Commonwealth v. Grady and McNally

95 Pa. Super. 108, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1928
DocketAppeal 317
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 Pa. Super. 108 (Commonwealth v. Grady and McNally) 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
Commonwealth v. Grady and McNally, 95 Pa. Super. 108, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mary McNally appeals from an order of the court below discharging her rule to show cause why a judgment entered against her by the Commonwealth on a certain bond should not be satisfied of record.

Prom the record we gather this history of the case: In 1912 desertion and non-support proceedings were instituted by the Commonwealth in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County against appellant’s nephew, Prank M. Grady, under the Act of April 13,1867, P. L. 78, and resulted in an order directing bim to pay $5 per week for the support and maintenance of his wife, Mary P., and their child Stanley. Upon the creation of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia by the Act of July 12,1913, P. L. 711, the case seems to have been transferred to that court under the provisions of the act. By November 6, 1924, the arrearages upon this order aggregated $695 and the defendant was brought into the Domestic Relations Division of the Municipal Court by attachment. He was released from custody upon the giving of a bond to the Commonwealth in the sum of $800, upon which appellant became surety. The bond is dated November 6, 1924; recites the original order and contains the following condition: “Now, the condition of this ob *110 ligation is such, that if the above-bounden Francis M. Grady shall pay $300 cash on November 20, 1924, and to pay $8 weekly, $3 to be applied to arrears, shall and do well and truly comply with the said order of said court, then the above obligation to be void,” etc. The bond also contains a warrant of attorney for the confession of “judgment or judgments ...... and thereupon to issue execution for such sum or sums as shall, by affidavit filed in the said court, appear to be due by breach of the condition of this obligation; ...... and the said judgment or judgments shall afterwards remain as a security for the performance of said condition; and in case of any further breach of the said condition, execution shall issue thereupon in the same manner as before.” The district attorney’s office forthwith entered judgment on the bond in the court below.

The present controversy arises out of the fact that appellant claims to have discharged in full her liability as surety on the bond by having paid into the Municipal Court since November 6, 1924, the sum of $895 and into the district attorney’s office an additional $100. The Commonwealth contends that none of these payments was on account of appellant’s liability as surety under the bond, but were all made by her as a mere volunteer on behalf of the defendant and in partial discharge of his obligation under the order. The dates and amounts of the payments which have been received by the Municipal Court since November 6, 1924, are ascertainable from the depositions taken in support of the rule. There is no evidence that the defendant, Frank M. Grady, has paid anything since giving the bond and his present whereabouts seem to be unknown. Payments aggregating $1,170 have been received by the cashiers of the Municipal Court since the giving of the bond. Of this amount $175 was paid in by the defendant’s mother on November 21, 1924, in partial payment of the $300 due from him on No *111 venxber 20, 1924, under the terms of the order and bond. There is no evidence that the balance of that cash payment was paid by anyone. On December 1, 1924, appellant paid $30 to one of the cashiers of the Municipal Court, and between that date and May 4, 1927, appellant, either by herself or thorugh her niece, Kathryn McBride, who acted as her messenger, paid in various amounts to the cashiers of the Municipal Court a total of $895 out of her own money. In addition, appellant, under circumstances hereinafter referred to, gave her check dated April 13, 1926, to the district attorney for $100, which check was endorsed to the order of the clerk of the Municipal Court and was by him applied to arrearages in the same way it would have been if paid by defendant himself. Receipts were given for the payments taken to the Municipal Court by appellant and her messenger. They were all in the same form as that given her for the payment of $30 on December 1, 1924, which reads: “Received from Francis [Frank] M. Grady, Thirty Dollars, on account support of Mary.”

The question of how the payments shown to. have been made by appellant are to be credited, i. e., whether on account of the defendant’s obligation under the order, or of appellant’s liability as surety on the bond, or some one way and some the other, must be determined under the evidence and by keeping in mind the respective obligations of the defendant and his surety. Appellant contends that all the payments made by her were made on account of her liability as surety on the bond, and, as they exceed the amount of its penalty, she is entitled to have the judgment satisfied. The Commonwealth contends that none of her payments was made in discharge of her liability under the bond.

Under the facts appearing from this record we cannot agree with either contention. If this bond had been signed by the defendant alcine it would have con *112 stituted an obligation continuing as long as the order remained in force and payments made by him would not have diminished the security in any way: Vogel v. Hughes, 2 Miles 379; Silverthorn v. Hollister, 87 Pa. 431. But we here have both a principal and a surety and the obligation of each differs from that of the other. In our opinion this controversy should be disposed of in accordance with the principles laid down by President Judge Porter in Foster v. Passerieux, 37 Pa. Superior Ct. 307. In that case one Valentour became surety on a bond in a penal sum, with a warrant of attorney to confess judgment, and reciting an agreement between Passerieux and his wife, who had separated, that Passerieux would pay her $10 per month during her lifetime. In the course of the opinion it was said: “The defendant, Valentour, the appellee, had entered into no contract which required him to malee the monthly payments to the wife of Passerieux; the recital of the agreement between the parties in the bond contains no suggestion of any such engagement upon his part, nor was any action or payment by him required to satisfy the condition of the bond. The contract, as recited, and the condition of the bond required that Passerieux alone should pay. All that Valentour undertook to do was to be liable for the penalty, in case Passerieux did not pay according to the condition of the bond. While Passerieux made the monthly payments, there was no breach of the condition. After the breach Valentour could discharge himself only by the payment of the penalty: Silverthorn v. Hollister, 87 Pa. 431.”

So here, appellant did not give bond that she would pay the $300 cash payment or the weekly payments of $8 each; all she undertook to do was to be liable for the penalty in case the defendant, or some volunteer in his behalf, did not make the payments required by the order. So long as the defendant, or *113

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Pa. Super. 108, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-grady-and-mcnally-pasuperct-1928.