Bernatovich v. Davis

19 A.2d 925, 342 Pa. 86, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1941
DocketAppeal, 216
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 925 (Bernatovich v. Davis) 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
Bernatovich v. Davis, 19 A.2d 925, 342 Pa. 86, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 487 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Schaffer,

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, tenants by entireties of a property on which, they had created a mortgage for $5,000 in favor of the Bosak State Bank, filed a bill in equity, after the bank’s failure, against its receiver, praying for a decree declaring the mortgage paid, forbidding foreclosure proceedings upon it, and compelling the entry of satisfaction on the record. The chancellor so ordered. From this action the receiver appeals.

The bill recites that, at the time the mortgage was made, . June 10, 1926, no money was paid by the bank *88 to plaintiffs, but it was given as collateral to secure repayment to the bank of amounts which the husband, a building contractor, desired to borrow, in order to perform a. construction contract. During succeeding months, the husband, in consideration of the mortgage, received various loans and made various payments thereon. It is alleged that on November 26, 1926, plaintiffs conferred with Edward Bo’sak, vice-president of the bank, concerning the payment of their debt and the satisfaction of their mortgage, and were informed by him that all loans advanced upon the security óf the mortgage had been paid, except the sum of $3,000, and thereupon the husband gave a check to the bank for that amount in full payment and satisfaction of all money due for or on account of the mortgage, and Bosak as vice-president of the bank orally promised arid agreed to'accept the check as such payment and satisfaction, and that the mortgage would be marked satisfied of record. It was further alleged that by reason of the payment of the sum named there remained no liability to the bank upon the mortgage, and plairitiffs did not learri that it had not been satisfied iri accor'darice with the alleged agreement until after the bank was closed and demand for payment Avas made by the receiver. It should be noted that nothing is said -in the bill about a note for $2,000, executed by the husband-plaintiff, .which was given to the bank simultaneously with the check for $3,000.

At the trial, the wife-plairitiff testified that* on November 26,1926, she and her husband saAV the vice-president at the bank, who said to her that if the bank was paid $3,000, the mortgage .wduld be satisfied, and that her husband- thereupon wrote a check for that amount and delivered it to the vice-president.

The husband testified that he gave the mortgage as collateral for future loans and thereafter borrowed from the bank from time to time. The mortgage recites that it is given as additional or collateral security for the *89 payment of any note or notes now or thereafter made to the bank by the mortgagors or either of them. Recounting what took place between plaintiffs and the vice-president of the bank, the husband- said the latter, told him if he would, pay $3,000, everything -would be all right and he -would have the mortgage satisfied; that with this understanding he ;drew a check for $3,000 to the bank and handed it to the vice-president.. After this time he paid premiums on the policy of fire insurance on the property, which contained a mortgagee clause, and also paid such premiums after the bank had become insolvent. It is undisputed that, • .subsequent to the execution of-the mortgage, and prior to November 26, 1926, when the conversation relative to its satisfaction is alleged to have taken place, the husband-plaintiff borrowed the sum of $5,500 from the bank, whose books show that amount to be owing on the latter date. This indebtedness was evidenced by a note dated October 21,1926, for $2,000; one dated November 18, 1926, for $3,000, and a third dated November; 22, 1926, for $500. . With the payment of $3,000 on November 26th, this left an indebtedness to the bank on that day of $2,500. Thus, while it was argued in plaintiffs! behalf that the note for $2,000, given on November 26th, together with the $3,000 check, was in complete discharge of his existing obligation :to-.the bank, it is obvious -that this cotild not be true, for the undisputed book entries show that his indebtedness exceeded these combined-sums at that time, and the note . teller , testified that the new note was merely a renewal of a prior note for $2;000.' ■ ■ ■ .

On November 8, 1929, the. husband-plaintiff executed another note covering his then indebtedness to the bank of $32,020j- in which he stated that he .had deposited as collateral security the bond and mortgage in question. At the time the bank closed:its doors,.he owed it $16,099.27.

*90 The vice-president of the bank testified, not only that he entered into no agreement or undertaking with the plaintiffs to satisfy the mortgage, but that he had no conversation with them on that subject, and had never seen the wife-plaintiff. Furthermore, he said that he had no power to agree to satisfy the mortgage upon tlie'payment of $3,000, and that he could not have entered into an agreement to satisfy' it unless the bank was fully secured for the loans it had made, which it then was not.

The court below found as a fact: “That in consideration of the payment of $3,000 to the Bosak Bank November 26, 1926, in addition to a new note for $2,000 shown on the records as having been given that date, Edward Bosak, its vice-president, agreed that said mortgage of June 10, 1926, Avas thereby paid and he promised to satisfy the same of record.” It was also found as a fact: “That EdAvard Bosak as vice-president of the said-.Bosak Bank was duly empoAvered, and had áuthority to bind said bank by his promise to satisfy tlie mortgage, and by his acceptance of check for $3,000.” We think neither of these findings was warranted by the evidence. :

It is argued in appellee’s behalf that the finding of the- chancellor that the vice-president had authority to agree to satisfy the mortgage should be sustained, because the records of the bank on the day in question show a credit of $5,000, the principal amount named in the mortgage. But as analyzed by the note-teller of the-bank, called as a witness to explain the entries, and, as is manifest to us, they do not show such a credit. They show a cash pay-mént of $3,000 on existing notes and the renewal of a note for $2,000.

It is further argued that the finding should be sustained,- because the vice-president and note teller of the bank both testified that they had such authority. A reading of the testimony of the vice-president- shows that he did not make the broad statement that he had *91 general authority to satisfy, or to agree to satisfy, mortgages for a sum less than the full amount. Indeed, under the circumstances here appearing, he said he had not. Asked whether “Assuming that a person wanted to have a mortgage satisfied and also had other collateral deposited with you, you could have said, ‘I will take so much and satisfy your mortgage and retain the other collateral,’ ” he answered, “Provided the other loans were sufficient security. The mortgage could not be satisfied until the bank was amply secured.” He specifically said, in answer to the query, whether if plaintiffs owed more than $8,000, he, as an officer of the bank, could agree to satisfy the mortgage, that he certainly could not. The note-teller testified that the only authority which he had to surrender collateral was upon full paymefit of the debt, or payment of the full value of the collateral.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 925, 342 Pa. 86, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernatovich-v-davis-pa-1941.