140 A. 869 | Pa. | 1927
Argued October 5, 1927. Appellants, — Stirlings —, owners of a plot of ground in Pittsburgh, engaged the Central Home Company to finance and construct a duplex dwelling. A temporary loan of $15,000 was secured from the Pittsburgh Deposit Title Company on bond and mortgage of appellants. The total cost less a credit of $910.37 was $19,950. *197 For permanent financing and to liquidate this debt, reduced by $2,150 which had been paid by appellants, a new loan of $13,000 was procured, hereafter called first mortgage, and it was agreed the balance due, $4,800, was to be raised by a second mortgage. These two amounts were sufficient to pay the principal and accrued interest of the $15,000 mortgage, that being the balance of the construction debt.
When the second mortgage of $4,800, due six months after date, was executed to the Title Company as mortgagee, the Home Company agreed with appellants that $150 should be paid each month in reduction of the principal and interest of the second mortgage, and interest on the first mortgage. Appellants, in this manner, paid the full amount of the second mortgage to the Central Home Company, with interest, but the latter, as far as the record discloses, did not account to the Title Company for the principal, and paid only a part of the interest, — to December, 1925. While the Home Company's records show the money received was sufficient to pay this mortgage and interest, it was not sufficient to pay the interest on the first mortgage, which, in the sum of $2,314.40, the Home Company advanced for appellants. The Home Company misappropriated the $4,800 received to pay the second mortgage, with interest from December as above stated.
The Title Company was forced into liquidation, and, when the secretary of banking took possession of its property, he found this mortgage unpaid. Appellants then paid the amount of the mortgage into court, and the secretary of banking petitioned for its distribution to the insolvent company. Appellants, in answer thereto, denied any knowledge of the second mortgage executed to the Pittsburgh Deposit Title Company, or that they had received any money from that company, and averred they had paid the full sum due on their building contract to the Central Home Company. *198
Appellants, in executing the second mortgage without reading it, relied on the assurance of the representative of the Home Company that it was in favor of that company, and its terms required the payment of $150 a month. The court below, however, found that the mortgage was executed by them to the Pittsburgh Deposit Title Company, and held that they were bound by the instrument: Ralston v. Phila. R. T. Co.,
Appellants' answer to the secretary's petition does not set up fraud between the Title Company and the Home Company, nor does the evidence show anything from which misconduct might be inferred. The Stirlings admit that the Home Company acted as their agent to procure the money necessary to construct the building. This was accomplished by securing their mortgage for $15,000, payable to the Title Company. They knew that the Home Company received this sum of money on duly authenticated building vouchers. When the building was completed and the total cost was ascertained, the Home Company acted as their agent in procuring an additional loan of $13,000 from a church society. At the same time they executed the bond and mortgage which is the basis of this action.
It does not appear that the Title Company had any knowledge whatsoever that the Stirlings denied or did not know that they were named as mortgagees. When the mortgage was delivered and the proceeds turned over, the Title Company was clearly justified in presuming *199
that the Home Company, who had theretofore acted as the agent of the Stirlings in its financial and building matters connected with this property, was continuing to act for them. The rule, "as between the principal and third persons, [is that] the mutual rights and liabilities are governed by the apparent scope of the agent's authority, which is that authority which the principal holds the agent out as possessing or which he permits the agent to represent that he possesses and which the principal is estopped to deny, and the principal will be bound by all acts of the agent performed in the usual and customary mode of doing the particular business,' though acting with limited powers: 2 C. J. 570": Williams v. Cook,
The Stirlings paid the full sum, but there is no evidence to show that the Home Company, in receiving it, represented the Title Company; nor does the record show it represented the Title Company for any purpose at any time. The agreement as to monthly payments was not shown to be by its authority. While it is true the Title Company did finance other building operations for the Home Company, this circumstance would not be enough to establish an agency; nor would the fact that while appellants continued to pay to the Home Company, the Title Company did not call for payments on the principal, overdue for three years. The interest was *200 paid for a part of the time, but while it does appear that this interest was paid by the Home Company to the Title Company, this fact would not establish an agency, especially when the Home Company had admittedly been acting as agent for the mortgagors.
The court below was justified in finding from the record that the Title Company was innocent as to any wrongdoing on the part of the Home Company, and that the latter company did not represent it. Where one of two innocent persons must suffer, it must be the one who places it within the power of the third person to commit a wrong. This the Sterlings did when they trusted the Home Company to act as their agent, and relied on it to execute the second mortgage, and continued to pay to the one defrauding them.
Under all the evidence, the decree awarding the money to the secretary of banking must be affirmed at the cost of appellants.