Batten v. Jurist (Northwestern Nat. Bank, Etc., Co.)

158 A. 557, 306 Pa. 64, 81 A.L.R. 625, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 22, 1931
DocketAppeal, 176
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 158 A. 557 (Batten v. Jurist (Northwestern Nat. Bank, Etc., Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batten v. Jurist (Northwestern Nat. Bank, Etc., Co.), 158 A. 557, 306 Pa. 64, 81 A.L.R. 625, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 403 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

This ease involves the validity of a mortgage to secure future advances and its priority in lien as against a judgment creditor whose judgment attached after the advances were made. The mortgage was executed by Louise S. Jurist and her husband on June 7, 1917, and covered certain property in Philadelphia and Montgomery Counties. The mortgagee was Florentine S. Sutro. The initial obligation secured by the mortgage was a demand note for $5,000 with interest at 5%. The mortgage contained the following provision: “Whereas, the said party of the second part may hereafter, during the continuance of these presents, make further advances to the said Louise S. Jurist, one of the parties of the first part, and it is intended that the same, with interest, shall be secured thereby.” Between September 14,1917, and May 21, 1920, Mrs. Sutro made ten additional advances to Mrs. Jurist aggregating $15,000 for which she took notes. All the properties subject to the mortgage, except the property at 1308 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, were subsequently released from this mortgage lien by Mrs. Sutro as an act of friendship to Mrs. Jurist. The North Broad Street property was, before the mortgage to Mrs. Sutro was executed, encumbered with a first mortgage for $13,000 given to Henry G. Freeman, *68 Jr., and subsequently assigned to Joseph A. Batten, who instituted the foreclosure proceedings which constituted the basis of the present action. In 1922 Mrs. Jurist made a statement in writing to the Northwestern National Bank & Trust Company, hereafter referred to as the bank, to the effect that the entire mortgage indebtedness on the North Broad Street property was $18,000 including the $13,000 first mortgage. This statement accompanied an application for a loan. Credit was thereafter extended to Mrs. Jurist from time to time until her indebtedness to the bank amounted to more than $41,000 evidenced by a consolidated note, upon which judgment in foreign attachment proceedings was obtained against Mrs. Jurist for $44,133.99. Execution was issued on this judgment and a sale by the sheriff was had and the premises were bought by the attorney on the writ for $34,000. After paying the first mortgage and interest and costs, there was a balance in the hands of the sheriff of $16,339.76. The bank claimed that Floretine Sutro as the holder of the mortgage of June 7, 1917, was not entitled to more than the specific amount stated therein, $5,000, plus interest. Florentine Sutro claimed the balance in the hands of the sheriff in liquidation of the advances made by her subsequent to the execution and recording of the mortgage and all of which she declared remained unpaid. Interest had been paid on these advances by Mrs. Jurist until March 20,1922. The balance in the sheriff’s hands was paid into court and an auditor appointed to make distribution. The issue was between Mrs. Sutro anc thejmidk

The auditor found as a fact that Mrs. Sutro advanced a total of $20,000 to Mrs. Jurist, including the original $5,000. The auditor negatived the contention of the bank that the evidence supported the inference that the loan had been repaid and held that the mortgage in question was a lien which as to all advances made was prior to a judgment which attached after the advances *69 were made. The court below dismissed the exceptions filed to the auditor’s report, confirmed that report, and decreed that the fund of $16,339.76 should be paid Florentine S. Sutro, subject to the auditor’s fee of $500 and the costs of the audit.

The judgment of the court below should be affirmed. As to the first question, that is,, the alleged inference of repayment of the advances, the testimony of Mrs. Sutro and her banker-husband that the money had not been repaid and the corroborating fact that they had in their possession the notes given for the advances was not overcome by any fact or inference of facts to the contrary. Nor could the statute of limitations be successfully pleaded though it is true that the last interest payment was made on the notes in March, 1922. A creditor may hold and realize on collateral pledged to recover a debt although action on the principal obligation is barred by limitation: 37 Corpus Juris, page 701; Sproul v. Standard Plate Glass Co., 201 Pa. 103. Neither is Mrs. Sutro bound by the statement made by Mrs. Jurist to the bank in July, 1922, to the effect that the mortgage indebtedness on her Philadelphia property was then only $18,000, including the first mortgage indebtedness of $13,000. On no theory of law or logic can Mrs. Sutro be estopped by false statements of another when she was not privy to them.

The appellant’s chief contention is that a mortgage to secure a specific sum and also to secure further advances unlimited as to time and amount is not valid against subsequent lien creditors for an amount exceeding the specific sum named and intererest thereon.

While much may cogently be said about the impolicy of legally recognizing such mortgages and some states have by statute denied them legal recognition, such mortgages have long received judicial sanction in Pennsylvania.

In Garber v. Henry, 6 Watts 57, a mortgage for future advances was upheld. It is true that there the mortgage) *70 referred to articles of agreement in which the future indebtedness to be secured by the mortgage were specifically set forth. But this agreement was not recorded and one about to become a junior creditor would have to exercise diligence to ascertain the extent of the then existing encumbrance.

In Land Title & Trust Co. v. Shoemaker, 257 Pa. 213, this court upheld the validity of a mortgage of $40,000 given to secure a loan of $32,000 and to secure “future obligations” of the mortgagor. Subsequently a second mortgage was executed on the same property. The second mortgagee had notice that only $32,000 was loaned on the first mortgage. The mortgagor later became actually indebted to the first mortgagee for a large amount on a bond of indemnity given the mortgagee by the mortgagor a few years after the execution of the first mortgage but before the making of the second mortgage. The property was sold in foreclosure proceedings on the first mortgage. The first and second mortgagees became rival claimants for the amount remaining after the payment of the $32,000 which was the debt actually existing when the first mortgage was executed. It was held that a potential obligation such as that created by the bond of indemnity related back to the time of the execution of the mortgage and that the first mortgagee had the superior claim on the balance for distribution after the original loan of $32,000 had been paid. This court said on page 219 that “it is now established in Pennsylvania that, when a contract for advances or the assumption of future obligations accompanies á mortgage, it is not essential to its validity that the engagement governing the advance be placed upon record, or even expressly referred to in the mortgage (Moroney’s App., 24 Pa. 372) ; it is also established that, when such a contract obligates the mortgagee either to make advances or assume future responsibilities on behalf of the mortgagor, this lends a sufficient consideration to the mortgage, and the lien of payments made under such *71 an agreement relates back to the date of the mortgage;

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 557, 306 Pa. 64, 81 A.L.R. 625, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batten-v-jurist-northwestern-nat-bank-etc-co-pa-1931.