Worthington v. Levis

Opinion by

Trexler, J.,

William Levis gave a mortgage to Henry E. Worthington. A scire facias was issued and judgment entered for want of an affidavit of defense. The petition of George Wright, intervening defendant, was then presented to the court to open the judgment. The court made the rule absolute. On the trial of the issue William H. Good, who had become the owner of the mortgage by assignment, offered the mortgage, bond and assignment in evidence. The defendant offered nothing *147by way of a defense except that he sought to introduce the petition that had been presented to the court in the proceedings looking to the opening of the judgment and the answer to the petition as proof of the fact that the mortgage was fraudulent and void as to creditors. The basis of his offer was that the answer to the petition filed by Good did not contain any denial of the allegations of fraud contained in the petition. The court sustained the objection to the admission of these papers and this is the principal matter submitted for our consideration.

When the preliminary inquiry was under way, the failure of the plaintiff to deny the allegation set forth in the petition to open judgment permitted the court to take the facts alleged in the petition as verity. The sole question before the court was whether the judgment should be opened and the defendant allowed to present his side of the case to a jury. Good, being the equitable plaintiff, was not in a position to deny the existence of facts with which he was not conversant. His position might be expressed thus: “As I do not know, I cannot deny.” The assumption of the verity of the declarations in the petition arise not from any admission made by Good but under a provision established by a rule of court. When the matter came to trial before the jury, having offered the mortgage in evidence, he submitted a prima facie case. It then became the duty of the defendant to show the fraud alleged. The learned judge in disposing of the rule to open the judgment in his opinion properly defines the status of the parties. “The important question for determination at the trial is whether or not the mortgage was a voluntary one and without consideration” and further on,. “If however there is proof that it was a voluntary mortgage and its existence was unknown to him the burden still rests on the petitioner (the defendant) to show that there was an intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors including himself.” Had there been an affirmative admission on the part of *148the owner of the mortgage, the question presented would be entirely different. The cases cited by the appellant do not present the same question as the one we are considering. In Haupt v. Henninger, 37 Pa. 138, it was held that depositions taken under a rule to show cause why a judgment should not be opened are competent evidence on the trial of an issue directed by the court to determine the validity of the judgment. In that case the depositions were regarded as secondary evidence but were admissible when the witness was dead or out of the jurisdiction of the court. They had been taken subject to the opportunity of cross-examination. Evans v. Reed, 78 Pa. 415, was also a case where the deposition of a party who had died was admitted. The same may be said of the other cases cited by the defendant. There is a very evident distinction between admitting the answer to a rule to prove an implied admission under a rule of court and the testimony of witnesses obtained under a rule to take depositions. We think the court was clearly right in excluding the testimony.

Objection is made that under the Act of April 22,1863, P. L. 567, the assignee of a mortgage had no right to prosecute the scire facias to judgment, he not having made application to the court as provided by this act for an amendment of the record so as to make him the proper plaintiff and that therefore the judgment entered by default was absolutely void and should have been stricken from the record. The answer to this is that the petition of the defendant was to open the judgment and that after the judgment was opened, the court allowed the amendment in conformity to the act above referred to and Good became the use-plaintiff and that the matter now is in strict conformity to said act and the verdict rendered by the jury and the subsequent judgment thereon are therefore not subject to any attack on these grounds.

The remaining assignment of error is that the simple proof of the bond, mortgage and assignment was not sufficient to constitute a prima facie case. This hardly *149merits consideration. The mortgage was the act of the mortgagor. Its execution was not disputed. It was therefore prima facie evidence that the amount claimed was due and owing. There was no dispute as to the amount due under its terms. That it was fraudulently given was a matter for the defendant to prove.

The assignments of error are overruled. Judgment affirmed.