Alliance Funding Co. v. Stahl

829 A.2d 1179, 2003 Pa. Super. 277, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2320
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 24, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 829 A.2d 1179 (Alliance Funding Co. v. Stahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliance Funding Co. v. Stahl, 829 A.2d 1179, 2003 Pa. Super. 277, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2320 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION BY

LALLY-GREEN, J.:

¶ 1 Appellant, Alliance Funding Company, appeals from the order entered on June 28, 2002. We reverse and remand.

¶2 The trial court found the following facts:

In this case Plaintiff provided $140,000 to Defendants Stahl, in exchange for a purchase money mortgage, on or about November 6, 1998, which mortgage was then duly recorded in the Columbia County Office of Recorder of Deeds. The same day, Defendants Stahl gave a second mortgage to Defendants Reichard, which was also duly recorded. On February 19, 1999 Defendants Wilson/Smith commenced suit against Defendants Stahl. 1
On August 11, 1999, Plaintiff filed an allegedly erroneous Satisfaction Piece in the Columbia County Recorders Office. February 16, 2000 Defendants Wilson/Smith were awarded a verdict by an arbitration board in the sum of $9,000. On November 9, 2001, nearly 27 months later, Plaintiff filed a Complaint in Quiet Title, asking the court to strike their satisfaction piece, along with a Lis Pen-dens. Three months later, on February 16, 2002, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Strike Satisfaction Piece, the same relief requested in their Quiet Title Complaint. Plaintiff then filed a Motion for Hearing on May 16, 2002.
Following the June 6, 2002 hearing an Order denying Plaintiffs relief is issued on June 28, 2002. Plaintiff appealed, filed their Statement of Matters Com *1181 plained Of and this Opinion is in response thereto.

Trial Court Opinion, 9/16/02, at 1-2. This appeal followed.

¶ 3 Appellant raises three issues on appeal:

1) Did the lower court abuse its discretion or commit an error of law in its evaluation of the evidence presented at the June 6, 2002 hearing?
2) Did the trial court abuse its discretion in denying appellant’s Motion to Strike Mortgage Satisfaction Piece?
3) Did the trial court abuse its discretion or commit an error of law by failing to find Charles Stahl in contempt of court and by failing to order him to answer questions?

Appellant’s Brief at 4. We address Appellant’s second issue first because it is dis-positive of the appeal.

¶ 4 Appellant claims that the trial court erred in not granting its Motion to Strike Mortgage Satisfaction Piece because Appellant presented sufficient evidence to establish that Appellant entered the mortgage satisfaction piece in error. 2 A petition to strike the entry of satisfaction is addressed to the trial court’s discretion and the court’s adjudication of the petition will not be reversed absent an abuse of that discretion. A-1 Discount Co. v. Nardi, 735 A.2d 121, 123 (Pa.Super.1999).

¶5 Satisfaction of a mortgage, while prima facie evidence of payment, is not conclusive and can be tested in a hearing notwithstanding the fact that the record was marked satisfied. St. Clement’s Building & Loan Ass’n v. McCann, 126 Pa.Super. 20, 190 A. 393, 394 (1937). Equity affords relief where an encumbrance has been discharged through a mistake. Id. As we stated in St. Clement’s:

The record is not necessarily conclusive upon the parties as there is nothing so sacrosanct about the satisfaction of a mortgage that stops the truth from being shown. All that is incumbent upon the part of this plaintiff to attain the relief it seeks is to prove that the defendants were not entitled to have the mortgage satisfied.... On the same principle, a release or satisfaction entered by accident or inadvertence, as where it is made to apply to the wrong mortgage, or by a mistake as to an essential fact, so that it is not in accordance with the real intention of the party, may be set aside and the mortgage reinstated, except as the rights of third persons may prevent.

St. Clement’s, 190 A. at 394. This principle applies even where the exact nature of the mistake is not disclosed. Id.

¶ 6 More recently, this Court determined that where a finance company mistakenly entered a satisfaction of judgment, the company’s petition to strike should have been granted and the mistaken satisfaction of judgment stricken. A-1 Discount Co., 735 A.2d at 123. In A-1 Discount, the finance company mistakenly marked an entire judgment satisfied instead of merely releasing the judgment hen against the subject real property. Id. *1182 at 122. We concluded that the finance company’s fault in mistakenly marking the judgment satisfied was not determinative because equity would not permit a ruling that divested the finance company of a substantive legal right based on a procedural error. Id. at 123. Thus, the satisfaction of judgment was entered by mistake and the trial court’s determination was reversed.

¶ 7 Here, the trial court reasoned as follows:

[Appellant’s] first claim of error was the failure of this court to accept a Proof of Claim, filed in a bankruptcy, as sufficient evidenced [sic] that a balance remained due on Stahl’s mortgage to [Appellant]. The court refused to accept the exhibit as sufficient proof, in and of itself, because it was executed by counsel and not by any member of the [Appellant] organization with authorization to sign. Indeed, no one from the [Appellant] testified at all.
The second form of claimed error is that the court failed to consider that no Defendant presented evidence that the mortgage had been paid off. Indeed, in the adversarial system the [Appellant] must bear its burden and in light of testimony received from [Appellant], there was no need for such testimony.
Finally, [Appellant] asserts that the court should have granted the requested relief and permitted the mortgage to remain as a subordinated lien, if indeed, the court felt it should not hold a first lien priority.
[Appellant] at no time offered testimony or even a scintilla of evidence as to how or why a Satisfaction Piece was or would have been entered by error. There was not a scintilla of evidence from a representative of [Appellant] as to how much of the money due to [Appellant] had been received and therefore how much remained. [Appellant] made no effort at all to explain why it took over two years to notice that the mortgage had been satisfied. No testimony was offered as to whether payments were received in the interim period between the satisfying and a much later date.
This court had no difficulty in knowing what priority [Appellant’s] mortgage should occupy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
829 A.2d 1179, 2003 Pa. Super. 277, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliance-funding-co-v-stahl-pasuperct-2003.