275 Pa. 319 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
The court below entered judgment for defendant on a case-stated and plaintiff has appealed.
By deed dated May 1, 1913, plaintiff took title to the real estate which gave rise to this controversy: January 28,1914, he executed a mortgage thereon in the sum of $8,000 to a certain life insurance company, whereby he
By deed dated March 25, 1914, plaintiff and wife conveyed the mortgaged premises to E. E. Ellwood, the present defendant, for one dollar and other valuable considerations. To secure the payment of $12,000, the balance of the purchase money due plaintiff, defendant executed and delivered to the former a judgment bond and mortgage, dated April 4, 1914, on the property thus acquired. The bond provided that, if Ellwood should pay or cause to be paid to Morris, his executors, etc., the “sum of twelve thousand dollars, with interest1 thereon from date hereof at six per cent per annum, payable annually, and, until the said indebtedness shall have been fully paid, shall also pay all premiums and charges for such insurance on the buildings on the land described in the accompanying mortgage as shall from time to time be taken out by the said obligee, or his assigns, to better secure the said debt and interest; and all taxes and municipal claims, with penalties and costs, against the mortgaged premises as soon as possible, which, if paid by the obligee, or his assigns, may be added to said real debt; then this obligation” shall be void, etc.
The mortgage, securing the payment of the above bond, after reciting the debt, the agreement to pay interest, and the insurance covenant, contains a “proviso,” on which defendant1 largely relies. This part of the contract between the parties reads thus: “It is expressly ......agreed by and between the parties hereto that $8,000 of the within mortgage is for the same debt of $8,000 [mentioned] in the mortgage now on the premises herein described, given by Elijah E. Morris to the United Security Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, dated January 28, 1914,......which latter mortgage the said Elijah E. Morris assumes, and [he] agrees to pay and
On February 20, 1919, Morris paid off and had satisfied of record the underlying mortgage of $8,000 (hereinafter called the first mortgage). April 22, 1919, execution was issued on a judgment' entered upon the bond accompanying the $12,000 mortgage (hereinafter called the second mortgage), to recover an $8,000 balance of principal admittedly due thereon ($4,000 of said mortgage, with interest upon the same from April 4, 1914, having been paid July 17, 1916), together with interest from it’s date of issue (April 4,1914) to the date of satisfaction of the first mortgage (February 20, 1919), amounting to $2,341.33; in addition, it was sought to recover $1,137, the cost of fire insurance on the mortgaged premises, which plaintiff alleged he had paid up to the time of the satisfaction of the first mortgage, and also $233.12, interest on this latter item.
Defendant claimed that he was liable for only legal costs and the $8,000 balance of principal, with interest from February 20,1919, the day the first mortgage was paid off, but that he was not liable for the insurance item above referred to; he, therefore, made application to pay into court $3,711.45, covering the above-mentioned items, aggregating that sum, and prayed that, on payment of
The particular legal points for decision are set forth in the case-stated as follows: “The dispute between the parties is whether or not Ellwood is required to pay interest to Morris on $8,000 of said [$12,000] mortgage from April 4, 1914, its date, or only from February 20, 1919, the date of payment and satisfaction of the first mortgage and [whether he must pay] the insurance thereon up to the time of its satisfaction, alleged to have been paid by the said Morris.” In other words, Ellwood admits the indebtedness of $8,000 (the balance of the second mortgage)- with interest thereon from February. 20, 1919, (all of which he has paid), but denies that he owes interest from April 4, 1914, to February 20, 1919, as claimed by Morris; and “he also denies that he owes the said Morris any sum or sums of money for or on account of any insurance on the buildings upon said premises......which said Morris paid under his covenants in the [first] mortgage.”
As to the claim for insurance payments, these, — so far as the case-stated shows, — were made by plaintiff under his covenants in the first mortgage, and since the second mortgage, executed by defendant, does not, either expressly or impliedly, require the latter to repay the costs of such insurance to the former, the court below properly decided against this particular claim.
So far as the claim for interest is concerned, a different question is presented. When deciding against plaintiff’s right to recover this item, the learned court below erred in conceiving that the “disposition of the case-