Hughes v. Miller
Hughes v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Judgment being recovered by the sheriff against the appellant as a defaulting bidder, for the deficiency at a second sale of the real estate of James Judge, the appellant filed a petition setting- forth that the action was brought and the judgment would inure entirely to the benefit of Mrs. Judge, the widow of the former owner; that Mrs. Judge was not only the widow, but a creditor of her husband’s estate, under such circumstances as made her the equitable owner of the present judgment, and that Mrs. Judge was indebted to the petitioner, defendant, so
From the facts set up in the answer, which were not denied, it is clear that Mrs. Judge’s payments on the judgment against her husband’s estate, if not uncollectible because voluntary, were barred by the statute of limitations, and that the largest equity in this judgment is in the daughter. The rule for subrogation was therefore properly discharged and this appeal must be dismissed.
Pending this appeal, however, the appellant obtained a rule to show cause why the judgment heretofore entered in this Court should not be opened or modified, so as to permit a jury to pass upon his defense. The circumstances were as follows : At the trial in the court below the appellant, then defendant, presented two defenses, one on the facts and one on the law. The court ruled against him on the first, and directed a verdict for plaintiff, giving defendant exceptions on which he would of course have had an appeal. But the court being of opinion that his defense on the law was good, subsequently entered judgment in his favor non obstante veredicto. This judgment however on plaintiff’s appeal, was reversed by this Court, 186 Pa. 875, and our attention not being directed to the fact that the verdict was by peremptory instruction of the court, we entered judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict. The defense set up on the facts at the trial in the court below was that defendant was not a defaulting bidder, but that he had failed to take title under his bid because of an amicable agreement between the parties interested that there should be another sale. Such an agreement would of course estop the parties to it from the present suit.
In the present case we have already entered judgment on the verdict, and the time for defendant’s appeal has passed. To reach an equitable result therefore we now, on the rule to open or modify our previous judgment, rescind so much of it as gives judgment for the plaintiff, but let the reversal of the judgment of the court below stand, and remit the record to the court below for such judgment as law and justice require.
In doing this we express no opinion on the merits of the defense alleged. We have no knowledge of the evidence by which it was sought to be sustained or of the objections made to it. All we decide is that the defendant should have an opportunity either to have a jury pass on his defense, or to have
The appeal is dismissed. And so much of the judgment heretofore entered as renders judgment on the verdict for plaintiff is now reconsidered and rescinded and the record is remitted with directions to the court below to enter such judgment as law and right require.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- T. D. Hughes v. J. H. Miller
- Cited By
- 10 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Judgment—Subrogation—■Satisfaction. . Judgment was recovered by the sheriff against a defaulting bidder at a sale. The defendant subsequently filed a petition setting forth that the judgment was for the benefit of the widow of the former owner who was a creditor of her husband’s estate, and that she was indebted to the defendant. He prayed that he might be subrogated to the claim of the widow and that the judgment against him be decreed to be satisfied. The guardian of a daughter of the former owner filed an answer from which it appeared that the largest equity was in the daughter, and that the wife’s payments on the judgment against her husband’s estate, if not uncollectible, because voluntary, were barred by the statute of limitations. Held, that there was no error in dismissing the petition for subrogation. Appeals—Act of May 19, 1897—Practice, Supreme Court. Where the attention of the Supreme Court is called to a desire for an opportunity for appeal by the winning party in the court below, in case he should lose on the appeal by his opponent in the Supreme Court, the practice in the future will be merely to reverse the judgment and send the record back to the court below to enter suoh judgment as it should have entered in the first instance. The time for appeal by a different party will then begin to run from such judgment so that no one will be barred without a fair opportunity to be heard. Where the Supreme Court in reversing the court below inadvertently entered judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict, and the time for defendant’s appeal has passed, it will, subsequently on a rule to open or modify the previous judgment, rescind so much of it as gives judgment for the plaintiff, but let the reversal of the judgment of the court below stand, and remit the record of the court below for such judgment as law and justice require.