207 Pa. 59 | Pa. | 1903
Opinion by
An auditor was appointed by the court below to distribute the fund in court arising from sale by the sheriff of certain real estate of Edward F.- Stewart. He heard all the parties interested in the fund and made report of distribution to those who in his opinion were entitled to the same. On his report coming into court, exceptions were filed by S. L. Fisler, trustee. After hearing the exceptions the learned judge of the court below sustained the material ones, overruled the auditor and directed distribution of the fund in accordance with his own opinion. We have now three appeals from decree of the court, Nos. 78, 79 and 80, January term, 1902, by Laura S. Lachenour, executrix of Margaret K. Stewart. Practically the same facts and the same conclusions of law are the subject of contention in all of them and it has been agreed by counsel to argue together here all three appeals. And while it is necessary that we should formally enter judgment here in each, we shall say ail we have to say in No. 79, the appeal to which the auditor’s report and the opinion of the court below are appended.
It seems to us the material facts, on which are founded the conclusions of the auditor and those of the court, are about the same ; while they differ widely in their inferences from them, they do not differ greatly as to the essential facts. We shall endeavor to state what to us seem the material facts and then give our conclusions from them.
Margaret K. Stewart was the wife of Edward F. Stewart; she owned land on Northampton street, Easton and her husband on Second street in the same city. The husband was president of the First National Bank of Easton, and was indebted to the bank on notes and overdrafts; he was also indebted to one Henry Fulmer who was vice president of the bank. On December 27, 1893, at the suggestion of Fulmer and on request
The mortgage was the first lien on the wife’s land; the judgment entered on the bond was the first lien on the husband’s land. Three days after the recording of the mortgage and entry of the judgment, Samuel L. Fisler, trustee, etc., for brothers and sisters of the husband, recorded a mortgage on the land of the husband, given to secure the payment to his brothers and sisters of $6,425.55; twenty-five days after
The trial court, Judge Yerkes presiding, overruled the defense and judgment was entered against the wife on the mortgage, which was a lien upon her land, for the full amount, with interest, $13,995.01. On this judgment lev. fa. was issued and the wife’s property on Northampton street sold for a sum considerably in excess of all liens. The court below indicated that the excess should, in equity, go to Fisler, owner of the second lien on the land of the husband, that is, he should be subrogated to Fulmer’s right on the fund realized from the wife’s mortgage. It is not necessary to inquire at this point into the soundness of his suggestions on this question, if Margaret K. Stewart has established a legal or equitable right to the surplus over and above all liens against her property. However meritorious may be the claims of the beneficiaries of the Fisler mortgage on the property of the husband, what is clearly the wife’s property could not be appropriated in payment, unless there was an equity on their part superior to hers. It does not help us to discuss what might have been decided in Fisler, Trustee, v. Stewart, supra, if this case had then been before the court; it clearly and unmistakably decides what was before it, and that is, that the plaintiff in a judgment cannot, against the objection and protest of the defendant, release his lien to the prejudice or supposed prejudice of defendant. The decision settles that Fulmer’s $11,000 judgment-was the first lien against the husband’s property; and that being the case, the $7,000 purchase money, made by a sale of the husband’s land on a subsequent judgment, must be credited, less costs on the $11,000. This, on the assumption that the wife ought to be treated as a surety in that judgment; if she was not a surety, then Fulmer having a lien on two properties, the husband’s and the wife’s, must in equity go upon
“ Under all the evidence before the commissioner, and the law applicable thereto, Margaret K. Stewart, with respect to her Northampton street property, bound by the mortgage for $11,000, occupies the equitable relation of surety for the bond accompanying the mortgage, entered as the first judgment lien of record on the Second street property of her husband, Edward F. Stewart, at the time of the sheriff’s sale. She has all the rights of a surety growing out of the equitable relationship between the respective pieces of land. She has the right to require that the proceeds of her husband’s land, sold under execution, be applied upon the indebtedness under the $11,000 judgment to Henry Fulmer, in relief of her own land, and discharge pro tanto of the mortgage.”
And, without his very full and persuasive reasons therefor, this is how the question is answered by the learned judge of the court below:
“ The mortgage was not given as collateral to a subsisting debt of the husband, but to be used towards paying off his debt and became a debt of her own. Her attitude throughout was different towards this liability from her position towards the $7,500 note. The whole transaction rebuts any idea of surety-ship, and there is evidence sufficient to overcome any such presumption which, in the first instance, might prevail.”
This conflict throws upon us the decision of the controlling fact, the suretyship, not the equity of a surety, for that has -been firmly settled and there is no real variance in the authorities.
Let us first notice the attitude of the three parties to the transaction when they are first brought together. The husband owes money to the bank of which he is president and Fulmer vice president and director; his indebtedness to the bank is large, a great deal larger, perhaps, than was consistent with prudent banking or a fair definition of duty on the part of the
It is immaterial that the bond and mortgage were not made directly to the bank; it was the express understanding of all the parties, that if Fulmer made the loan and took the security in his own name, all the money furnished was to be paid the bank, to be by it applied in payment of the husband’s indebtedness ; and it is immaterial whether the proposition was made directly by Fulmer to the wife or conveyed to her by her husband ; it was suggested by Fulmer and no other, with the disagreeable alternative, that if not accepted the husband would lose his situation in the bank.
The proposition in substance was that Fulmer would loan her $7,500 on her individual note with her bank stock as collateral, and $11,000 on the joint bond of herself and husband, the latter to be secured by a mortgage on her separate real estate. After considerable reluctance she acceded to the proposition, executed and delivered the papers to Fulmer, received the money, had it placed to the credit of her husband in the bank where it was applied in payment of a large part of his indebtedness.
While there is a strong sentiment of affection growing out of the marital relation which would induce a wife to do that for her husband which she would do for no other, yet her acts as between her and his creditors are governed by the same rules of evidence that operate in transactions between others. She stands on exactly the same footing as all the other creditors of her husband; the same evidence which would establish a stranger’s right will establish hers, except as to the income of her separate estate; there the receipt of such income by the husband without objection on her part is presumptively a gift to the husband instead of a loan. In the case before us, the question is, was she surety to Fulmer for the husband’s debt ? Suppose instead of the wife, a mere friend had come to the help of the husband in his extremity; had joined the husband in a bond, had mortgaged his own land to secure the bond; then this money had been handed to the husband and he with the money had paid his debt of which his friend owed nothing. From these facts without more, the presumption would be, that the friend was a surety; it would require very strong evidence to rebut the presumption. The wife is in no less favorable position, so far as concerns proof, than the' friend. The motive to impel her to become surety to the husband’s creditors may be stronger, but the rules of evidence impose upon her no heavier burden in establishing her suretyship than upon any other creditor.
It seems to us, the court below gave too little weight to the undisputed facts which we have just noticed establishing the presumption and too much significance to extraneous facts as rebutting the presumption. That $16,000 of the debt of the
And so with all of the facts, which in the opinion of the court below, tended to rebut the presumption of suretyship. We think, taking them all together, they are not of sufficient
The court below in its view of the evidence bearing on the question of the wife’s suretyship seems to have been strongly moved by an assumed equity, that it thought ought to be enforced in favor of the beneficiaries under the Fisler mortgage, which equity could only be reached by finding as a fact, that the mortgage of the wife’s land was neither a loan nor a contingent pledge for the husband’s debt but a gift of her land to him. Swayed somewhat, perhaps, by what he deemed a superior equity in the beneficiaries of the Fisler mortgage to be paid their debt out of the brother’s land, he fails to give full effect to the evidence and law in favor of the wife’s claim. While equity “ is the correction of that whereof the law by reason of its universality is deficient,” yet it must be noted that the law was in no way deficient in settling the status of record. It determined that the Fulmer judgment was the first lien and that he under the circumstances without the consent of defendants could not release it; the purchase money paid by Laubach must then, necessarily, be appropriated to it. It is true, that if Fulmer had access to two funds, the wife’s as well as the husband’s equity might subrogate the junior creditor’s to Fulmer’s right against the wife’s estate; but this brings us right back to the question, ivas the wife a surety ? We find that she clearly