51 Pa. Super. 251 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion bt
These are cross appeals by plaintiff and defendants from judgment for plaintiff for one-half the debt in suit, without prejudice to his right to go to trial for thé balance. The proceeding was a scire facias issued July 8, 1910, upon a mortgage given by John D. Evans and Elizabeth Evans, his wife, upon two distinct pieces of land, each of which, as shown by the mortgage, as well as in fact, was owned in severalty, one by him and the other by her. By the terms of the mortgage, which was executed and recorded on October 8, 1902, the real debt, $1,000, was payable five years from date, and interest was payable semiannually. The mortgage further provided that, upon default for thirty days in payment of the principal sum, or like default in payment of interest as agreed, the mortgagee, his representatives or assigns, might, without prejudice to any other remedy, sue out a scire facias for the immediate recovery of the principal, with interest. No part of the principal has been paid, and no interest was paid after October 8, 1908. On July 8, 1909, the mortgagee assigned the mortgage and accompanying bond to the plaintiff below, and, on August 4, 1909, which was after John D. Evans and Elizabeth Evans died seized of the lands, the assignee, knowing that the parcels of land were held in severalty and not in common or jointly, and also knowing that the value of the John D. Evans lot was greater than the amount due on the mortgage, released that lot from the lien of the mortgage. It is further averred in the affidavit of defense, (1) that Elizabeth Evans executed the mortgage as an accommodation to John D. Evans, that he received all the money borrowed on the same, and she received none of it; (2) that the lot released constituted the entire estate of John D. Evans, and that upon the release being given it was sold and con
A mere release of the lien of a mortgage as to one of two mortgaged tracts, as in this case, does not ipso facto discharge either of the debtors from the debt, unless the parties so intended; nor does it necessarily have the effect of extinguishing or impairing the lien as to the other tract. In this respect such release differs from a release of part of the premises from a quit-rent, because that issues out of every part of the land, and it therefore depends on peculiar principles: Culp v. Fisher, 1 Watts, 494; Crawford v. Crawford, 2 Watts, 339. If there ever was any doubt whether it is possible for a mortgagee to release part of the mortgaged premises, without losing his lien on the whole, it was dissipated by the Act of April 2, 1822, 7 Sm. L. 551: Fleming v. Parry, 24 Pa. 47. But while that act declares the right of a mortgagee in
In the first place, the mortgage gave no notice to the mortgagee or the assignee that Elizabeth Evans received no part of the money borrowed, but executed the mortgage as a mere accommodation to John D. Evans; and it is not alleged that actual notice thereof was brought home to either of them in any other manner. Without actual or constructive notice to the mortgagee or his assignee of such fact and the secret equity growing out of it, the mortgagee or his assignee has a right to assume, after default in payment of the mortgage debt, that as between themselves both mortgagors are principals. This conclusion is in accordance with the general doctrine as to the necessity of notice enunciated in Taylor’s Executors v. Maris, supra, and many cases following in its lead. Hence, the release of the John D. Evans lot did not have the effect, either in law or in equity, of wholly discharging the Elizabeth Evans lot from the mortgage, or, in the absence of evidence as to the relative values of the two lots, have any different effect than it would have had if, as between themselves, each of the two mortgagors was liable for a moiety of the debt. See Watson’s App., 90 Pa. 426; Ackerman’s App., 106 Pa. 1. For this reason the defendants’ appeal cannot be sustained.
But it is to be observed, in the second place, that, according to the averments of the affidavit of defense, the plaintiff knew that the lands were held in severalty. The mortgage itself gave him notice of that fact. Further, owing to the fact that the John D. Evans lot constituted
The appeal of the plaintiff, No. 7, March term, 1912, is dismissed at his cost, without prejudice, however, to a second appeal after final judgment.
The judgment appealed from by the defendants, in No. 10, March term, 1912, is affirmed.