Berenato v. Bell Savings & Loan Ass'n

419 A.2d 620, 276 Pa. Super. 599, 1980 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2317
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 11, 1980
Docket3031
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 419 A.2d 620 (Berenato v. Bell Savings & Loan Ass'n) 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
Berenato v. Bell Savings & Loan Ass'n, 419 A.2d 620, 276 Pa. Super. 599, 1980 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2317 (Pa. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

*601 LOUIK, Judge:

This appeal involves the question of whether a mortgagee is entitled to retain a prepayment “penalty” or “premium” when the mortgage is paid off in advance as the result of a sale of the mortgaged property necessitated by the mortgagor’s adverse business circumstances.

The agreement underlying the present case is a mortgage executed on October 17, 1973, between Berenato (mortgagor) and Bell (mortgagee). Included in the terms of the mortgage was a clause allowing Berenato to prepay the mortgage as follows:

“MORTGAGOR may have the privilege of making payment on account of mortgage obligation as follows: DURING the first five years of the term of the mortgage, any prepayment will be subject to one year’s interest on the unpaid balance. . . ” (R. 21a)

After making the regular installment payments until November 1, 1976, Berenato became in default on the loan. Bell entered a judgment by confession on the Bond and Warrant on April 12,1977. Execution on the judgment was issued, and notice of sheriff sale was sent out. The pending sheriff sale was stayed upon payment of the arrears. This payment was arranged by First Pennsylvania Bank, a creditor of Berenato having a security interest in the heavy equipment installed on the premises by virtue of a loan made to Berenato. At this point Bell’s records indicate that the mortgage account was returned to good standing. Further monthly payments on the mortgage account through First Pennsylvania kept it current and in good standing.

In the meantime, to protect its interest in the personally guaranteed loan with Berenato, First Pennsylvania sought a buyer for the property. With respect to these matters, Berenato contended that he had no control. In any event, on September 1, 1977, Berenato settled with a buyer arranged by First Pennsylvania, whereupon Bell submitted a *602 pay-off statement for the mortgage, including the sum of $10,746.27 for the prepayment premium. Berenato paid the premium amount under protest and subsequently sued for its return. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment on the pleadings was granted and defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment was denied.

The trial court ruled in favor of Berenato. The Court reasoned that because Bell had entered judgment on the Bond and Warrant, and proceeded through execution and notice of sheriff sale, so long as the execution of the judgment was still outstanding and unsatisfied, Berenato was in a situation where he was compelled to sell the property in order to satisfy his obligation to Bell. The trial court felt that these circumstances made the sale and subsequent prepayment of the mortgage “involuntary” within the rule of Chestnut Corp. v. Bankers Bond and Mortgage Co., 395 Pa. 153, 149 A.2d 48 (1959), and therefore not subject to the penalty.

In Chestnut Corp. v. Bankers Bond and Mortgage Co., the mortgaged premises were destroyed by fire. According to the terms of an insurance policy the mortgagee received payment in full of the unpaid balance of the mortgage. According to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the prepayment clause was inserted in the mortgage to give the mortgagor the privilege of prepaying while compensating the mortgagee for the expenses involved in making new long-term investments. Since the prepayment was not made by the voluntary election of the mortgagor, but rather was forced by the occurrence of the fire, the circumstances were not of the sort contemplated by the prepayment clause. Balancing the equities of the situation, the mortgagee having received the entire principal and interest of the mortgage, while the mortgagor was left only with the remaining proceeds of the insurance policy, the court indicated that the mortgagee was not entitled to the prepayment premium.

A similar result has been reached in other jurisdictions where the sale of the mortgaged property and prepayment of the mortgage was occasioned by some governmental *603 authority exercising or threatening to exercise its powers of eminent domain. In such cases the prepayment is not a voluntary election on the part of the owner, but a right to condemnation funds created by law.

Berenato’s reliance on the eminent domain cases is wholly misplaced. The “grandfather” case among them, Shavers v. Duval County, 73 So.2d 684 (Fla.1954), denied a mortgagee interest for the full period of the mortgage where the mortgaged property was taken by eminent domain. The Supreme Court of Florida allowed interest only to the date of distribution of the condemnation funds. The court reasoned that the change in the contract accelerating the mortgage payments was brought about by operation of law, law which was in effect at the time of the creation of the contract, and therefore, presumptively within the contemplation of the parties. In the condemnation proceedings, the full amount of the unpaid principal was awarded to the mortgagee. Upon distribution of this amount, there remained no balance of principal on which the mortgagor was obligated to pay interest. To the same effect is Associated Schools, Inc. v. Dade County, 209 So.2d 489 (Fla.App. 1968).

These cases, along with Chestnut Corp., supra, were cited by the Superior Court of New Jersey in Jala Corp. v. Berkeley Savings and Loan, 104 N.J.Super. 394, 250 A.2d 150 (1969), to establish the proposition that because the mortgagor’s fee interest in and the mortgagee’s lien on the premises were destroyed by the action of the state and transmuted by operation of law to a present right to the condemnation funds, the mortgagor had not exercised a right to prepay as contemplated by the clause in the mortgage. Echoing the equitable focus of the Chestnut Corp., supra, opinion, the New Jersey court noted that if the mortgagee felt that he was entitled to this sum under these circumstances, he could have provided for this in the mortgage.

It would be inappropriate to extend the rule of the eminent domain cases to include the present circumstances. It may be that Berenato had no control over the sale, but First Pennsylvania Bank should not be put in the place of *604 the sovereign in this analogy. The mortgage was accelerated not by operation of law, but by business concerns. If this is the source of the duress which Berenato claims, it is clearly distinguishable from the forces which made the prepayments in Jala, Associated Schools, and the others “involuntary.”

Neither should the reasoning of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Chestnut Corp. be extended to cover the facts in the case at bar. Sale of property to cover debts that were personally guaranteed is not the same reason for prepayment as destruction of the subject matter of the mortgage by fire. Berenato’s adverse financial circumstances were not caused by Bell, nor was Berenato entirely without choice as to the means of resolving his business difficulties.

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Bluebook (online)
419 A.2d 620, 276 Pa. Super. 599, 1980 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berenato-v-bell-savings-loan-assn-pasuperct-1980.