DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 156
Citation Numbers: 192 Pa. 458, 43 A. 998, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 940
Judges: Deah, Fell, Gkeen, McCollum, Mitchell
Filed Date: 7/19/1899
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
From Weitzell’s Lessee v. Fry, 4 Dallas, 218, to Trust Co. v. Kelly, 185 Pa. 131, it has been uniformly held that inadequacy of price, without more, is not sufficient ground for setting aside a sheriff’s sale. The principles on which this line of decisions rests, as announced in Young’s Appeal, 2 P. & W. 380, were restated in the opinion in Stroup v. Raymond, 183 Pa. 279, in which it is said that the rule that sheriffs’ sales should not be set aside for inadequacy of price, where there has been
An assignee’s sale under the act of February 17, 1876, by order of the court, for the discharge of liens, stands upon an intermediate ground. The purpose of the act is to enable assignees for the benefit of creditors to sell, discharged of liens not excepted by its provisions, when the real estate assigned is so incumbered that it is difficult to determine the amount of the liens, and a bidder cannot know in advance of the sale whether he will get a clear title. In such a case it is manifestly in the interest of all that a sale discharged of liens should be made, and it is on this ground only that the intervention of the court should be had. In many cases which have been brought to our attention there has been an improper use of the act to the prejudice of lien creditors. Sales under the act are judicial sales, and interest on liens ceases on the date, of confirmation: Carver’s Appeal, 89 Pa. 276; Tomlinson’s Appeal, 90 Pa. 224. Delay in distribution or the imposition of terms which postpone payment may seriously affect the rights of lien creditors. It is not the purpose of the act to take from them the right to collect their claims by execution in order that the general creditors or the assignor may be benefited; and it is not taken from them at all except in cases where the estate “ is encumbered with liens to such an extent as to render it difficult to determine whether the same can he sold for .enough to pay all the liens,” and then only “ where the court shall deem it for the manifest interest of all parties.” In speaking of a sale under the act of 1876 it was said in White v. Crawford, 84 Pa. 433, “ The object is to pass to the purchaser a title as free and unencumbered as if acquired by virtue of a sheriff’s sale made upon execution upon a judgment lien.”
In this case the discretion of the court was exercised within the lines indicated. There was no fraud or irregularity in the sale, and the land brought a fair price. The offer to bid $ 10.00 per acre more at another sale is made by the trustee for the wife of the assignor, to whom a judgment was confessed before the assignment, under which all the personal property was sold. As the fund realized is sufficient to pay all judgments prior in lien to hers, and the increase would produce nothing for the unsecured creditors, she is the ordy party to be benefited by a resale, and the other judgment creditors and the purchaser may be prejudiced by the delay.
The order of the court is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.