32 A.2d 563 | Pa. | 1943
This is an appeal from an order of the court opening a judgment entered on a note.
Plaintiff sold to defendants an apartment dwelling house, taking back a purchase-money mortgage in the sum of $14,250. The principal of the mortgage having been reduced to $13,000, defendants refinanced it with the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, plaintiff notifying the latter that he would accept its bonds in the amount of $10,575 in full settlement of his claim. In a subsequent letter to the Corporation, however, after stating that it was agreeable to him "to accept a reduction of approximately $2,450 in the amount of the mortgage," he added, "Said reduction to be covered by a second mortgage on the above property." Before he received the bonds of the Corporation defendants agreed with him in writing that they would give him a second mortgage or judgment note in the sum of $3,436.90 to cover the amount of the reduction with interest, costs and "legal fees." Such a note was executed and judgment entered thereon. After several writs of attachment-execution had been issued defendants obtained a rule to open the judgment. The court made the rule absolute, and plaintiff appeals.
The question is whether the note is void because in violation of the Home Owners' Loan Act of June 13, 1933, c. 64, 48 Stat. 128,
Applying this principle to the present case, plaintiff having informed the Home Owners' Loan Corporation that the reduction "of approximately $2,450" was to be covered by a second mortgage, and having thus indicated that he did not intend the amount he was accepting from the Corporation to be an accord and satisfaction of the whole indebtedness, and the Corporation, with knowledge of this fact, having proceeded to refund the original mortgage and issue its bonds to plaintiff, it must be inferred that the Corporation was willing that plaintiff should obtain from defendants a second lien on the property of "approximately $2,450" (or, according to the actual refunding, $2,425). Plaintiff contends that because the regulations of the Corporation might have permitted a second lien in the amount of $2,917.33 (that being the difference between the Corporation's appraisal of the value of the property and the total loan made by it), the note should be upheld to that extent. We cannot speculate, however, as to whether the Corporation would have given such approval. What apparently it did approve was a lien of $2,425, and plaintiff may recover in that amount, together with interest thereon and costs, if any due, less whatever sums have been paid by defendants on the note since its execution. The judgment should have been opened only for the excess; (see Keystone Bank ofSpangler v. Booth,
It is urged that defendants are not entitled to equitable relief because they were parties to the agreement which they now denounce as against public policy and *410 therefore void. The answer is that defendants are members of a class which it was the purpose of the Home Owners' Loan Act to protect, and they are not to be considered, therefore, as in pari delicto with the mortgagee. "If refusal to . . . rescind an illegal bargain would produce a harmful effect on parties for whose protection the law making the bargain illegal exists, . . . rescission . . . is allowed": Restatement, Contracts, section 601.
The order of the court making absolute the rule to open the judgment is modified by continuing the judgment in force to the extent of $2,425 with interest and costs, if any due, less whatever sums have been paid by defendants on the note since its execution, and opening it only as to the excess. Plaintiff to pay the costs on this appeal.
There are cases which hold that the agreement is void in any event if the mortgagee agreed with the Home Owners' Loan Corporation to accept its bonds in full settlement of his claim: Cook v. Donner,
There are some authorities which hold that the agreement is valid even if not disclosed to the Home Owners' Loan Corporation: McMillan v. Palmer,