Zeigler's Appeal

35 Pa. 173
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 Pa. 173 (Zeigler's Appeal) 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
Zeigler's Appeal, 35 Pa. 173 (Pa. 1860).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Lowrie, C. J.

The judgment-creditors of Weikel claim to exclude Zeigler’s mortgage from sharing in the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale, on the ground that it was not the first lien, and that, therefore, it was discharged by a former sheriff’s sale, though none of the proceeds of that sale were applied to it. It is perfectly clear, that the original sheriff’s sale was intended to be subject to Zeigler’s mortgage, as the supposed first lien, though there was no express condition to that effect. So the sheriff and [183]*183all the bidders, and Weikel himself, understood it, and so the price shows, and it is not now denied; and Weikel has confessed judgment on the mortgage, and on that the land is now sold.

We start, therefore, with the assumption that Weikel bought subject to the Zeigler mortgage, and with the further assumption (for sake of the argument), that the sheriff ought to have sold the land discharged of the mortgage; and this raises the question, must we treat the mortgage as discharged, notwithstanding the actual terms of the contract to the contrary ? Let us first leave out of view the rights of Weikel’s creditors, and ask — could he defend against such a mortgage, admitting that he had bought subject to it, and that, therefore, it was not paid out of the proceeds of the former sale, and "assigning, as his only argument, that it was the sheriff’s duty to sell discharged of the mortgage, and therefore it must be treated as if it had been so sold, even though the fact is otherwise ?

The general rule of law certainly is, that judicial sales divest all liens, with some well-known exceptions; but in order to know how to apply this rule, in answering our question, it is important to notice, that the rule grows out of and depends upon the practice of the courts. There is no positive law directly imposing any such condition on the contract of sale and purchase ; but the contract takes this character, without any express conditions, only because of the practice of the courts to sell discharged of liens.

Now, this practice does not infuse this or any condition or element into the contract, any otherwise than as other public laws and customs do the like with the contracts made within their respective spheres. All nations have their general customs, and it is under the influence of those that the people transact their business, and by the aid of those that their transactions are interpreted. And every trade, occupation, and profession has its customs, which enter in like manner into its peculiar transactions. Such customs are presumed to be followed, unless the contrary appears; for parties may choose to deal differently, and then the maxim applies, eonventio vinoit legem.

So it is with that species of transactions called judicial sales; they are to be understood according to the laws and customs constituting the practice of the court in such matters, unless it appears, in a proper manner, that the court has, in the given case, departed from the usual practice. Then the contract must be enforced as made, according to the maxim already quoted, and in order that individuals may not suffer from the irregular practice of public officers, which the maxim, actus curiae neminem gravdbit, forbids.

Now, if we may thus deal with and sustain departures from the common law, and from the customs of trade, it would seem plain [184]*184that we must do the like in relation to contracts which involve a departure from the customary practice of the court, and to save parties from suffering wrong by such irregularities which they do not occasion; and that, therefore, we ought to treat the sheriff’s sale to Weikel as subject to Zeigler’s mortgage, notwithstanding the general practice to the contrary.

But we cannot feel satisfied, in this case, with this summary deduction from general principles, without going further, and testing our deduction by the experience which our reports reveal to us on this- very subject. How have judicial sales been treated in practice heretofore in analogous cases ?

In relation to judicial sales of lands for the payment of debts, the law of the case was from the first that the courts had authority to sell them, clear of all liens, that could be discharged out of the proceeds. The practice of the courts in making sales, how they were to exercise this authority, was declared by no law. The form of the proceeding had, therefore, to grow up, from great varieties of practice, into consistency and uniformity. While in this formative state, it often presented anomalous cases that were very hard to solve. Indeed, the complications of the practice were such as often to cast doubt upon the principle itself.

As might be supposed, in the absence of any general regulation, the practice was, for a long period, in a very unsettled state; and the Supreme Court was very cautious about venturing on any generalizations of it, so as to declare when prior judgments, mortgages, and other liens were discharged, and when not: 3 Yeates 561; 4 Id. 316; 2 Binn. 231; 9 S. & R. 306; 13 Id. 229; 14 Id. 263.

It was, indeed, impossible to find any one rule of practice on this subject throughout the state. Perhaps the most nearly universal one was that which left it to the sheriff to fix the conditions at the sale, as subject or not subject to any prior liens, and which ones. This he generally did, on consultation with the parties interested in the sale or liens, or with their attorneys. This practice is traceable everywhere in the reports, and it was very properly treated as a question of usage or practice; for law on l'he subject there was none. Thus it is said, it was “usual” for the sheriff to sell free of liens; the execution “ was considered sufficient authority for the sheriff” so to sell, and to pay out the proceeds accordingly: 2 Yeates 45; it was a “ practice of long standing,” and so on: 3 Binn. 358; 1 Id. 97 ; 13 S. R. 229 ; 14 Id. 262; 9 Id. 306, 314; 1 Browne 97.

In the case of Febiger v. Craighead, as reported in note 3 Rawle 117, 134, Chief Justice Shippen treated the matter as one -of mere practice, and took the testimony of ex-sheriffs and lawyers to ascertain the usage; and it was shown to be, in the eastern [185]*185part of the state, that the sheriff sold with or without conditions as to prior liens; if without conditions, then it was considered as a sale free from liens; if with conditions, they defined what liens were to remain.

The traces and judicial recognitions of this, as a valid usage or practice, are very abundant in the reports. The case of The Presbyterian Corporation v. Wallace, 3 Rawle 109, shows three sheriff’s sales on conditions as to prior mortgages. Hart v. Homiller, 8 Harris 248, shows two, subject to testamentary charges. Such conditions existed in both Mode’s and Randolph’s Appeals, 6 W. S. 280, 5 Barr 242, and they were not sustained, only because of the rights of third persons who had no notice of them.

In Stackpole v. Glassford, 16 S. & R. 167, the apparent discharge of a mortgage by a prior sheriff’s sale was allowed to be rebutted by oral testimony of an understanding to the contrary at the time of the sale; and the same was allowed in Tower’s Appropriation, 9 W. & S. 105, and in Towers v.

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