Wallace v. Fourth U. P. Church

25 A. 520, 152 Pa. 258, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 966
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1893
DocketAppeal, No. 230
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 A. 520 (Wallace v. Fourth U. P. Church) 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
Wallace v. Fourth U. P. Church, 25 A. 520, 152 Pa. 258, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 966 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Williams,

The ownership of the ground rent in controversy in this case was in George Wallace, the younger, at the time of his [260]*260death in 1826. This was settled in Wallace et al. v. The Church, 111 Pa. 164. By his will George Wallace, the younger, gave the ground rent to his wife, Jane, for life. He left no issue surviving him, and upon the death of Jane Wallace the ground rent fell, so far as we can now see, upon the issue of his brother Charles as his heirs at law. The plaintiffs in this action are among the heirs at law of Charles, and therefore among the heirs at law of George, the younger, the owner of the ground rent; and the learned judge of the court below was right in holding them entitled to recover unless the act of 1855 is in their way. No other question needs to be considered therefore than that of the effect of this statute upon the plaintiffs’ title.

It was settled at a very early day in this state that a ground rent is not a rent charge, but a rent service for the enforcement of which a distress is of common right. Ingersoll v. Sergeant, 1 Wh. 337. It cannot be enforced by ejectment unless a right to re-enter for nonpayment of rent is expressly reserved in the deed. Kenege v. Elliott, 9 Watts, 258. An action of debt or covenant for the recovery of ground rent is an action in personam and not in rem. Hiester v. Shaeffer, 45 Pa. 537. Such action would be subject to the presumptions applicable .to other actions in personam, such as that money secured by a bond or other sealed instrument will be presumed to be paid after the lapse of twenty years from the time when payment was demandable. It would not be within the operations of the statute of. limitations unless included within its terms: Korn v. Browne, 64 Pa. 55.

By the act of 1855 the legislature provided a limitation for ground rents. It is entitled “ An act to amend certain defects of the law for the more just and safe transmission and secure enjoyment of real and personal estate.” The first, second and third sections relate to the law of descents; the fourth and fifth to proceedings in partition ; the sixth to presumptions .affecting real estate; the seventh declares “ That in all cases where no payment, claim, or demand shall have been made on account óf or for any ground rent, annuity or other charge upon real'estate for twenty-one years, or no declaration or acknowledgment of the existence thereof shall have been made within that period by the owner of the premises subject to such [261]*261ground rent, annuity, or charge, a release or extinguishment thereof shall be presumed, and such ground rent, annuity or charge shall thereafter be irrecoverable.”

This section was not to go into effect for three years after its passage, in order to afford opportunity for those who would otherwise be barred by its provisions to bring an action, or secure an acknowledgment from the owner of the land of the continued existence of the ground rent, annuity or other charge, and his liability therefor. There was no other exception or reservation in it. It was intended for the protection of the owner of the land, and to remove stale encumbrances appearing on the records by the application to them of the presumption of an extinguishment by the act of the parties after the lapse of twenty-one years without a legal claim or demand made by the owner of the encumbrance, or an acknowledgment made by the owner of the land bound.

Has the statute run against the plaintiffs in this case ? The rent appears to have been regularly paid down to 1863. In March of that year Jane Wallace sold the ground rent in fee to Hayes, stating in her conveyance that she was the absolute owner thereof; and Hayes recorded his deed within a few days after its date. Upon what facts she rested her claim to own the ground rent in fee, and Hayes came to regard her claim as well founded and to pay the full value of the ground rent upon that basis, does not now appear. In May, 1863, Hayes sold and released the ground rent to the church, and thereafter the' church claimed that the ground rent was at an end, and that its ownership of the land was an unqualified and an unencumbered fee simple. There was no recognition or acknowledgment of the ground rent thereafter, but, on the contrary, a claim of absolute ownership free and discharged from all claim under the reservation made by George Wallace, the elder, upon his sale to Boyle Irwin. This suit was brought on the seoond day of April, 1885. This was twenty-one years, ten months and four days after the church ceased to pay rent, and claimed that the right to demand it was extinguished by the sale and the release of Hayes to the church.

But the plaintiffs allege that they ought not to be barred by this lapse of time for two- reasons; first, that their right did not accrue till the death of Jane Wallace on the ninth day of [262]*262April, 1864, and that the computation should begin at that date; and, second, that an action was brought by them in 1882 which should be held to be a sufficient demand within the meaning of the act of 1855.

In considering the first reason it must be remembered that this act makes no exception in behalf of persons under disability when their titles accrue, nor of persons taking as heirs at law or distributees. In this respect it is like the act of 1718 limiting the right to recover in personal actions. It begins to run when the debt matures or a right of action arises, and the running is not suspended by the death of the creditor, nor by that of. the debtor. But it is unlike the act of 1785 which limits the right of entry on real estate to twenty-one years, for in that case there is an express provision that the computation shall begin when the title of the plaintiff “ descended or accrued; ” and if the plaintiff was then an infant or under disability ten years more are allowed after the disability is removed, “notwithstanding the twenty-one years be expired.”

The purpose of the act of 1855 was to relieve titles and facilitate the sale of real estate. It fixes upon an arbitrary period of twenty-one years as that over which the search of a purchaser or other person must extend, and beyond which it shall not be necessary for him to look. If for twenty-one years no payment upon, or acknowledgment of, the ground rent can be shown and no demand for payment has been made, the act conclusively presumes a release and extinguishment of the encumbrance by the act of the parties, and declares that the rent shall thereafter be irrecoverable.

The plaintiffs are the successors in title of Jane Wallace. Her .death took place on the ninth day of April, 1864, at which time their title accrued. But in March, 1863, she had released the ground rent to Hayes, declaring in the body of the release that the purpose of the transaction was to extinguish the ground rent altogether; and Hayes, who seems to have been a mere conduit for that purpose, released in turn to the church, making the same declaration of purpose to extinguish the right to the ground rent. These releases were regularly recorded, and the plaintiffs had full notice of the act of Jane Wallace, and of the nonpayment of the rent. Having such knowledge they waited until the second day of April, 1885, twenty-one years [263]*263less seven days after the death of Jane Wallace, and twenty-two years after her release, for the declared purpose of extinguishing the rent, before the bringing of this suit.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A. 520, 152 Pa. 258, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-fourth-u-p-church-pa-1893.