Lehigh Valley Trust Co. v. Strauss

258 Pa. 382 | Pa. | 1917

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Potter,

Of the twenty-two assignments of error filed in this case, the first nineteen are to various findings of fact and of law by the trial judge, and to his answers to requests for findings. Not one of the assignments shows an exception to the finding of which complaint is made; therefore, they are all defective: Streng v. Buck Run Coal Co., 241 Pa. 560; Brown v. Hughes, 244 Pa. 397; Scull’s Est., 249 Pa. 57.

The twentieth assignment is to an interlocutory order of -the trial judge, which merely directs judgment to be entered if no exceptions are filed within thirty days, and the record shows that exceptions were filed. The assign*384ment shows no exception to the order of which complaint is made.

The twenty-first assignment is to the final order of the court dismissing plaintiff’s exceptions to the findings and conclusions of the judge. But these exceptions are not set out in the assignment, and it is therefore defective and not self-sustaining: Prenatt v. Messenger Printing Co., 241 Pa. 267.

The twenty-second assignment raises the question whether there was error in entering judgment against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant for costs. But the assignment should have quoted the judgment verbatim.

The action was assumpsit, brought by the executor of David R. Kline against Martin H. Strauss, to enforce an alleged right to contribution. The claim was based upon a paper dated May 27, 1908, addressed to the Citizens Deposit & Trust Company of Allentown, signed by the defendant, Martin H. Strauss, and by David R. Kline, in which they agreed that, in consideration of the discounting or purchasing of certain notes of the Lehigh Tungsten Mining and Milling Company, in the total sum of $5,000, they would pay said notes at maturity, or their renewals. On the same day, the trust company did purchase a note of the milling company for $5,000, and, at the time, Kline turned over to Fred H. Lichtenwalner, the treasurer of the trust company, 133 shares, which he owned, of the capital stock of the trust company, to be held by Lichtenwalner individually, to secure the payment of the note or its renewal. The note was renewed from time to time, until on December 3, 1912, after Kline’s death, a note for $4,750, payable forty days after date, was given to the trust company by the milling company, in renewal of the original note and made and endorsed in the same manner. When this note matured Kline’s stock in the trust company, which was in the hands of the treasurer, was sold, and the note was paid out of the proceeds. This suit was then brought by *385Kline’s executor to recover one-half of the amount paid in satisfaction of the note. The case was tried without a jury, and the trial judge found as a fact that the transaction was a personal loan to Kline by the trust company, and that he placed his own stock in the hands of the treasurer to be held in trust to secure payment of the loan, and that it was paid out of the proceeds of the sale of that stock. The trial judge said: “Nowhere does it appear that this was an obligation coming within the terms of the paper, dated May 27, 1908; in fact it appears that this was a personal obligation of decedent.”

, Under the facts as found by the court below, Kline was the real debtor and was not merely a cosurety with Strauss, and it was properly held that the doctrine of contribution had no application. As between himself and the trust company, Strauss was, no doubt, liable, but there is no reason why he should be called upon to respond for the benefit of the person at whose request, evidently, he agreed to become cosurety. As the record stands it appears merely that the proceeds of Kline’s property was applied to the payment of his own debt. That being the case, there could, of course, be no recovery here against the defendant. ;

The assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.