374 Pa. 312 | Pa. | 1953
Opinion by
The soie question involved in this litigation concerns the. relative priority of the liens of a purchase money mortgage and a, “construction”,-or advance-money, mortgage... • ' • •■•••• M • ... ■ • *: v,
James B. Clark was--the owner-' of a tract of land -in Beaver County in which he had laid 'out a plan of lots. On March 15, 1947, he/and his wife agreed to sell 34 of these lots to Allied Communities, Inc., for the sum of $23,800, which.was to,,be paid by the execution.,of a purchase money mortgage in that amount, payable in one year thereafter, with 5% interest thereon, and with the express understanding and agreement that the purchaser would proceed forthwith .to erect dwelling houses on the lots, with -the;.privilege for ..that purpose of pacing construction loans on the property, the liens of which by proper stipulation should be made .prior-to the lien of the purchase money mortgage when the construction mortgages were recorded and the erection .of the dwelling houses commenced. This agreement was subsequently assigned by Allied Communities, Inc. to Allied Construction Co., Inc., an affiliated corporation engaged in the. erection of dwellings. - ,
A month later, on April 21, 1947, Clark, officers of Allied Construction. Company (hereinafter called Allied) and officers of Housing Mortgage Corporation (hereinafter called Housing) which was a corporation engaged in the business of making mortgage loans, met in the offices of Housing, and at that meeting there were simultaneously executed a deed from Clark and his wife to Allied, a purchase money mortgage from Allied to Clark, certain construction loan agreements between Allied and Housing, and three construction loan mortgages from Allied to Housing. The deed and all the mortgages were promptly thereafter recorded.
Each of the three construction loan mortgages from Allied to Housing contained a provision that “The several sums of money aggregating the full amount of the debt secured by this mortgage are to be advanced by the mortgagee to the mortgagor in accordance with the terms and requirements of a certain agreement of even date herewith between the parties hereto . . .' .”
Each of the three construction loan agreements thus referred to provided for a schedule of the amounts which were to be advanced by Housing to Allied at various stages in the erection of the dwellings, as follows(a) no immediate payment; (b) a certain specified sum When the foundation of each house was completed and the first floor joists were in place; (c) a certain specified sum When- the shell of each house was ereeted and the roof installed ; (d) a certain specified sum when the brick or stone- veneer front and all siding had been applied to each house, chimneys erected, door and window, frames set, prime coated; (e) a certain specified sum when the plumbing of each house had been installed, wiring roughed in; furnace roughed in; (f) a certain specified sum when each house had the- plaster completed; basement floor in; windows and éxt'ériór doors -hung-; (g) a certain specified sum when each house had been trimmed, the doors infloors' 'completed, hardware in; painting’ completed;-ready .for. final EHA.inspection. It.was pro
From time to time as the work progressed Housing advanced money to Allied but apparently, in the case of the 14 lots involved in the present proceedings, it made some payments to Allied before they were due according to the schedule contained in the construction loan agreements. Allied having become financially involved at a time when the houses were still uncompleted, Housing instituted foreclosure proceedings on two of its mortgages, entered judgments on the bonds, issued executions, and at the sheriff’s sales bought in 13 of the lots under one sale for the sum of $67,000, and one lot under the other sale for the sum of $8,007.52; on the one sale it paid in cash $1,532 for costs and taxes and obtained from the sheriff a receipt for the balance; on the other sale it paid in cash $410.77 for costs and taxes and obtained from the sheriff a receipt for the balance. The sheriff filed proposed statements of distribution which granted priority to the claim of Housing to the extent of all its payments under its advance money mortgages over the claim of Clark on his purchase money mortgage. Clark filed exceptions, claiming priority for the amount still due on his mortgage
It is the contention of the Clark Estate (1) that their decedent, the purchase money mortgagee, had the right to insist upon Housing complying with the schedule of advance payments contained in the construction loan agreements between it and Allied; (2) that any payments made by Housing to Allied which did not so comply were voluntary, not obligatory, on its part; and (3) that the lien of Clark’s purchase money mortgage was therefore subordinated to that of the advance-money mortgages of Housing only to the extent that the advances made by the latter were as prescribed in the schedule. Since it is our opinion that these contentions are valid, the orders of the court below based on contrary conclusions must be reversed.
When Clark agreed that Allied should have the right to place construction loans on the property, the liens of which by proper stipulation should be made prior to the lien of his purchase money, mortgage, he. obviously
“In many cases . . . the terms of agreement may be expressed in two or more separate documents, some of them containing promises and statements as to their agreed consideration, and others, such as deeds, mortgages and trust indentures, being performances agreed on rather than a statement of terms to be performed. In every such case, these documents should be interpreted together, each one assisting in determining the meaning intended to be expressed by the others. This is true whether the documents are all executed by a single party or by two or more parties, and whether some of the documents are executed by parties who have no part in executing the others. A transaction may be tri-partite or even more complex, a factor that must not be disregarded in the process of interpretation of any of the documents.” 3 Corbin on Contracts, pp. 102, 103, §549.
“A contract may be contained in several instruments. These if made at the same time, in relation to the same subject-matter, may be read together as one instrument,' and the recitals in one may bp explained or limited by reference to the other. This rule obtains even token the parties are not the same¿ if - the several contracts were-
“In this case the parties intended to settle no more than one comprehensive business deal, and the District Court correctly found that the four contracts under discussion constituted a single transaction — the granting of a license under the Hopkins patent, and a mutual adjustment of rights occasioned by the granting of that license. This is evidenced, for instance, by the references within the contracts to others of the four, by the manifest interrelationships of the specific subject matters, and, incidentally, by the fact that the contracts were all entered into at one time.” Patterson-Ballagh Corporation v. Byron Jackson Co., 145 F. 2d 786, 788, 789.
“The Pennsylvania cases indicate that even where there is no specific reference to a prior agreement or prior agreements, several contracts shall be interpreted as a whole and together.” Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Ziegler, 151 F. 2d 784, 795.
i Since, then, Clark was entitled to the protection afforded by the terms of the construction loan agreements regarding the timing of the advances, the lien of his purchase money mortgage was deferred in priority to the Housing liens only to the extent of the advances made by Housing in accordance with the provisions of the schedule contained in those agreements. ■ The law is definitely established that an advance made pursuant to a mortgage to secure future advances which the mortgagee was not obligated to make, is subordinate in lien to an' encumbrance 'intervening- between the giving of the mortgage and the making of the advance, if the advance was made with actual notice of knowledge of the intervening encumbrance; the lien of an'advance-under such circumstances dates only from'the time it was made and not from the time of the' creation'of 'the'•mortgage'.'
The court below reached the mistaken conclusion that the making of Housing’s advances under its mortgages was not voluntary on its part but obligatory. That of course is true as far as the advances were made in compliance with the schedule contained in the construction loan agreements, but the payments in excess of those required by those agreements at each successive stage of the work of construction were clearly voluntary since Allied could not legally have compelled Housing to make them.
This, then, brings us to the final question in the case— a factual one — namely: Were any such excess payments made and to Avhat extent? The answer to this question clearly appears from the findings made by the auditor in his supplemental report. Those findings were to the effect that all the work had been finished on 13 of the houses as to stages (b), (c) and (d) specified in the schedule of payments, and on the house on the 14th lot as to the stages (b) and (c). This justified the payments advanced by Housing to the extent of |55,900.00. But the next stage of the construction work, namely,
It follows- from what has been said,-, that, of. the purchase price paid by Housing at the sheriff’s sales,-it.is;
In appeals numbered 16 and 17 March Term, 1953, the orders are affirmed. In appeals numbered 4 and 5. March Term, 1953, the orders are reversed, and the record is remanded that orders may be entered awarding distribution in accordance with this opinion.
Clark had received payments in respect to 19 other lots and houses not here involved, thereby reducing his claim in these proceedings, according' to' agreement of counsel, to $10,400.