181 A. 779 | Pa. | 1935
In 1928 Emma J. Kahler borrowed from the Fair Oaks Building and Loan Association, appellee, four thousand four hundred dollars, giving her bond therefor with a mortgage on certain land as security. As additional security she assigned to the building and loan association *248 twenty-two shares of its stock. Later in the year she sold the property to Joseph Veronese and wife. The deed of conveyance is not printed, but it is stated that it was subject to the mortgage which was assumed by the purchasers. The grantor also assigned her ownership in the building and loan stock to her grantees subject to the prior assignment to the association. On the 21st of February, 1933, Veronese and wife, having defaulted in their payments on the mortgage, the building and loan association entered judgment against Mrs. Kahler on her bond.
Thereafter Veronese and his wife were requested by the officers of the association to make a deed for the property to it to avoid costs of foreclosure, etc., and in May, 1933, they did make such deed to G. W. Guyer, an officer of the building and loan association who took the title in trust for the building and loan association. It is stated that this deed contained words creating the same liability as to Guyer, Veronese's grantee, as did that from Mrs. Kahler to Veronese, i. e., subject to the mortgage given by Emma J. Kahler to the association, which the grantee assumed to pay.
It is not denied that Guyer took title to the property for the building and loan association and that Emma J. Kahler knew nothing of the default of Veronese or of the subsequent transaction culminating in the deed to Guyer until after that deed had been made. Then she was advised of these matters by the association's officers, who demanded from her four thousand six hundred and seventy-four dollars as the balance due on the mortgage. She refused to pay this sum, claiming no liability. The association thereupon issued an execution on the judgment against appellant, directing the sheriff to sell the property mentioned in the mortgage together with other property of appellant not covered by the mortgage. Mrs. Kahler endeavored to prevent this by petitioning the court below to open the judgment and stay the writ as to all property not covered by the *249 mortgage. The execution was stayed as to such property, but that covered by the mortgage was sold for twenty-six hundred dollars to the building and loan association. It then petitioned for a deficiency judgment under the Act of January 17, 1934, P. L. 243, and asked the court below to determine the amount appellant was indebted on the mortgage less the sum credited from the sale of the mortgaged premises. A master was appointed to ascertain the deficiency, if any.
Before any action was taken by the master Mrs. Kahler again requested the court below to open the judgment and permit her to enter a defense. The court below, in discharging the rule granted on this petition, stated that its order was based on the decree in the first petition, which adjudicated the questions in the case. This appeal by Mrs. Kahler followed.
The only matter in dispute under the first petition was one of merger of estates through the ownership of the mortgage and the property under the deed to Guyer. The court held there was no merger. Appellee had set up a third person to take title from Veronese for the purpose of preventing this merger. Whether as trustee or not was not material. Merger is always a question of intention and where the mortgagee intends there shall be no merger, the mortgage will be kept alive: Continental Title Trust Company v. Devlin,
The second petition while raising the problem just discussed, presents another question for consideration. It must be answered to determine whether there was any liability at all for the deficiency in the mortgage debt after the sale of the premises. That question was not decided by the court below. When it is, an appeal may not be necessary. As the case must be returned to permit its decision, it is necessary to discuss some of the issues raised thereby.
The question involved may be thus stated: May the beneficiary (the building and loan association) recover a deficiency against the mortgagor when the trustee for the mortgagee is by covenant bound to pay the mortgage as part of the purchase price?
Whether there is any liability for the deficiency is difficult of solution and cannot be known until all relevant facts are placed on record. We are not favored with a copy of either of the deeds which contained the covenants, and possibly other matters of interest. The court below did find from the oral testimony that "Guyer, though holding the legal title to the property, is actually trustee for the plaintiff and that the deed to Guyer was not only with plaintiff's [appellee's] approval but for its benefit . . . but conceivably for the benefit of the defendant [appellant] also." We do not agree with the last part of this statement, and it was not sustained by the testimony. Appellant knew nothing of the conveyance and was not benefited by it, and it is conceivable that it was to her prejudice rather than benefit.
Appellant's liability for a deficiency, is to be determined from the precise nature, construction and scope of the engagements undertaken through the deeds by the various grantees and the other parties involved herein. If the property was conveyed under and subject to a mortgage, or if the grantee assumed the mortgage or agreed to pay it as a personal liability, different legal relations are created by these covenants which *251 govern and control the legal liability of the title holder.
Where a conveyance is made subject to a mortgage, the amount due on the mortgage is presumptively part of the consideration for the purchase: Orient Building Loan Association v. Freud,
It is fundamental in this, as in all indemnity contracts against loss, that a loss must be shown before the indemnity covenant is available or can be enforced: Faulker v. McHenry,
Where there is a personal assumption of the payment of a mortgage by a grantee as, for instance, where the grantee "assumes and agrees to pay" it, or uses other language showing he undertakes a personal assumption, a broader liability is created than by the use of the words "under and subject." We have not fully discussed the conditions under which the mortgagee may assert this liability in the grantee. We have held that the obligation assumed was for the benefit of the mortgagee or the holder of the encumbrance: Blood v. Crew Levick Co.,
We have not decided whether under such personal assumption a loss — that is, through foreclosure — must be first shown before recovery may be had in a use action by the mortgagee against the grantee. In other jurisdictions it is established that direct action may be *253
maintained irrespective of whether there has been a foreclosure or a determination of the possibility of a deficiency: First Trust Co. v. Calumet, etc. Ranch,
Moreover, when we come to consider the liability of the grantee to the mortgagee the rules of law applicable to contracts, which entitle a creditor to sue his debtor or a creditor beneficiary to do likewise, should not be lightly set aside: cf. Merriman v. Moore,
Whether, therefore, appellant will be able to take advantage of Guyer's obligation to Veronese will depend on whether it is a covenant of indemnity solely for the benefit of Veronese or a general assumption of the payment of the mortgage debt. The fact that he made the promise as trustee has been considered in two cases. In Britton v. Roth, supra, a dry trustee took the title under a personal assumption clause and we held the trustee liable for a deficiency in the payment of a mortgage debt. It was there urged that the trustee should be relieved of liability and the beneficiary held therefor. The court did not consider this argument of any avail to relieve the trustee who was compelled to pay the deficiency. In Girard Life Insurance Tr. Co. v. Stewart,
We do not here pass on the problem as to how far the trustee may be identified with the building and loan association for which he was acting, or whether appellant could, under the circumstances in this case have any rights against the building and loan. It is clear, however, that the subsequent sale by the sheriff to appellee would not carry with it any personal liability either directly or as indemnitor for the mortgage on the property as to which foreclosure took place: See Ryon's Estate,
There will also have to be considered by the lower court as an independent matter credits through the trustee's liability, if any, for the payment of dues, fines, interest, etc., up to and at the time of the sale: cf. Orient B. L. Assoc. v. Freud, supra, at 436, 437.
Appeal dismissed without prejudice, costs to abide the final determination of the case. *257