197 A. 499 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1937
Argued September 29, 1937. This controversy originated with defendant's petition to open a revived judgment in favor of the First National Bank and Trust Company of Ford City, the original judgment having been confessed on a judgment note in the amount of $1,800. The judgment was opened, and the subsequent trial resulted in a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff's motion for judgment n.o.v. was refused by the court below, and this appeal by the plaintiff, the receiver of the First National Bank and Trust Company of Ford City, followed.
Error is assigned to the refusal of appellant's motion and the action of the court below in opening the judgment. Appellee's contention is that, with the knowledge of the bank, he signed the judgment note in question as surety, not as maker, and that he was discharged by the bank's unwarranted action with respect to the security held by it for the principal obligation. A review of the underlying facts, which are almost entirely matters of record about which there is no dispute, is necessary in order properly to appraise appellee's position.
At the time of the events upon which the defense is based, the bank was plaintiff in three judgments, entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Armstrong County as follows:
March 11, 1927 No. 48, June Term, 1927 .... $ 600 June 13, 1927 No. 53, June Term, 1927 .... $1,800 June 13, 1927 No. 55, September Term, 1927 $5,150
It will be noted that the last two judgments were entered on the same day. In all these judgments Joseph Stolar and Mary, his wife, were defendants. In the judgment entered on the note in question to No. 53, June Term, 1927, in the amount of $1,800, Joseph Bartek, the present appellee, and Johan Jurica were also defendants. At the time of the entry of the three *483 judgments, Joseph and Mary Stolar were the owners of two pieces of real estate in Ford City. The judgment entered to No. 48, June Term, 1927, in the amount of $600 was revived to No. 20, June Term, 1932.
On June 13, 1932, the bank accepted a mortgage, dated May 2, 1932, wherein Joseph and Mary Stolar were mortgagors and the bank was mortgagee, in the amount of $5,890, covering the two pieces of real estate in Ford City, upon which the three judgments above mentioned were liens. This mortgage was taken by the bank as full payment and satisfaction of the judgments originally entered to No. 48, June Term, 1927 (revived, as above stated, to No. 20, June Term, 1932), and to No. 55, September Term, 1927. By direction of the bank, the prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas of Armstrong County satisfied those two judgments of record. As a result the judgment entered to No. 53, June Term, 1927, in the amount of $1,800, in which Joseph Bartek, appellee herein, was a defendant, became the first lien on the real estate of the Stolars.
On June 13, 1932, the date the bank accepted the mortgage above mentioned, it caused a writ of scire facias to issue to revive the lien of the judgment entered to No. 53, June Term, 1927, which was served upon Joseph Bartek, appellee, personally, and, on August 6, 1932, the bank took judgment for want of an appearance so that the judgment was revived to No. 58, September Term, 1932.
On June 16, 1932, the bank filed its agreement in writing to No. 53, June Term, 1927, subordinating the lien of that judgment to the lien of the mortgage.
On March 27, 1936, Bartek filed his petition to open the judgment entered to No. 58, September Term, 1932, the basis of which was that he had signed the judgment note, upon which judgment had been confessed against him originally, as a surety for the Stolars; that the bank knew that he executed said note as surety; and *484 that he was therefore discharged by the subordination of the lien of the judgment to the lien of the mortgage, without his knowledge or consent. On March 28, 1936, the court granted the rule prayed for, with a stay of proceedings. On June 2, 1936, the two pieces of real estate in question were sold by the sheriff on a writ of fieri facias issued on the bond accompanying the mortgage of $5,890, and appellant purchased said real estate at said sale for $645.86, being costs and taxes.
The two pieces of real estate owned by the Stolars are referred to as the "old property" and the "new property." In order to purchase the new property, the Stolars needed $6,950 which they arranged to borrow from the bank, the transaction being handled for the bank by Mr. Core, its cashier. It was arranged that the loan should be made on two judgment notes in the amounts of $5,150 and $1,800, respectively. The $1,800 note was executed by the Stolars, Johan Jurica, and appellee.
Appellee received none of the proceeds of the note which he signed, and the entire fund realized from the loan was received by the Stolars who turned it over to the person from whom they had purchased the new property.
At the trial it was agreed that the judgment at No. 58, September Term, 1932, should stand as plaintiff's statement of claim, the petition to open the said judgment as defendant's affidavit of defense, and the answer of plaintiff as its reply thereto; and that the issues were such as were raised by the petition to open the judgment and the reply.
Appellant contends first that the defense offered by appellee was insufficient because of the absence of an allegation in the petition, or proof at the trial, of fraud, accident, or mistake, and that appellant's point for binding instructions should have been affirmed or judgment in his favor n.o.v. entered. In this connection *485
appellant relies on Germantown Trust Co., Guardian, v. Emhardt(No. 1),
The jury found that appellee signed the note as a surety. The evidence warranted that finding and established the relationship between appellee and the Stolars as that of surety and principal debtors on the $1,800 note. The cashier of the bank was cognizant of this fact at the time of the execution of the note by appellee and its acceptance by the bank. There is also evidence that, when the Stolars were in default in the payment of interest, the bank officials in conferring with appellee treated and recognized him as surety.
Appellant refers to the following clause in the $1,800 note, "This obligation is to be held as collateral security for any debt or liability now incurred, or that may be incurred by the makers hereof to the payee hereof," and argues that under these terms appellee could not be surety. A contract of suretyship is between the principal debtor and the surety. The bank had notice of the existence of this relationship between the parties liable on the obligation, and it was consequently obligated to act with due consideration of the rights of the *486
surety. 50 Corpus Juris p. 15, § 6. In this connection the court below, in its opinion refusing appellant's motion for judgment n.o.v., aptly stated: "The clause in the note in no way affects or changes the agreement between the principal debtor and his surety. When the note was executed the makers were not indebted, nor did they at any time thereafter become indebted, to the bank as joint obligors. The clause in the note is purely for the protection of the bank to secure any present or future joint indebtedness other than that represented by the note." SeeHeffner v. First National Bank of Huntingdon,
Proof by parol that, as between the Stolars and appellee, appellee was surety only was admissible (Hull v. Weaver,
The next material contention of appellant relates to the bank's right to postpone the lien of the judgment, upon which appellee was surety, to the lien of the mortgage. Appellant concedes that said postponement, on June 16, 1932, gave the bank an advantage superior to that which it had held for a period of five years prior to June 13, 1932, but takes the position that it was entitled to this advantage, even assuming that appellee was actually a surety on the judgment note. This argument is predicated on the proposition that, granting that the satisfaction of the two judgments on June 13, 1932, was final, appellee was not a third party in the sense of one who does some act in reliance upon the record, and was not entitled, under the facts in the instant case, to insist upon any rights given to him by *487
the action of the bank. But appellant overlooks the relationship of surety, principal debtor, and creditor established by the evidence according to the verdict of the jury. Knowledge of that situation by the bank cast upon it a positive duty to appellee with respect to the preservation of the security for the principal debt. The benefit of any and all security held by the bank for the principal debt inured to appellee, whether obtained at the time of, or after, his assumption of liability, and even without his knowledge. 50 Corpus Juris p. 235, § 381; BeaverTrust Co. v. Morgan et al.,
While it is true, as appellant argues, that a surety has no equity superior to the legal obligation undertaken by him, yet the authorities hold that he is discharged by an alteration or change in the original contract, or by an impairment of the securities by the creditor; in the former instance he is discharged entirely, and in the latter to the extent to which the security has been impaired. Robbins et al. v. Robinson et al.,
Appellant contends also that the court below abused its judicial discretion in opening the judgment, because appellee was guilty of laches, in that he had actual or constructive notice of his present defense for a long time prior to its assertion in this proceeding. See Schomaker v. Dean,
The remaining contention raised by appellant is to the effect that appellee was not injured by the postponement of the judgment lien; that the Stolar properties were sold at sheriff's sale in 1936 for taxes and costs which fixed the value thereof; that any right of subrogation to a first lien upon these properties which appellee might have secured by paying the judgment would have been worth nothing. The sheriff's sale was on the bond accompanying the mortgage held by appellant, to which the appellee was not a party and with which he had no connection. The subordination agreement in the instant case, and the subsequent sale of the Stolar properties on the bond accompanying the mortgage, rendered impossible any sale on the judgment of $1,800, to which appellee was a party, as a first lien. See Holt v.Bodey, supra. Appellee was not concluded as to the value of the properties by virtue of the sheriff's sale. Although appellant purchased the Stolar properties at the sheriff's sale on the bond for taxes and costs in the amount of $645.86, it is admitted that the properties at all times were worth more than $3,000. It is unquestioned that the properties were at all times *490 worth more than the judgment of $1,800, which was a first lien until the filing of the subordination agreement by the bank.
In those cases cited by appellant, the rule for which he contends was applied against those who were the principal debtors or sureties on the obligation on which the properties were sold as collateral. Although it is true that, as between the parties themselves, the amount realized at a sheriff's sale is conclusive as to the value of the property (Beaver County Building LoanAss'n v. Winowich et ux.,
Under the facts in the instant case the action of the bank in subordinating the lien of the $1,800 judgment to the lien of its mortgage, without the knowledge or consent of appellee, released or discharged appellee as surety from liability on that judgment. See 50 Corpus Juris p. 164, § 268; Beaver Trust Co. v. Morgan etal., supra; First National Bank of Irwin v. Foster,
Assignments of error are overruled.
Judgment is affirmed.