Charles Rettig & Son v. Becker

11 Pa. Super. 395, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 147
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 1899
DocketAppeal, No. 179
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Pa. Super. 395 (Charles Rettig & Son v. Becker) 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
Charles Rettig & Son v. Becker, 11 Pa. Super. 395, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 147 (Pa. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

W. D. Porter, J.,

Elizabeth Becker was desirous of becoming the representative of the plaintiffs, for the purpose of receiving and selling their goods at Tamaqua and collecting the accounts resulting from said sales, and negotiations had been in progress to that end. It had been understood between the parties that Elizabeth Becker would be required to give to plaintiffs a bond in $1,000, with surety, conditioned for the payment of any amount in which she should become indebted to plaintiffs in conducting the business. A duly authorized agent of plaintiffs visited Elizabeth Becker, on January 26, 1895, and a conference with her and her daughter Caroline Becker, who was the active manager for her mother in the entire business, and they finally agreed upon terms. Caroline Becker proposed Margaret Becker, her relative, as surety upon the bond and told the agent of plaintiffs that said Margaret Becker owned certain real estate, that there were no mortgages or judgments against the property, and that Margaret Becker was free of debt. She then sent one of her employees with the agent, to introduce him to Margaret Becker and show him the property. Margaret Becker made statements to the agent corroborating what Caroline had said. The agent examined the record and found the title to a lot in Tamaqua in the name of Margaret Becker and that there were no judgments or mortgages. The agent accepted Margaret Becker as surety, the bond was executed and delivered, and goods were furnished to Elizabeth Becker, under the agreement, as she required, until June, 1896, by which time she had become indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of $959.72.

Elizabeth Becker failing to make payments upon the amount owing on the account, the plaintiffs refused to continue to furnish her with goods and threatened to enter up judgment on their bond; whereupon Caroline Becker, on June 22, 1896, en[398]*398tered judgment against Margaret Becker, upon a bond dated January 16, 1893, which secured to said Caroline a debt of $1,300 owing to her by said Margaret, and payable one day after the date of said bond. On August 13, 1896, Rettig & Son entered judgment against Elizabeth Becker and Margaret Becker upon their bond, said judgment being liquidated in the sum of $959.72. On August 20, 1896, the judgment of Caroline Becker v. Margaret Becker was marked of record for use of the Tamaqua Building & Loan Association. Rettig & Son issued execution upon their judgment and real estate of Margaret Becker was duly sold by the sheriff, for $650. The court appointed an auditor to distribute this fund, the auditor awarded the balance, viz : $500.64, after payment of costs, to the judgment of Caroline Becker for use of the Tamaqua Building & Loan Association against Margaret Becker and the court overruled exceptions filed by Rettig & Son and confirmed the report. The plaintiffs, Rettig & Son, appealed and assigned for error the action of the court in awarding the fund to the Caroline Becker judgment.

The facts as stated above are substantially found by the auditor and are conclusively established by the evidence. Two questions arise from this state of facts, viz: Did the false representations made by Caroline Becker to the plaintiffs, at the time they accepted Margaret Becker as surety, that the said Margaret was free from debt, when, in fact, Margaret was at that very time indebted to Caroline in a large amount, estop Caroline from subsequently asserting her claim against Margaret to the prejudice of the right of plaintiffs? Second: If Caroline was so estopped, was the assignee of the judgment affected by the secret equities between Caroline and the plaintiffs?

The representations were made by Caroline for the purpose of inducing the plaintiffs to accept Margaret Becker as surety. At her suggestion plaintiffs’ agent visited Margaret, who corroborated the representations. Margaret was in possession of the lot and an investigation of the record showed title in her name and no incumbrances of record. The representations so far as they were capable of verification were found to be true ; this rendered it all the more probable that the plaintiffs would fall into the trap, and accept as true the representation that [399]*399Margaret owed no debts. The representation that Margaret was free of debt was absolutely false, for she was then indebted to Caroline, who held her bond for $1,300, which was two years overdue, and the falsehood was fitted and intended to deceive. The plaintiffs had no other means of information upon this point, the truth was known only to Caroline and Margaret Becker, by whom plaintiffs were deceived and induced to part with their property, upon the credit of a surety whom they believed to be free of debt. The debt, the existence of which was concealed, amounted to twice the sum at which the property of Margaret Becker was sold; it is therefore manifest that the testimony of plaintiffs’ agent, that he was by the representations induced to do what otherwise he would not have done was true. If Caroline Becker were now permitted to allege the truth as against plaintiffs’ claim, she would garner the fruits of falsehood and fraud and deprive plaintiffs of any hope of recovery for the goods which they parted with upon the faith of her misrepresentations. As against her all the elements necessary to work an equitable estoppel are conclusively established. The learned auditor concedes that such must have been the conclusion reached, if both Caroline and Margaret had been present when the representations were made, but he is of opinion that because plaintiffs visited Margaret and interrogated her after the talk with Caroline, it must, therefore, be held that it was the representations of Margaret which induced plaintiffs to accept her as surety. If this were sound, it would only be necessary for one desirous of escaping the consequences of Iris. own fraud to induce the party intended to be deceived to make inquiry, as to the facts, of some confederate who had been instructed to tell the same tale. Caroline after completing her fraudulent representations sent the plaintiffs to Margaret to make inquiry. Margaret corroborated Caroline and plaintiffs believed them both, because they agreed in their statements. If either had told the truth, the plaintiffs could not now allege that they had been deceived. Caroline having made the false representation which deceived plaintiffs, and then having sent plaintiffs to Margaret, who corroborated her in the deception, neither Caroline nor Margaret can now be permitted to assert the truth to their own advantage and plaintiffs’ injury: Com. v. Moltz, 10 Pa. 527; Hill v. Epley, 31 Pa. 331; Logan v. Gardner, 136 Pa. 588; Lewis v. Baker, 162 Pa. 510.

[400]*400As to the second question involved in this record, the learned auditor found that “ if then Caroline Becker is estopped from claiming this money in question, clearly her assignee would be estopped, being subject to her equities.” Stated thus, apart from the facts in this particular case, the proposition is broader than the authorities warrant. A bona fide assignee, for valuable consideration, of a judgment takes subject to the equities of the judgment debtor, but discharged of secret equities between his assignor and third parties: Mott v. Clark, 9 Pa. 399; Twitchell v. McMurtrie, 77 Pa. 383; Hancock’s Appeal, 34 Pa. 155; Mifflin County National Bank’s Appeal, 98 Pa. 150; McConnell v. Wenrick, 16 Pa. 365; Taylor v. Gitt, 10 Pa. 428.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Pa. Super. 395, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-rettig-son-v-becker-pasuperct-1899.