Garland v. Seaton

Argued April 23, 1925. This is an action of ejectment brought January 19, 1922, against Peoples and Seaton. Seaton was served by the sheriff who returned that he was in possession. Peoples accepted service of the writ. When plaintiff's evidence was in, the court entered a compulsory nonsuit. The refusal to take off the non-suit and the rejection of certain offers of proof are now complained of.

Appellant's argument on fraud would come with force if Peoples instead of Seaton held the land or had any interest in it when the writ issued, but there is no evidence, and nothing in the offers of proof, to affect Seaton in any legal sense with Peoples's alleged misconduct, apparently at the bottom of this suit. Nor is there any merit in the contention that title did not pass by the sheriff's sale.

Both sides agree that prior to March 31, 1908, the title was in Lemmon et al., subject to two judgments against them, one of $500, the other of $400. Lemmon et al. conveyed to Garland, the appellant, March 31, 1908, subject to the judgments, by deed duly recorded; when the conveyance to Garland was made, he executed a $1200 judgment bond to Peoples, $900 of which was said to be collateral security for the payment of the two judgments specified and $300 representing other debts of Garland's. At that time, Peoples also owned or controlled the two judgments subject to which Garland bought. Peoples issued execution on all three judgments at February Term, 1917, at Nos. 63, 64, and 67, — No. 63, covering the $500 judgment, 64, the $400 *Page 511 judgment, 67, the $1200 judgment, and the sheriff sold on the three writs, and so returned. The judgments, originally entered in 1906, 1907, and 1908 respectively, had been kept alive by revival (appellant himself appearing and confessing judgment on revival), but in the case of the $500 judgment the lien expired on January 3, 1917, while the sheriff's sale did not take place until February 10, 1917, at which date the other two judgments only were liens. The sheriff's deed to Peoples, offered in evidence by appellant, recites that the sale was pursuant to the writs at Nos. 63, 64, 67, February Term, 1917. Peoples, on his bid of $3, was the purchaser at this sale and received the sheriff's deed dated February 14, 1917, duly recorded. On April 5, 1917, Peoples conveyed to Seaton by deed duly recorded. The sheriff made a full and formal return of the sale on the writ at Nos. 63 (the $500 judgment) and a short return in the case of the other two executions in the following language: "For return see return to Fi Fa. No. 63, Feb. T., 1917." Appellant contends that such return is inadequate to support the sale on the two judgments, which, it is conceded, were then liens on the land. Apart now from the power to amend the returns by appropriate proceeding (Act of April 21, 1846, P.L. 430), the point is ruled against appellant in Ruth and Stoner's Appeal, 20 W.N.C. 375, in which the Supreme Court said: "The execution issued upon this judgment was delivered to the sheriff after the writ of the appellants came to his hands but before the sale. The sheriff having both writs in his hands at the same time, made return to the writ of the appellants that he had levied and sold the real estate of the defendant in the execution, in obedience to and by virtue of that writ, and to the writ of the Building and Loan Association [the second writ placed in his hands] he returned: `Same return as at No. 151, May Term, 1886'. Whether he meant by this to say that he had levied and sold, under the writ of the *Page 512 association also, is perhaps not quite so clear as might be desired, but the natural interpretation of his words is to that effect. For the `same return,' written out in full, would, with reference to that writ, mean the same thing as the return upon the other writ meant in reference to it. This conclusion is strengthened by the circumstances that, in the fully written out return, the sheriff certified that, as it appeared from the proper record, that the association as a lien creditor was entitled to the sum of $326.81, he had taken their receipt for that amount. As this return would only be consistent with the fact that he had sold the property under both writs, we are obliged to assume such to be the fact. Of course, if the sale was made upon both writs, the lien of the mortgage, for the debt secured by it for which the judgment was entered, would be divested by the sale. As to the matters of fact set forth therein, the sheriff's return is, of course, conclusive, and cannot be impeached except in a proceeding, the object of which is to falsify the return." See generally: Sherrard v. Johnston,193 Pa. 166; Lyon v. Cleveland, 170 Pa. 611.

In the other division of his argument, appellant says Peoples was his attorney, and accuses him of misconduct and of breach of contract with regard to the executions on the judgments, the taking of title by Peoples and his sale to Seaton, contending that Peoples thus obtained his property by fraud and thereby became a trustee ex maleficio for him. It may be so, but our difficulty with the record is, that it contains no proof and no offer to prove that Seaton participated in the alleged misconduct or that he knew anything about it. This is an action of ejectment in which plaintiff must show that his title is superior to Seaton's, which in this case means, since both claim under the Lemmon title, that Seaton was not a bona fide purchaser without notice. When Seaton bought from Peoples, Peoples had the record title; if Seaton was a *Page 513 bona fide purchaser for value of the premises without notice, he took a good title. When the writ in this case issued, Seaton was in possession; Peoples was then in no way interested in the title.

The effort to involve Seaton in the alleged misconduct of Peoples rested on the insufficient testimony of a witness that Seaton told him that immediately before the sheriff's sale Peoples had requested him not to bid for the property, that Peoples would buy it and sell it to him. Seaton was called for cross-examination, and denied the statement. That evidence — and there is nothing else — is wholly insufficient to establish Seaton's knowledge of a trust and its breach by Peoples, even if we assume for the moment that his misconduct appears. Consider what appellant proposes: Seaton is in possession by a record title, agreed to be valid unless he had notice; it is proposed to set aside the deed by which he holds, by the statement of the single witness referred to. The law is otherwise. "No rule of law is better settled by the decisions of this court than that, requiring the evidence in support of a trust to be clear, precise, convincing and satisfactory to the conscience of a chancellor; and in an action of ejectment to enforce a resulting trust, the trial judge acts as chancellor as to the question of the existence of the alleged resulting trust. If, in his judgment, the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict, it is his duty to withhold it: Bowen v. Haupt, 192 Pa. 409"; Braun v. the Church, 198 Pa. 152, 157; see also Walker v. Walker,254 Pa. 220. As the evidence in the record, in addition to what was offered and rejected, does not measure up to the standard so stated, we must overrule the remaining assignments of error.

Judgment affirmed. *Page 514