10 A.2d 418 | Pa. | 1939
This appeal is from judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense in an action by the Pennsylvania Company, etc., mortgagee, to the use of Jacob Belmont, assignee, v. defendant Building Loan Association. The suit is on a mortgage extension agreement made by the legal plaintiff and the defendant, and assigned by the legal to the use-plaintiff; it is part of the statement of claim and recites that the legal plaintiff held a mortgage on premises owned by defendant who had asked for an extension of the due-dates of the bond and mortgage, which the mortgagee was willing to grant and for which the agreement provided. It contains this provision: "4. The party of the second part guarantees the payment of the interest within ten days after the same becomes due and payable, and the principal of said bond so secured, . . . anything in said mortgage contained to the contrary notwithstanding, together with all taxes assessed as aforesaid."
The statement alleges that the bond, mortgage and extension agreement were assigned to the use-plaintiff and that defendant had defaulted in payment. Defendant admits this default. Nothing is averred in *318 the affidavit of defense that can stop summary judgment. The averments and appellant's argument may be dealt with under three heads:
(1) It is alleged, somewhat inconsistently, that the mortgage was not assigned but that, in any event, the use-plaintiff gave no consideration to the legal plaintiff for the assignment; that the use-plaintiff "was not a bona fide purchaser in good faith of the" mortgage. Such averments state no defense against the demand of the mortgagee, the legal plaintiff. There is no averment of anything in the relations of the legal plaintiff and the use-plaintiff which would discharge defendant's obligation to the legal plaintiff, which, after all, is what is involved in the suit. Apart from exceptions not now material, it was1 long the rule that, while the use plaintiff is the equitable owner of the cause of action, his name is unnecessary in the suit and may be disregarded: Brownfield v. Com., 13 S.
R. 264, 268; Purdy v. Massey,
(2) Defendant also avers that at the time the extension agreement was executed it had been understood and agreed by the parties to it, that defendant's obligation to pay, created by the agreement, was an obligation to the legal plaintiff only and one that the legal plaintiff would not assign. As there is no averment that this agreement was in writing — it should have been made part of the affidavit if it was — we conclude that it was an oral understanding. From averments of this kind, defendant concludes that it "was discharged from *319
its personal liability under said extension agreement to the mortgagee by the latter's alleged assignment of said mortgage." It is difficult to understand how this conclusion, that the assignment extinguished defendant's obligation to the legal plaintiff, follows from the facts alleged.2 But in any event it is sufficient to say that there is no averment that this oral understanding was omitted from the writing by fraud, accident or mistake without which it could not be proved and therefore cannot be considered a defense: Gianni v. Russell,
(3) Appellant also contends that there is no liability on the extension agreement because there is no averment that the mortgagor has been shown to be insolvent or its equivalent. This brings up the meaning of the words, "The party of the second part guarantees the payment" etc., as the parties used them in the contract. It is said defendant cannot be called on to pay until the legal plaintiff has established its loss.
The appeal does not require discussion of the provision of the Act of July 24, 1913, P. L. 971,
Judgment affirmed.