100 Pa. 551 | Pa. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court, October 2d 1882.
Charles Earnest and wife executed a mortgage to Lydia McPherson, who assigned it to J. M. Albertson on the ÍOth of September 1875. Albertsqn issued a scire facias thereon and, December 19th 1876, obtained judgment by confession for $4,886.66.
Earnest and wife executed two mortgages to Albertson; one dated June 26th 1872, for $8000; the other, May 9th 1873, for $9,000. Upon each of these he issued scire facias dated November 20th 1875, and in thirty days thereafter discontinued both suits. On January 15th 1878 an agreement was filed in each case, that the discontinuance be struck off, and judgment be entered in favor of the plaintiff, in one case for $3,300, and in the other for $9,000. Eor consideration of $17,186.66, receipted by Hoskins on a debt due him, Albertson assigned all the mortgages to Hoskins on the 21st May 1878, and the judgments were marked to his use.
Each of these judgments was opened by the court and an issue directed to determine: “1. How much money was usuriously paid on the loans secured by said judgments?and, 2. How much of said judgments has been paid by actual
At the outset the court charged that the assignee of a mortgage is within the protection of the recording acts; that the evidence shows that Hoskins was a boná ñde purchaser for the value of the mortgages, without notice of any defence, and is protected against all fraud, usury and everything which existed at the dates of the assignments, and which would have avoided the mortgages in the hands of. the mortagagee; and that the defendants are estopped from setting up any defence against Hoskins which existed before the confessions of judgment. This ruling is entirely novel. It is in the teeth of the decisions. The mortgagee is a lien creditor, a holder of a security for money. He has some advantages over judgment creditors, by virtue of the recording acts, but the mortgagor may avail any legal or equitable defence against the debt. The assignee takes subject to all defences, unless he inquire of the mortgagor and is told that there are none : Michener v. Cavender, 38 Pa. St. 336. “That the assignee of the mortgage, unless the mortgagor had estopped himself from taking the defence, held it subject to all the equities with which it was affected in the hands of the assignor, is a principle too familiar and well settled to 7i eed the-citation of decisions to sustain it:” Ashton’s Appeal, 73 Pa. St. 153. Where, at the time of purchase, the assignee of
There is no difference in legal effect between a judgment confessed, and judgment on the verdict of a jury. But the court will open’ one of the former kind and let the defendant into a defence, in a proper case: Hopkins v. West, 83 Pa. St. 109. 'The power of the courts to open judgments entered by confession, or in default of an appearance or plea, is not denied; and it is the duty of the courts to exercise such power wherever it is satisfactorily shown that in equity the judgment ought not to be collected. An assignee of a judgment has no rights superior to the plaintiff, except where he was induced to purchase by the defendant. A judgment confessed is conclusive against the defendant till opened, or set aside; if opened, the confession may be given in evidence as an admission of the'amount due; but it is not an estoppel. As testimony, it may have much or little weight, which will be determined by its connection with other evidence. An estoppel is an admission of such a nature that the party whom it affects is not permitted to aver against it, or offer proof to overcome it. He cannot controvert an estoppel by admission. It is as conclusive against him as an estoppel by record. A judgment cannot be impeached collaterally, save for fraud in the obtaining of it. A stranger cannot avoid it for usury or other illegal thing contained therein, unless it was given to defraud him. Nor can the defendant, even in the distribution of a fund raised by sale of his property. It estops the defendant and others from proving that it was rendered for more money than wras owing to the plaintiff. But if it was rendered by confession, the defendant may move that it be opened, and if it be opened, the confession will not estop him from showing any good defence against the plaintiff’s claim. The confession will be treated as a mere admission. It was not given to induce a third person to purchase, and the assignee has no better footing than the plaintiff had. Such admission is not akin to the answer of the defendant in the judgment to the inquiry of one about to purchase, that he has no defence. A stranger, who inquires and acts upon the faith of such answer shall not be injured by the defendant subsequently setting up a defence, for the defendant induced the act. Whether he spoke truly or not, if the purchaser believed him, he is estopped from averring or proving a defence, which would injure the purchaser. Precisely of the same nature is a certificate of no defence given by a mortgagor; it is for the purpose of inducing any person to whom it is presented to buy the mortgage. It is a statement to the assignee at and before the time
The learned judge of the common pleas cited Lennig’s Appeal, 93 Pa. St. 301, as authority for his ruling that all usury which can be found that was paid before the rendition of these judgments, will not avail the defendants as a defence against Hoskins. That was a case of the distribution of the proceeds of sale of the mortgaged property. The sole question was, whether a second mortgage creditor, where there had been no fraud, could defeat distribution to so much of the judgment on the -first mortgage as might have been prevented had the mortgagor set up a defence of usury; and it was held that he could not. Before the auditor, for purpose of distribution, the judgment was conclusive. It is difficult to conceive that anything in that case has the slightest bearing on the question, whether a mortgagor can set up the defence of usury when the judgment was opened, at his instance, for the express pur pose of permitting him to make that defence.
The sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, fifteenth and twentieth assignments are sustained. And the instruction complained of in the thirteenth assignment was error. Some months after Hoskins bought the mortgages, Mrs. Earnest was induced to assign to him a policy of insurance, and to give him a power of attorney to collect the insurance money in case of loss, and appropriate the money toward payment of the mortgages and judgments. This was additional security, not an estoppel. It evidences that she then thought she was liable to pay the money claimed.
The borrower is not bound to pay any interest in excess of six per centum per annum, though he may have contracted to pay a greater rate. Any security given in payment or discharge of an usurious contract is equally void with that. The original taint attaches to all consecutive obligations, growing out of the original usurious transaction, and none of the descendent obligations can be free from it if thp descent be traced. This principle was settled under statutes which totally avoided the contract. Hnder the Act of 1858, the money loaned with lawful interest is a valid debt, and only the excess of interest can be avoided, but that affects only the extent of the application of the principle: Campbell v. Sloan, 62 Pa. St. 481; Overholt v. The Bank, 82 Pa. St. 490. It is immaterial in what form, or pretense the usurious interest is covered in the contract. When a party is compelled to take goods at more than the market price in order
In each of the last two cases the plaintiff is entitled to judgment for the amount, if any, remaining, unpaid on the debt secured by the mortgage, and no more. Moneys and debts, not so secured, were included in the confessions. Mrs. Earnest was not bound thereby. Neither she nor the attorney for her could make a conclusive contract to embrace outside indebtedness as if it were secured by the mortgage. She had right to demand that the same be thrown out, and the twelfth and twenty-second assignments are well taken.
The defendants requested the court to charge that, “ If the jury believe from all the testimony in the case that the mortgage dated June 25th 1872, was given for collateral security for the payment of certain notes there and then held by J. M. Albertson against the said Charles Earnest, and that tiie said notes were afterward paid, whether by actual payment on principal or by usury payments of interest, by the said Charles Earnest, then the said mortgage was extinguished and the land of Isabella L. Earnest discharged.” This point ought to have been affirmed, and doubtless would have been had not the learned judge started out by ruling that a boná fide assignee for value, after confession of judgment by the mortgagor, is protected, although the debt was actually paid prior to the confession. lie based the refusal upon that ruling.
The defendants’.tenth point was, “ That if the jury believe that J. M. Albertson received out of the Breitenbach securities any money over and above the amount due himself on his interest therein, then such overplus money must be credited on account of the mortgages in suit, even as against abona fide assignee.” Had this point been simply refused the defendants could not complain. The testimony respecting the Breitenbach securities was conflicting ; one party testifying that he assigned them as collateral security, and afterwards sold an interest in them to Albertson ; the other, that he purchased the whole for a specified sum. Here was a question for the jury, but the point assumed
After testimony liad been received tending to establish that the mortgage of June 26th 1872, was executed to secure tlie payment of tlie renewed notes and as a substitute for a prior mortgage, the defendants offered to prove that Earnest communicated this fact to his 'wife. It ought to have been received, for it was proper to show that Mrs. Earnest knew, at tlie time, of the agreement of Albertson and Charles Earnest respecting the purpose of the mortgage.
No point raised by the specifications of error, not already noted, requires remark. Even if it was error to receive the confessions of judgment at tlie time they were offered the error was harmless, for at a later stage in the trial they were admissible.
Judgment reversed, and venire facias de novo awarded.