176 A. 422 | Pa. | 1934
Defendant borrowed $26,000 from the Northern Central Trust Company, giving its demand collateral promissory note therefor and pledging therewith twelve first mortgages as security for repayment. Nine of the mortgages were paid off and the loan was reduced accordingly. The three remaining mortgages were foreclosed on default and the properties bound thereby were bought in and are retained by plaintiff. Plaintiff brought this suit to recover the balance due on the note, and, in addition, taxes and water rents which were assessed against the properties for certain years, and which he had to pay. In the statement of claim plaintiff alleged that defendant in the years named was the real owner of the properties. Plaintiff credited defendant with the nominal consideration, $50, which he paid for each property at the sheriff's sale. *259
Defendant filed an affidavit of defense in which it set up that plaintiff had breached the terms of the collateral note by not selling the collateral at broker's board, or at public or private sale, and that the value of the collateral exceeded the amount of plaintiff's claim. In addition, defendant denied ownership of one of the properties which had been purchased by plaintiff on the foreclosure. Defendant also made a counterclaim for the value of the collateral less the amount due on the note. The court below entered judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense for the amount of plaintiff's claim, and we have this appeal by defendant.
The situation boils down to this: Defendant seeks to escape payment of the money it borrowed and still owes by alleging an improper conversion of its collateral, which has been merely changed in form by plaintiff, without tendering payment of its debt and thereby getting the collateral back.
It is to be borne in mind that we do not have to deal with a situation in which collateral was parted with by the holder. The collateral in each instance was a chose in action, a mortgage, and the pledgee merely enforced the chose in action, neither enlarging nor diminishing in any respect the pledgor's right in the subject-matter, provided it desired to redeem the property by paying its debt. The pledgee now holds legal title instead of a mere lien. So far as the taxes are concerned, plaintiff is not required to rely upon defendant's ownership of the properties to recover the amounts so paid. These are recoverable as expenses incident to the maintenance of the pledged property. No question was raised in the court below as to the water rents.
The situation we are dealing with is strikingly like that in Smith v. Bunting,
The note before us provides: ". . . With the right on the part of the holder hereof, . . . in case of such default, or of the nonpayment of any of the liabilities above mentioned at maturity, to sell, assign and deliver the whole, or any part of such securities, or any substitutes therefor or additions thereto, at any broker's board, or at public or private sale, at their option at any time or times thereafter, without advertisement or notice to the undersigned, and with the right on the part of the holder hereof to become purchaser thereof at such sale or sales, freed and discharged of any equity of redemption." This provision did not affect the plaintiff's right to foreclose the mortgages upon their default for his own protection. He has not parted with the properties, and, as we said in Lanahan v. Clark,
In Gettysburg R. R. Co., McCurdy's App.,
Appellant's rights are not in any way jeopardized by the foreclosure of the mortgages which it pledged and the buying in of the properties by plaintiff. Upon payment of the amount due on its notes it will be entitled to a return of the properties, which we understand are still in *262 the possession of plaintiff. It can ask nothing more than this.
For recovery of the taxes paid there is ample warrant. "The pledgee is entitled to reimbursement for all expenses reasonably incurred by him in keeping and caring for the property pledged, such as reasonable expenses incurred in . . . the payment of taxes, assessments and insurance premiums": 49 C. J., page 944, section 90. On the general question of expenses incurred by a pledgee and recovery allowed, the following cases show the course of decision: The expense of suing out a mortgage held as collateral was allowed in Knox v. Moatz,
The affidavit of defense in answer to the averments covering the tax items simply stated that the defendant had no knowledge or means of obtaining knowledge of the averments and demanded proof at the trial. In North Phila. Trust Co. v. Heinel Bros., Inc.,
Appellant makes a further contention that plaintiff's statement of claim is insufficient to support judgment, because it alleges only a presentment of the note for payment and not a demand, the note being payable upon demand. The statement of claim avers that the note was *263
presented at the place of payment therein designated and that payment was refused. The bringing of suit in itself is a sufficient demand: Dominion Trust Co. v. Hildner,
As the court below entered judgment for plaintiff, it was not necessary to specifically pass upon defendant's counterclaim setting up the value of the mortgages as a set-off against the balance due on the note.
Judgment affirmed.