DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 97
Judges: Beaver, Orlady, Porter, Rice, Smith, Wickham
Filed Date: 1/18/1898
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Opinion by
Real estate was sold by a trustee in partition proceedings to three of five heirs, one of the three having previously mortgaged her interest to the present plaintiff. The sale was confirmed upon the trustee giving bond with sureties conditioned “ faithfully to execute the trust and properly to appropriate the proceeds of such real estate according to the trust and decree of the court, and according to law.” On the adjudication of the account of the trustee the share of the heir who had given the mortgage was ascertained to be $3,057.70, which sum was awarded to her subject to the liens of record against her interest. In defense to this action brought by the mortgagee on the trustee’s bond it was alleged, that, pursuant to an agreement made between the trustee and this heir before the sale, he settled with her, receiving from her on account of her bid only so much money as was necessary to pay her share of the costs and the amount due the other heirs, and she, in turn, discharging him from payment of the sum awarded to her in the adjudication of his account. In an opinion filed, to which little can be added, the court below held that the affidavit was insufficient to prevent judgment, and in that conclusion we concur. If the heir were suing for her share this might be a good defense, but we fail to see how the rights of her lien creditor can be prejudiced by an agreement to which he was not a party and of which he had no notice. No secret agreement between the heir and the trustee could compel him to resort to the land for the collection of his debt if under the decree he was entitled to take it out of the fund. The general rule is, that where a proceeding in partition results in a judicial sale of the land, the lien which had been created by one of the tenants is divested from the land, but continues on the money raised by the sale: Wright v. Vickers, Adm’r, 81 Pa. 122; Reed v. Fidelity Ins. Co., 113 Pa. 574. In making distribution the orphans’ court recognized and applied this general rule, and awarded to the heir only what would remain of her share of the fund after payment of the record liens against her interest. By the decree, fairly construed, these were continued against, and were first payable out of the fund into which her-interest in the land had been converted, and she had no authority to release the trustee from his duty to pay them.
Judgment affirmed.