatives have been first warned by a writ of scire facias to show cause against the issuing thereof, notwithstanding the teste of such execution may bear date antecedently to his death.” It is obvious that the case of a decedent, actually dead, but technically alive at the time of judgment, cannot be worse off than that of one alive at judgment but dead before execution. On the contrary, it demands the benefit of the statute more strongly than the latter, for had the personal representative been warned, he might have had the judgment reversed or set aside, and thus prevented a sale and sacrifice. Of this section the revisers said in their report: “ It is intended to abolish a fiction of the courts, and to prevent the inconvenience and injustice which might happen from the levy of an execution upon the estate of the decedent without notice to his executor or [84]*84administrator.” The 33d section does not stand alone, but in the midst of a series of sections from the 26th to the 36th, which make a perfect system for the prosecution and defence of actions and executions, after the death of a party, evincing the mind of the legislature, to draw a broad boundary between the estates of the living and the dead. Indeed this characterizes the whole Act of 24th February 1834. In this the law follows nature. As the green tree, growing, expanding and yielding its fruit, differs from the dead trunk, which lies and decays where it falls, so the estate of the living differs from that of the dead man. The estate of the latter drops into a fixed and unalterable mould; new rights attach, new agents begin to act, and new rules tonegulate it. The intention to protect the estate after death from the pursuit of creditors seeking individual success at the expense of each other, and of the heirs, legatees and next of kin, is further developed in the 34th, 35th and 36th sections, which require notice of claims to the parties in interest, enjoin against execution at common law, and remove the sale and settlement of the real as well as the personal estate into the Orphans’ Court. It is only by a view of this entire statutory system we can really comprehend the full force of the decision in Cadmus v. Jackson, supra. It is there held under the 33d section, that execution cannot issue against the estate of a deceased defendant until his personal representatives have been warned by a scire facias. Said C. J. Woodward, “It is not a case of irregular process, but it is a defect of power to take any process of execution before scire facias, and nothing can be more imperative than the denial of this power. Then it is the case of void process, for surely that which is expressly forbidden by law must be void process.” Again, he says, “ sheriffs’ vendees buy at their peril. Not only must there be a legal judgment but a legal execution also, to make a sheriff’s sale valid.” Cadmus v. Jackson is a well-remembered case, and was argued elaborately, and the opinion carefully written. The invalidity of the execution is supported also by the case of Wood’s Executors v. Colwell, 10 Casey 92, holding that if the defendant die after a levy and condemnation under a testatum fi. fa. no venditioni exponas can issue thereafter without a scire facias against his personal representatives. The court below drew a very plausible distinction between a venditioni exponas following the writ on which the levy is made, and a writ, such as a levari facias, which commands the immediate levy and sale of the premises; but this court held that the venditioni exponas, being a writ for the sale, fell. directly within the 33d section of the Act of 1834. In this case, therefore, unless we set at nought the statutory system for the regulation and settlement of the estates of deceased persons, and overrule a solemn decision of this court, made only six years ago, we must hold that the sale in this instancé, under the levari facias, without a scire facias first [85]*85to bring in tbe personal representatives of Robert Barnet, Jr., is void, and that the court below erred in holding differently.

I. iV. Brown (with whom were T. F. Jenkins and T. B. Fl-cock), for plaintiff in error. J. M. Pile, for defendant in error. Gf. W. Biddle (with whom were W. IT. Rawle, S. Wharton and F. K. Price), for the petitioners.

The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo is awarded.

A petition of persons not interested in this particular case, was afterwards presented to the Supreme Court, representing that the result of such an application of the 33d section of the Act of February 24th 1834 as was declared in the foregoing ruling of the court, would tend to unsettle titles, &c. The Supreme Court thereupon ordered that the case should be again argued.

It was reargued at Harrisburg, May 28th 1872, before Thompson, C. J., Read, Agnew, Sharswood and Williams, JJ. Opinions were delivered by Thompson, C. J., and Agnew, J., both of which were directed to be reported.

The opinion of the court was delivered, July 3d 1872, by

Thompson, C. J.

It has long been settled in this state that two returns of nihil to successive writs of sci. fa. sur mortgage, are equivalent to a return of scire feci: Warder v. Tainter, 4 Watts 274; Chambers v. Carson, 2 Wh. 365; Compher v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Pa. 81, 1872 Pa. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-young-pa-1872.