253 Pa. 257 | Pa. | 1916
Opinion by
This is an appeal from an order of the court below making absolute a rule to open a confessed judgment which was entered by the Excelsior Saving Fund and Loan Association against the defendants. The latter had given a bond and a mortgage, dated April 2, 1907, conditioned for the payment of $3,000, in one year from that date, with interest. Plaintiff caused judgment to be entered on the bond on March 15, 1915, and execution was issued. ■«
In the petition for opening the judgment it was averred that defendants borrowed $7,000, from the plaintiff association, for which they gave a building association mortgage for $4,000 with a subscription to twenty shares of stock in the association as collateral, and they also gave a mortgage in the ordinary form for $3,000, both covering the same property. The second mortgage was drawn by the solicitor for the association and was made payable in one year from its date. But defendants alleged, and in this they were corroborated by the solicitor himself, that at the time the bond and mortgage were executed a parol agreement was made between the officers of the association and themselves that they were not to pay the principal of the second mortgage until the amount due on the first mortgage had been paid by the maturing of their stock in the building and loan association, at which time defendants were to have the option of taking out additional shares of stock in the association to the amount of $3,000, and to have their straight loan for that amount changed to one secured by a building association mortgage with the additional stock as collateral. They did not read the bond and
An examination of the record shows that there was evidence tending to show that during the negotiation for the loan the association agreed to take a straight mortgage for $3,000, and a second mortgage of $4,000, for a stock loan with twenty shares of stock, with the understanding that, when the second mortgage was paid off, additional shares were to be taken to liquidate the first mortgage of $3,000. It appears that the committee of the association, appointed to view the property, reported in favor of an arrangement of this kind, although neither in the report of the committee, nor the resolution of the board of directors, were the terms of payment of the straight mortgage specified. Mr. Jenkins, who was the secretary and solicitor of the association when the loan was made to defendants, testified that the bonds and mortgages were drawn in his office under his direction, and that nothing was said to him as to how long the $3,000 mortgage was to stand, and that he drew it for one year, as he was accustomed to do, unless expressly authorized to the contrary. He said that it was his understanding that the principal of the $3,000 mortgage was not to be
■ The assignment of error is overruled, and the order of the court below is affirmed.